Australia PM puts economy at heart of re-election

July 15 (Reuters) – Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard sought to sell her Labor government’s economic credentials on Thursday, warning that the conservative opposition’s policies could risk a robust economy.

In her first major economic speech since becoming prime minister on June 24, Gillard set out her platform for re-election at polls expected within months, centering on job creation.

“I believe a strong economy is the foundation of everything else that as prime minister I want for this great country of ours,” Gillard told the National Press Club in Canberra.

“As prime minister I will make my economic judgments based on what gives Australians the best opportunity for access to work.”

The government, on course for a narrow election victory according to opinion polls, tweaked its economic forecasts on Wednesday, predicting robust commodity prices due to Chinese demand will ensure the budget returns to surplus in 2012/13, far ahead of most other rich nations.

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It also forecast unemployment would fall to 5 percent in 2010-11 and 4.75 pct in 2011-12.

Gillard said the economy had emerged from the global financial crisis stronger than many other developed nations due in part due to the government’s A$52 billion ($46 billion) stimulus package in 2009.

“I say to the Australian people, now is not the time to take risks with the Australian economy,” said Gillard, Australia’s first female prime minister who appears far more at ease dealing with the media than her predecessor Kevin Rudd.

“It is a time for prudent and careful economic management, not a time to take risks with a Liberal Party that got it wrong on the global financial crisis, that opposed (stimulus) action to support Australian jobs and that would have allowed hundreds of thousands of jobs to be destroyed.”

Gillard said a new mining tax, which is forecast to raise A$10.5 billion in revenue from 2012, would fund a cut in corporate tax and a rise in pensions but would be dumped by conservative leader Tony Abbott if he was elected.

“Remarkably, my opponent would deny Australians these benefits because he is refusing to accept the tax that our biggest mining companies have agreed to pay,” she said.

PM SELLS ECONOMIC CONSERVATISM

Economic management is traditionally a major issue in Australian elections. And while Australia’s healthy economy, in its 17th year of growth, should be a winning ticket for the government, voters still believe the opposition has the edge in economic management, according to opinion polls this week.

The opposition, which ruled for 12 years before Labor was elected in 2007, is also committed to achieving a budget surplus, and has said it would put downward pressure on interest rates, cut debt and cap spending.

But it differs from the government over its opposition to a new mining tax and a planned carbon price to fight climate change.

Despite her left-wing background, Gillard has sold herself as an economic conservative, dismissing concerns her government would be an old-style, big-spending Labor administration.

Gillard said growth in spending would be capped at 2 percent a year once the economy was growing above trend.

She also said Australia could not rely solely on its resource sector for future economic prosperity, warning doing so could create a two-speed economy of haves and have nots.

“Australia today is a great beneficiary of the economic growth in China and the demand for our mineral resources in our region. But if anyone thinks that gives us a free ticket to easy prosperity, they are mistaken,” she said.

She said a re-elected Labor government would push for micro-economic reforms to ensure Australia remained a competitive and modern economy, but also provided social dividends.

“The microeconomic challenges of the future are not a simplistic choice between the market and the state,” said Gillard.

“Simply applying the extreme free-market medicine of liberalisation and privatisation without thought or care is not a solution. Maintaining an instinctive hostility towards the public sector and all it provides is equally wrong.” ($1 = 1.131 Australian Dollar) (Editing by Ed Davies and Sugita Katyal)

Romania – Factors to Watch on June 15

June 15 (Reuters) – Here are news stories, press reports and events to watch which may affect Romanian financial markets on Tuesday.

Energy

ROMANIA GOVT FACES CONFIDENCE VOTE OVER AUSTERITY

Romania’s centrist coalition government looks likely to defeat a no-confidence vote in parliament on Tuesday over planned deep spending cuts, giving it greater scope to carry out reforms.

Boc’s centre-right coalition needs 236 votes to survive the vote, expected to take place in the early afternoon after a debate in parliament which starts at 0700 GMT.

Unions are hoping up to a million Romanians will support a planned one-day general strike on the day of the vote.

