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May
22, 2003
Terror
Alerts in Australia
Howard
Government Plans New Assaults
By VANESSA JONES
Here is a copy of the Australian Labor party's
(opposition) budget reply for 2003. Budgets have little humor
or sex appeal, but this one's interesting in that it comes at
a time when our universal healthcare system, "Medicare",
the one Hillary Clinton wanted to emulate back in the early 1990s,
is threatened as we know it, by our government. Medicare has
been providing no-fee, tax payer funded "bulk billing"
when someone visits a doctor, requiring the patient to pay zero
dollars on consultation and treatment. Currently, the use of
bulk billing by doctors is falling under the current Howard government,
whose leaders have, for the past few years, been advocating private
health insurance as a way to fund health needs, in preference
to giving priority funding to Medicare. Instead, they have been
giving citizens a "one third of cost" rebate on private
health insurance.
Our public university student places
are about to be 50% available for full upfront fee paying students.
I fear that within a few years, Australian uni places will be
100% for full fee paying students, with a few scholarships thrown
in. When I went to uni (during 1989 and 1995) there were no "full
fee paying equals entry" places- you just got in on your
academic merit. Money couldn't enter the equation, for entry.
We did, unfortunately, have a part fee payment, called HECS,
which had a deferred debt payment option, but it didn't buy you
a seat academically. Now, for 50% of student places, money will
buy a place... Uni fees, after this budget, are set to rise by
up to 30%. In The Canberra Times on May 17, Stacey Lucas published
a list of current federal cabinet minister's uni education fees,
and it exposed that atleast 5 ministers received a free, taxpayer
funded Australian uni education in the 1970s to early 1980s,
before the HECS debt was introduced, not including those ministers
who received government scholarships. When the federal Education
minister and the nation's Treasurer got free degrees with no
debt attached, and then now introduce these policies mentioned
above, it comes across as the worst and most selfish conservative
politics imaginable.
So, an interesting budget reply below
by Labor, which also represents the Greens' beliefs in taxpayer
funded, accessible education and maintaining the existence of
the Medicare health system. It comes at a time when, if the conservative
Howard government maintains power, and puts into place itschanges,
and keeps going on with similar changes, this is the starting
point of a vast divide between the few rich, and the many working
poor, which will serve wealthy individuals and multinational/global
interests well. It will broaden the divides which already exist
within our society, and then create a gulf so deep, as if an
earthquake has passed, which will create marked social changes,
which will be hard to reverse. I will not say irreparable, because
that is too depressing. But to re-create a universal health care
system, and accessible universities, are tall mountains to climb.
Think of Hillary's efforts. I mean Hillary Clinton, not Sir Edmund
Hillary's. The mountains are equally steep and equally difficult.
Yet they are achievable and conquerable. But if you already have
it in your society, why would you let it disappear- why would
you allow the next generations to suffer so greatly, to fight
so hard? And be so thwarted. Things here are going fully US style,
without the world domination component. We are more the little
guy who follows the big bully around. To Iraq, to Afghanistan,
and we let the U.S. use Pine Gap in our central desert. Perhaps
the Australian people have to lose what they once had, before
they can appreciate what they had, and lost. Before they learn
to fight for what they need, French style. Australians will become
even busier, working to save for medical bills, health insurance
and college fees. They will have less time to read, to reflect,
to consider, and to protest about the actions of their government,
and the state of the society they live in, and its future direction.
Let alone have time to contribute to their own cultural identity.
All this will be music to the ears of those who want to use Australia
for its labor, resources and strategic assets. Also, last week,
on Mothers Day, the Governor General of Australia (the Queen
of England's representative), Dr Peter Hollingworth, an ex-Anglican
archbishop, stood aside due to the public disgust regarding his
protection of a pedophile, and hopeless management of sexual
abuse cases within the church when he was an archbishop. He was
appointed by our conservative Prime Minister, John Howard. There
has been a huge media controversy surrounding rape allegations
against Peter Hollingworth, by Rosemarie Jarmyn, who recently
committed suicide before her rape allegations reached court.