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ROMANIA LIMITS DEBT SALE AHEAD OF CONFIDENCE VOTE

Romania sold less debt than planned in a tender on Monday, hoping it will create a more stable political backdrop and ease pressure on yields a day later by winning a no-confidence vote.

[ID:nLDE65D1CP]

ROMANIA FINMIN NOT DESPERATE TO SELL DEBT – PRESS

Romania can afford to reject bids at debt tenders if yields asked by investors are too high, Finance Minister Sebastian Vladescu was quoted as saying ahead of a T-bill auction on Monday.

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CONSTITUTIONAL COURT JUDGES

Romania’s senate appointed Iulia Antoanella Motoc and Mircea Stefan Minea as new judges in the nine-member Constitutional Court on Monday. Both were nominated by the ruling Democrat Liberal Party.

SOUTH STREAM

Economy Minister Adriean Videanu could meet Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller on June 16 in Moscow to discuss Romania’s possible participation in the South Stream project, Miller said last week.

Marcel Piteiu, head of Romania’s state-owned gas company Romgaz, said he believes Romania will be invited to join South Stream.

Ziarul Financiar, Page 8

IMF

Romania will decide after the present IMF deal is done if it needs further help from the Fund, but it should better stick to implementing reforms and not get a new loan, Mihai Tanasescu, Romania’s representative to the IMF was paraphrased as saying.

Gandul, Page 4

NOTE- For a diary of forthcoming Romanian events, double

click [RO/DIARY], and a calendar of east European economic indicators, see [CONV/DIARY].

For other related news, double click on: ————————————————————— Romania Market Debt [RO-DBT] Romanian forex [RO-FRX] Romania Market Report [ROL/] Romanian money [RO-M] Emerging Market Debt [EMRG/DBT] Emerging forex [EMRG/FRX] All Emerging Markets news [EMRG] CEE indicators [CONV/DIARY] All East Europe News [EEU] E.Europe equities [.CEE] TOP NEWS — Emerging markets [TOP/EMRG] TOP NEWS — Convergence watch [TOP/EAST] Romanian indicators [RO/ECI] Main page of Reuters poll —————————————————————

Philippine lawmakers ready to approve national vote

Philippine lawmakers expect their official tallying of votes for president and vice president in the May 10 elections to be reasonably quick, but some allegations of poll fraud could possibly delay the proclamation of winners.

A joint sitting of Congress to officially name the national leaders was brought forward by a week to May 24 after a new automated voting system produced results far quicker than the manual counting of previous elections.

Senator Benigno Aquino has a massive lead in the unofficial presidential vote count, consistent with opinion polls, and the House of Representatives probe into allegations of fraud and problems with voting machines is not expected to change that.

“We expect it to be faster than previous tallies,” Arthur Defensor, a three-term congressman who was elected governor of the central province of Iloilo, said in a television interview.

In 2004, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo’s victory was confirmed on June 23, just a week before her inauguration as president and the start of new terms of all elected national and local officials.

Nine senators and nine congressmen have been selected to conduct the official tally of votes from 274 provinces, cities and embassies and consulates across the world next week.

“We are looking at three weeks,” Senator Miguel Zubiri, an ally of the outgoing Arroyo, told reporters, saying he would ask the election agency to explain claims of irregularities about the vote count and transmission.

“We have to look at the authenticity of the flash cards, the authenticity of the certificates of canvass. We can’t easily take as gospel truth whatever we’ll see in those documents.”

KOALA BOY

At Friday’s hearing, the chairman of the committee on suffrage and electoral reforms, Teodoro Locsin, a member of Aquino’s Liberal Party, said he believed the Arroyo government was behind the initial allegations that prompted the probe.

A government spokesman said Locsin’s remarks were unsubstantiated and illogical.

Earlier this week, a video was released of an unidentified masked man claiming to work for the elections commission and saying votes been sold and voting machines pre-programmed.

“We already know who is behind ‘koala boy’,” election agency spokesman James Jimenez said, using the nickname given to the masked man, but did not identify him. “He is a losing candidate.”

The election commission had earlier said it has discovered discrepancies involving about 150,000 votes, not enough to have an impact on the presidential race.

A messy transition or drawn-out investigation could erode the positive sentiment generated by what was seen as a relatively smooth election process and the clear victory of Aquino, who has vowed to fight corruption.

Juan Ponce Enrile, current President of the 24-member Senate, who was re-elected for a six-year term, said lawmakers would not entertain protests during the official tallying of votes except when discrepancies were found.

“The fraud can be handled by the election tribunal,” Enrile said, adding lawmakers would tally votes and declare the winners.

On Friday, the third day of the House hearings, more allegations of poll fraud and failures of the automated machines were made by lawmakers who lost their re-election bids.

(Editing by John Mair and Jerry Norton)

Hawke denies calling for Rudd’s removal

Former prime minister Bob Hawke has denied he told a Labor MP that Kevin Rudd should be dumped as leader.

A Liberal Party staffer says he overheard Mr Hawke tell Daryl Melham that he was heartbroken by Mr Rudd’s performance and wanted him replaced with Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard.

Mr Hawke has confirmed he had a conversation with Mr Melham but denies he criticised Mr Rudd.

Mr Hawke has released a statement saying he told Mr Melham he was disappointed with Labor’s performance in the latest opinion polls.

But he says he affirmed his support for Mr Rudd and it is sad that someone has “twisted” his words.

“As you normally do in Canberra, Daryl and I chatted about the latest media speculation in the press gallery,” he said.

“I expressed my disappointment about the polls and my support for Kevin and for the Government.

“It’s pretty sad that someone, who would hardly be an objective observer, twisted my words and misrepresented them.”

Mr Hawke says he “can’t wait” to campaign for Mr Rudd at the next election.

Mr Melham blamed a Liberal Party staffer for the reports.

“Bob and myself were doing nothing more than discussing the usual Canberra press gallery rumour mill,” he said in a statement.

“The fact that some Liberal staffer has deliberately eavesdropped on this conversation and misrepresented it to the media just shows how desperate the Liberal Party has become.”

Leadership speculation has been reignited after a series of poor polls for Mr Rudd and the continued popularity of his deputy.

UK’s third party: kingmakers or poison tasters?

Britain’s third largest party has suddenly found itself in the full glare of the political spotlight. It’s an uncomfortable, and potentially dangerous, place.

An inconclusive election result last week — the first such outcome in more than 30 years — has handed the centre-left Liberal Democrats the balance of power.

It should be a moment of triumph for Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg. The Liberal Democrats — formed from the old Liberal Party, one of the two great political parties of the mid-19th century — have not had a shot at government for decades.

Now they have a very real chance of ministerial posts and of achieving long-sought reform of Britain’s voting system.

Yet the dilemma of choosing to ally with either centre-left Labour or centre-right Conservatives could thrust the Lib Dems back to the political wilderness for decades if they get it wrong.

“There is a danger that if something doesn’t come out of this that is positive or permanent … then the Liberal Democrats will be skewered,” said Steven Fielding, Professor of Political History at the University of Nottingham.

LEADERSHIP TUSSLE

Clegg is in a bind. His party sits on the left of the political spectrum, championing social liberalism, electoral reform and fairer distribution of taxes and services.

That should make an alliance with the ruling Labour party a much more natural fit.

But Labour’s popularity has plunged after 13 years in power and it now faces a four-month leadership battle that could distract it from what all parties agree is the most important challenge for government — tackling the nation’s debts — after Prime Minister Gordon Brown agreed on Monday to step aside.

“How can anyone with any gumption call for stable government and then propose allying with a party which is going to spend the next four months in a bitter leadership contest?” wrote a blogger on activist web site Liberal Democrat Voice.

Nor would the Lib Dems and Labour together have enough seats to form a majority so they would need the support of a clutch of smaller parties, such as the Scottish National Party and Wales’ Plaid Cymru, to push through legislation.

Such a potentially unstable government would test the vision of a strong government Clegg has said the country needs.

“I don’t like what is taking place at all,” said former Labour Home Secretary (interior minister) David Blunkett.

“I believe it will lead to a lack of legitimacy and I think that the British people will feel that we have not heard what they have said to us,” he told the BBC on Tuesday.