On May 15 the Australian senate moved a motion stating that the
Governor General should be sacked or resign. Yet the senate does
not have the power to implement this motion. An update of our
decay of civilization... Meanwhile, the media just keeps going
on about terrorism, as if it's an opiate for our consciousness-
washing over our media screens, to dull out any critique of our
loss of education and health services, our weakening economy
and increasing personal debt. Let's freak out about all those
nasty, bearded Arabs, and forget about how our media slick, Anglo
politicians are engineering a society which will deny us and
our children basic, previously tax funded health and education
services, unless we pay big bucks for them. Sure, there are "terrorist"
horrors occurring globally, but think also about the denial of
basic health and education services to a society- is that not
a "terrorism" at a daily life level- a living fear
and terror, which could result in unnecessary deaths and suffering?
Even the French demonstrations earlier last week against cuts
to pensions, attended by over a million people, were drowned
out in the news. Not the type of thing the media wants to show,
when the government that week were increasing uni fees by up
to 30% and hammering the last nails into Medicare's coffin, by
favoring private health insurance. SBS TV eventually showed the
French pension cut strikes as the last item of news, after the
weather, with the credits rolling and the music drum beating,
at the end of the news. As if it were an after thought, an atmosphere-
all those people taking a stroll through Parisian and Marseille
spring streets, all those metro stations empty, as the news ended.
So- as winter approaches, we hope those sniffly noses of our
kids don't turn into flus which'll need a doctor to inspect,
and hope that we can start saving enough now for private medical
insurance and the kid's education- sacrifice healthy food and
books and holidays, in the hope that we can buy, in the future,
what we got less than 5 years ago, as part of our taxes. At least
now, we know how it feels to be American.
* * *
Budget reply by Australian Labor (Opposition)
Leader, Simon Crean-May 15
"Mr Speaker.
Tuesday's Budget should have improved
life for Australian families. That's the test any government
budget should meet.
Australian families are under growing
pressure. They are working longer hours and paying record taxes.
The last thing Australian families need is to pay more for vital
services like health and education.
But that's what Tuesday's Budget was
all about.
A civilised society demands health care
based on medical need and education for all based on ability.
I believe that health and education are
not just about providing services to individuals. They are public
goods, for all Australians. We must invest in these vital services.
But under the Howard Government we are
heading in the opposite direction.
Instead of improving life for families,
this Budget is making things worse. It is giving Australian families
a miserly $4 tax cut, while destroying Medicare and charging
them more for education.
The Howard Government failed the test
on Tuesday night.
It's time for something new.
Tonight I want to announce a new deal
for Australia and Australian families.
A new deal to save Medicare and bulk
billing.
A pledge to keep higher education affordable
and accessible.
A plan to save the Murray River from
a slow, tragic death.
A retirement tax cut for every Australian.
A new deal to protect the savings of
Australians.
An end to public subsidies of executive
golden handshakes.
A better deal for small business.
And a better way to protect Australia
and our children.
Most of all I want to give Australians
a sense of hope that Australia can remain a fair and decent country
that provides opportunities for all.
Saving Medicare and bulk billing
Mr Speaker, I believe that every Australian
must have the right to access a doctor who bulk bills. And they
must have the right to attend a well-funded public hospital without
charge.
I won't say for free, because it's not
free. Australians know that. They have already paid for Medicare
through their Medicare Levy and their taxes. They have earned
it. They shouldn't have to pay again when they visit a doctor.
Quality health care must only ever be
available on the basis of medical need.
It should never be rationed according
to ability to pay.
It shouldn't be a two-tiered system.
It shouldn't be a second-rate system.
Look at the United States.
Forty-five million people do not have
any health cover. They live in fear of serious illness. It destroys
family finances, sometimes for generations.
That's not the sort of health system
I want for Australia.
Mr Speaker. There's a profound difference
between the Labor Party and our opponents.
We are the builders. They are the wreckers.
Labor built Medibank under Gough Whitlam
and then Medicare under Bob Hawke because we believe everyone
should have access to affordable health care.
The Liberals have never believed in affordable
health care. They want you to pay more. That's why they wrecked
Medibank. And it's why the Prime Minister is wrecking Medicare
now.