VOTING REFORM

One of the potential trump cards held by Labour was the offer it made before the election of holding a referendum on voting reform, but that was matched late on Monday by a similar offer from the Conservatives.

The Conservatives won the largest number of parliamentary seats in Thursday’s election but fell 20 seats short of a majority. They swiftly offered talks with the Liberal Democrats, including the possibility of working in a formal coalition.

Voting reform is essential for the Lib Dems, particularly if people are turned off by the experience of the country’s first inconclusive election since 1974. Under the current system, which produces a first past the post winner in each parliamentary constituency, they could be squeezed hardest if people try to force a clear-cut outcome at the next election.

“Whoever they go in with, they really have to get electoral reform,” said Nottingham University’s Fielding, pointing to the negative experience of the Liberal Party in the 1920s.

Forerunners of the modern Lib Dems, the Liberal Party put a minority government into power twice in the 1920s.

In 1923, the Liberals supported the second-largest Labour party rather than the bigger Conservatives but the resulting Labour minorituy government lasted just 10 months and the Conservatives were then elected with a majority.

The Liberals also supported Labour — this time the largest party, although again short of a majority — in 1929 after Labour promised a commission on electoral reform.

“Unfortunately for the Liberals by the time Labour left office in 1931, amidst a grave financial crisis, it had failed to pass any legislation,” Fielding said.

The Liberal party then split over joining a national government to deal with the financial crisis and the party was an almost spent force for the next 30 years.

Howard sidesteps LNP infighting

Former prime minister John Howard says he will not buy into today’s upheaval in Queensland’s Liberal National Party (LNP).

State MPs Aidan McLindon and Rob Messenger have quit the party to sit as independents.

They timed their announcement to coincide with Mr Howard’s visit to Brisbane for an LNP strategy meeting.

Mr Howard says he will offer his advice in private.

“No, that’s something for the state parliamentary party,” he said.

“I’m here to share my experiences both in government and more particularly in opposition, and how to get from opposition into government.

“If I can be of any assistance to my friends and colleagues in Queensland I want to be so.”

Commissioner urges inquiry into child prostitute ‘disaster’

The Tasmanian Government is being urged to immediately commission an independent inquiry into a child prostitution case.

The Children’s Commissioner has described the case of a 12-year-old girl sold for sex as a “disaster’.

At the time she was under a care and protection order, making her a ward of the state.

The Premier, David Bartlett, says he will consider an independent investigation.

A 51-year-old Hobart man was jailed for 10 years jail for acting as a pimp for the girl, when she had sex with more than 100 men.

Mr Bartlett told parliament yesterday that an internal review was underway.

“It is not good enough. The review has already indicated a number of systemic issues with regards to case management and collaborative practice which the Department of Health and Human Services will need to respond to,” he said.

“It would be premature of me to request an independent review before considering the outcome of the internal departmental review. I certainly don’t rule it out.”

Tasmania’s Children’s Commissioner Paul Mason says there is no reason for the delay.

“An internal review can only ever be internal and it cannot satisfy really the Tasmanian people that they are being told what they need to know about what led to this disaster and whether it could have been prevented,” he said.

The Liberal Party has tabled a motion requesting the Government establish and fund the inquiry

Oz senator says smokers dying early would save health system money

Sydney, May 4 (ANI): An Australian senator affiliated to the country’s Liberal Party, has said the country’s health system would save funds if smokers keep up their habit and die early.

Senator Nick Minchin said smokers to “go for it” while criticizing a federal government plan to increase tax on cigarettes.

“They die early, they actually save us money,” Senator Minchin told ABC television last night.

Senator Minchin, who is leaving politics at the next election, is a key figure in the Liberals” conservative faction and was a minister under former Prime Minister John Howard.

He has kept a relatively low public profile this electoral term, but broke loose in his fiery television appearance.

The South Australian senator said smoking was a “hideous habit” but people had the right to indulge it in a free country.

“We”ve all got to choose our way to go, everyone”s going to die of something,” he said. (ANI)

Brit polls indicates Tory leader Cameron winning final debate

London, Apr.30 (ANI): Polls published immediately after the third and final debate involving Prime Minister Gordon Brown, Conservative Party leader David Cameron and Liberal Democratic Party leader Nick Clegg suggest Cameron is the winner.

YouGov puts Cameron on 41 percent, Clegg on 32 percent and Brown on 25 percent.

ComRes has Cameron two points ahead of Clegg on 35 percent with Brown trailing in third on 26 percent.

Angus Reids puts Cameron on 37 percent, eight points ahead of Clegg (29 percent) and 14 points ahead of Brown (23 percent).

However, a Populus poll for The Times puts Cameron and Clegg level on 38 percent and Brown on 25 percent.

An ICM poll for The Guardian has Brown in second place on 29 percent, Cameron on 35 percent and Clegg on 27 percent.

Sky News” Instant Poll of Polls puts Cameron on 38 percent, Clegg on 32 percent and Brown on 26 percent. (ANI)

Labour Party expels candidate over ‘sex’ploits

London, Apr 27 (ANI): Another Labour Party candidate, John Cowan, has bitten the dust after being expelled from the Party after he boasted about his ‘sex’ploits online.

John Cowan had advertised for people to pose nude for his portfolio and made indiscrete remarks about how he did not want his children to marry a Muslim. Cowan had earlier been expelled by the Liberal Democrat Party for sending ‘sexual emails’ reports SKY News.

“I post what I think. I think to be honest there is a level of transparency there that isn”t normally associated with many people in politics.” an unrepentant Cowan was quoted by The Sunday Telegraph, as saying.

Cowan joins the ranks of several other politicians whose sexual behaviour resulted in the demise of their political careers. (ANI)

Belgian PM to tender resignation to king – minister

Belgian Prime Minister Yves Leterme has gone to King Albert to tender his government’s resignation, a minister said after an emergency cabinet meeting on Thursday.

Health Minister Laurette Onkelinx told reporters Leterme had had no other choice but to quit after the Flemish liberal party withdrew its support for the five-party coalition.

(Reporting by Antonia van de Velde, writing by Philip Blenkinsop, editing by Timothy Heritage)

Labor pains deliver first Green minister

The leader of the Tasmanian Greens appears set to go down in history as the first MP from the party to be given a ministerial job.

In a highly-anticipated move, Nick McKim has been formally invited to join the Cabinet in Labor’s minority government.

The Greens leader has until Sunday morning to accept the power-sharing offer.

After three days of negotiations, Premier David Bartlett on Friday invited Mr McKim to be a minister in the Cabinet but will not speculate on which portfolio he would hold.

Mr Bartlett has ruled out appointing more Greens ministers for now but says Upper House independents may be invited before the Cabinet is sworn in next Wednesday.

“Tonight I have sent Mr Nick McKim a letter of invitation to join a Labor Cabinet as a non-PLP [Parliamentary Labor Party] member,” he said.

“This has never happened before in Tasmania and therefore we need to tread carefully.”

The offer compels Mr McKim to vote with the Government in Parliament on matters approved by Cabinet.

The only exceptions are so-called “matters of significant concern” in which he can abstain, as long as he consults the Premier.

In a brief statement, Mr McKim says he is taking legal advice about the formal offer and will respond after consulting the Greens’ partyroom.

The announcement comes almost four weeks after the state election which resulted in a hung parliament, with Labor and the Liberal Party holding 10 seats each in the Lower House and the Greens five seats.

Mr Bartlett says he is convinced the appointment will make his minority government more stable and effective.

“I recognise there will be many people who don’t want to see this happen in Tasmania,” he said.

Europe, UK flights delayed until Sunday

Qantas estimates flights to Europe and the UK will not be operating again until Sunday as a result of volcanic ash blasting out of an Icelandic glacier.

The volcano under the Eyjafjallajokull glacier is spewing a plume of grey ash up to 10 kilometres high across the Atlantic, closing major airports more than 2,000 kilometres away in the most extensive shutdown of airspace since the September 11 attacks in 2001.

The entire airspace in the UK, Norway, Denmark, Belgium and Sweden is closed and there are partial closures in France and Finland.

Qantas has cancelled today’s flights to London and Frankfurt and over 1,500 travellers are now stranded in Singapore, Hong Kong and Bangkok airports waiting for a connecting flight.

Airline spokesman David Epstein says passengers trying to get to Europe from Australia should not fly to Asia as all hotels there are booked out.

He says passengers travelling in the next few days should not go to the airport unless the airline has directed them to do so.

“We’d urge you to go to qantas.com,” he said.

“People travelling with us in the next few days, don’t got to the airport until you have confirmed with us.

“It is going to take some time [to] work through the backlog of flights coming in from Europe.”

Qantas passenger and New South Wales Liberal Party Director, Mark Neeham, flew into Singapore early this morning only to be told his flight to the United Kingdom will not be taking off until Saturday night.

But Mr Neeham says he is grateful he has been put up in a hotel and does not have to wait at the airport.

“Just as you came off the aircraft what greeted you was the hordes of people wandering around, people laying against the walls, laying against seats, every bit of floor space available somebody was sitting on it or asleep on it so it was not a pleasant place to be,” he said.

Rhianne Hole was due to leave Melbourne Airport to visit family in Wales.

She says she is annoyed the airline told her to reschedule the flights herself.

“Not happy at all, the fact that we have to call the reservation line and do it ourselves like they should… if they’re sending us home they should be rebooking the flights for us,” she said.

Mr Epstein says Qantas is at the mercy of the volcano and then the British authorities.

He says Qantas has provided the passengers stranded in Asia with meal vouchers and accommodation.

“We are working through the situation with them. Whether they want to remain in situ in Asia … or whether they want to return home,” he said.

But he says accommodation in Asia is already under pressure as the number of stranded tourists increases.

Mr Epstein says Qantas has experience operating around volcanic activities and he says there will be no flights until officials say there is no threat to safety.

“Qantas does have some experience in dealing with volcanic activities. Our meteorological people pay a lot attention to volcanic activity,” he said.

Volcanic ash contains tiny particles of glass and pulverised rock, which can melt in plane engines, causing a loss of power.

The flight safety officer for the British Airline Pilots’ Association, Dave Reynolds, says the problem with the ash is not confined to it getting into engines.

“Also as significantly, the ash can get inside the aircraft’s instrument systems and under conditions where the pilots are using their instruments to fly the aircraft, they’ll find themselves in the very dangerous situation of not being able to have reliable instruments,” he said.

Young Liberal in Obama ‘monkey’ Twitter scandal to be expelled

Brisbane, Apr.16 (ANI): A young Liberals’ member who called Barack Obama a “monkey” on Twitter during the US President’s interview on the ABC will be expelled, says the Queensland Liberal National Party (LNP).

The tweets, from an account belonging to Nick Sowden, a medical student at the University of Queensland, began just after 7.30pm AEST last night, during ABC TV’s 7.30 Report with Kerry O’Brien.

Sowden said his comments were taken out of context. He said it was a joke between friends.

“I think the people follow me know (it’s a joke) and the people who are my friends know and the people on Twitter don’t unfortunately,” he said.

I don’t think Obama is a monkey. You can’t be a monkey and be President of the United States.”

When asked if he’d apologise, he said: “Yes, sure, why not.”

Sowden said he shut down his Twitter account because he didn’t want any more tweets taken out of context.

The LNP held a meeting today to discuss Mr Sowden’s actions and found that he had brought the Party into disrepute.

The party said it “resolves to expel him from the Liberal National Party”. (ANI)

Liberals open Riverina pre-selection nominations

The Liberal Party has opened nominations in the Nationals’ held seat of Riverina.

The three cornered contest is possible after Kay Hull’s decision to retire at the next election.

The Liberal Party’s country vice president Scott McDonald says the amount of money the party will spend trying to take the seat depends on local support.

“Every regional seat is always a locally funded campaign so that’ll be entirely raised in the communities of Wagga, Griffith, Leeton and so on,” he said.

“There won’t be big buckets of money, I can assure you, from head office. But that’s an internal party matter. If the candidate is the right one, they’ll attract that support.”

Riverina is one of the safest Coalition seats in the country.

Mr McDonald says they should have a candidate by the end of the month and it would not be an ugly campaign.

“The contest will be straight forward, it won’t be a Liberal versus National. Obviously the target will be to keep the seat out of the hands of the Labor Party. And certainly my advice to any prospective candidate is to fight on the merits and we fight on the issues,” he said.

“We’ve got a pretty good track record of that in places like Farrer and New England where this has happened in the past.”

Meanwhile, former Wagga newspaper editor Michael McCormack has revealed he will be among those vying for pre-selection for the Nationals.

Mr McDonald from Griffith says it has been decades since the party held Riverina.

“I think you’ve got to go back to the early 20th century, so it’s been quite a while since the Liberal Party’s held it federally,” he said.

“But as I say, we’ve got a good record of holding the main centre which is around Wagga, we’ve held that as a state seat off and on. So we’ve got a good record in the community and we’re looking to extend that federally.”

Labor urged to abandon Tarkine Road

An environmental group wants Labor to formally abandon its Tarkine Road plan.

The $23 million project is being assessed by the Federal Government, and still needs approval by State Parliament.

Scott Jordan from the Tarkine Coalition says it is clear legislation for the road has no chance of making it through parliament.

“Our expectation would be that both the Liberal party with 10 votes and the Greens with five votes have run campaigns against the road,” he said.

“So our feeling would be that there’s now 15 votes against, and only 10 for, so we would expect that the Tarkine Road is finished.”

Mr Jordan says a Tarkine National Park would have the support of the community.

“It will be a great driver for tourism and for jobs in the local region,” he said.

“We think now that the heat of the election is over, we’d like to think that all three parties can sit down and look at it as something that’s positive for the region, positive for the environment and is a win all around.”

Townsville auctioneer wins Liberal preselection

Townsville auctioneer Ewen Jones has been preselected as the federal Liberal candidate for the seat of Herbert in north Queensland at this year’s election.

The sitting Member for Herbert, Liberal Peter Lindsay, has held the seat since 1996, but will retire at the next election.

Mr Jones says he only joined the Liberal Party this year but says he is confident of winning the seat.

“I’m not a politician by trade and realistically it doesn’t matter who they put up against you,” he said.

“We’re fighting for the people for Townsville.

“I’m not fighting any other candidate and I’m assuming there’ll be a fair few candidates who will put their hand up as well.

“It doesn’t worry me [that] you have to go up against someone. I’ll go up against a number of people.”

Mr Jones says he will be focussing his policies on roads.

“I’m interested in what the people of north Queensland are really craving [which is] things like roads; on the highways up here,” he said.

“We are part of a decentralised state and we need to use the highway.

“Things like having an overtaking lane every five kilometres would be a wonderful thing for north Queensland.”

Hulls denies Windsor contempt accusation

Victoria’s Attorney-General, Rob Hulls, is denying he has committed a serious breach of parliamentary rules, over the Windsor Hotel inquiry.

The clerk of Victoria’s Upper House has written to a parliamentary committee advising that Mr Hulls is in contempt of Parliament, by directing staff not to appear at the inquiry.

The inquiry is examining the leak of confidential media strategy document, that advised sham consultations about the hotel’s redevelopment.

Justin Madden’s former press secretary, Peta Duke was advised not to testify before the committee by the attorney-general.

But Mr Hulls says he has done nothing wrong.

“The Upper House knows full well, what the longstanding conventions and protocols are,” he said.

“That the ministers themselves are held to account before the committees, and not the ministerial advisers.”

He maintains he has followed the correct procedures and does not have a case to answer.

“The Liberal Party and the Greens are acting like bullies, wanting to drag this young woman in front of a committee in breach of all conventions, for their grubby political purposes,” he said.

“Not only are there only questions about the validity of the subpoena itself, and I’ve set that out in correspondence to the committee, but there’s also questions about the role of the chair of this committee.”

The State Opposition is calling for Mr Hulls to step down.

The planning spokesman, Matthew Guy, says Mr Hulls is setting a disturbing precedent.

“It really beggars belief that we have an Attorney General who is directing, bullying, intimidating people not to obey a legal subpoena, not to turn up after a legal summons has been issued,” he said.

“That is more a reflection of Rob Hulls and the Brumby Government, than anyone else.”

Governor’s stinging rebuke for Bartlett

In a rare move, Tasmanian Governor Peter Underwood has released his reasons for commissioning Labor to attempt to govern the state, and in doing so delivered a rebuke to the Premier.

Mr Underwood said David Bartlett did not have the right to promise power to Liberal leader Will Hodgman.

Mr Hodgman, meanwhile, says the events of the past few days show that the Liberals were outmanoeuvred by Labor lies.

The Opposition Leader thought he was going to be the next premier but the Governor dashed his hopes yesterday afternoon.

“Mr Hodgman advised me on the 8th of April that he didn’t seek the support of the Greens party,” Mr Underwood said in his statement.

“My failure to be satisfied that Mr Hodgman had the support of the Labor party not to block supply and not to move a vote of no confidence, except in extreme circumstances, gave rise to a constitutional obligation on the part of the holder of the commission to form government.”

This obligation arose regardless of whether Mr Bartlett had the support of the Greens Party or not.

The Liberals are furious because on April Fools’ Day the Premier made this promise:

“Labor will only ever move no confidence motions in the most serious circumstances of gross maladministration, of corruption or incompetence or in those circumstances. I mean that’s always going to be the case,” Mr Bartlett said.

But in a letter to the Governor on Wednesday, Mr Bartlett said he would not make any assurances about no-confidence motions or blocking supply.

Mr Hodgman quickly gave the Governor a copy Mr Bartlett’s April Fools’ Day press conference.

But in his statement the Governor said he decided to commission Labor because of the Premier’s recent letter where Mr Bartlett refused to support the Liberals.

“I considered the material and the contention and concluded that even if I was able to determine from the material given to me that Mr Bartlett has made the commitments Mr Hodgman said he made, his present intention is clearly expressed in the letter set out above,” Mr Underwood wrote.

“In these circumstances, I came to the conclusion that Mr Hodgman was not in a position to form a stable government.”

Broken promise?

Mr Hodgman says Mr Bartlett has broken his promise in order to hang onto power.

“It was deliberate, not only recanting from his original position, but it did directly leave the Governor, in my view, in a invidious position where Mr Bartlett was saying on one hand I’ll pretend to give the Liberals power but I will also threaten to take them down at the first opportunity,” he said.

“How can Mr Bartlett seriously say he was giving us an opportunity to test things on the floor of the house? He wasn’t even giving us an opportunity to get there.”

Mr Bartlett is not responding to the Governor’s statement.

Constitutional law expert Michael Stokes says it is rare that the Governor has released his advice, but Mr Stokes says that is because there is usually a majority government.

“I’m not aware of another, similar precedent. This is something which hasn’t happened in my lifetime, if you like,” he said.

During the election the Liberal and Labor parties had an agreement that if they won the same amount of seats, as they did, whichever party got more votes should form a minority government.

The Liberals got more votes and assumed government was theirs for the taking. But in his statement the Governor said the agreement was irrelevant to his decision.

“The commissioning of a person to form a government is entirely the governor’s prerogative and it is not within the gift of any political leader to hand over or cede to another political leader the right to form a government, whatever the result of the election,” he wrote.

The Governor has sent Labor back to test their power on the floor of the Parliament.

Ex-Howard minister gets tertiary appointment

Adelaide University has appointed former Howard government minister Robert Hill as its new chancellor.

The former South Australian senator replaces John von Doussa QC.

He will retire in July after six years in the role.

Mr Hill says Adelaide University is financially sound but needs more infrastructure to cope with rising educational demand.

He says one third of students at the university are from overseas, but the competition is getting tougher to attract them.

“You won’t get the same flood that’s come in recent years, you’ll have to go out and compete for students whereas there hasn’t been so much need for competition in the past,” he said.

“I don’t think it’s been an over-reliance, it’s happened very quickly but I think it’s been a good thing overall.”