That's why tonight I'm announcing that
a Labor Government will act to save Medicare and bulk billing.
I will not allow Medicare to be replaced
by an Americanised, privatised system where instead of your Medicare
Card, doctors ask for your credit card and refuse to treat you
unless you pay up front.
Saving Medicare starts with restoring
your patient rebate.
So tonight I am announcing that a Crean
Labor Government will lift the patient rebate for bulk billing
for all Australians, no matter where they live, or how much they
earn.
We will lift your patient rebate immediately
upon coming to office to 95 per cent of the scheduled fee, and
then take it to 100 per cent - an average rise of $5 for every
consultation that is bulk billed.
This is not just for concession card
holders. It is for everyone.
As we know, access to bulk billing is
declining faster in some parts of Australia than in others.
To remedy this, under Labor, doctors
who meet bulk billing targets will receive additional incentive
payments.
Doctors in metropolitan areas who bulk
bill 80 per cent of services will receive an additional $7,500
a year.
Doctors in outer metropolitan areas who
bulk bill 75 per cent of services will receive an additional
$15,000.
And doctors in rural and regional areas
who bulk bill 70 per cent of services will receive an additional
$22,500.
This is the equivalent of increasing
your patient rebate by as much as $6.30 for a doctor in a metropolitan
area, $7.80 in an outer metropolitan area and $9.60 for a doctor
in a rural area.
This is a significant down payment towards
restoring bulk billing and saving Medicare.
Without bulk billing there is no Medicare.
Our objective is to get bulk billing
to a national average target of 80 per cent. It won't happen
overnight, but tonight's measures represent a significant down
payment.
Labor will also increase the number of
doctors in rural areas and make more nurses available to doctors
who meet Labor's bulk billing targets.
These measures will help take the pressure
off our public hospitals because that's where people go if they
can't find a bulk-billing doctor.
And Labor will also provide additional
funds to ensure that veterans with Gold and White Repatriation
Health Cards continue to have the access to the bulk billing
they deserve.
There is another important aspect of
Medicare that Labor will protect - affordable access to pharmaceuticals.
Labor will not support the Howard Government's
30 per cent hike in the cost of essential medicines.
Last year when I announced Labor's response
to this price hike I announced a raft of proposals that will
cut the overall cost of the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, but
which will not impose charges on you.
Medicare is not only the most equitable
health system we can have, it is also the most efficient. Medicare
is prudent economics.
It is the envy of the world. Why would
you want to destroy it? Especially when we know we can afford
to save it.
Budgets are about values, priorities
and choices. Labor's priority has been clear - save Medicare.
Labor's plan to save Medicare is responsible
and fully funded.
In the Budget two days ago the Treasurer
announced a further $300 million in tax cuts for multinational
businesses. Now you know where cuts to your family's health services
are going!
To help pay for Labor's new deal to save
Medicare, I will redirect some of the Government's business tax
changes from Tuesday night.
I will also redirect the savings from
scrapping the destructive changes to Medicare that were in the
Budget.
This isn't a tax and spend proposal.
It's a cut and fix proposal. And it is a question of priorities.
Corporate tax cuts do not have the same
priority as saving Medicare for Australian families.
Let's be clear about this. We have a
very different view of Australian society than our opponents,
and I'll be happy to have an argument about these priorities
anywhere, anytime.
A new deal for lifelong learning
Mr Speaker.
Education is a bridge to the future.
It doesn't just give individuals opportunity,
it advances and strengthens us as a society.
It should not be treated as a tradeable
commodity.
Mr Speaker, the world is changing so
rapidly that our children will be working in jobs that haven't
been imagined yet and will have to update their skills throughout
their lives, not just when they are young.
This bridge to the future has many paths
leading to it. We must invest in putting down those paths and
we must not put up financial barriers.
Our goal must be the creation of a world-leading
system of lifelong learning.
It must start with the early years -
the crucial years for developing our learning skills. Too many
of our children are slipping through the net because they are
not getting the help they need.
Opportunities are being lost because
not enough money is being invested in our schools.
While we encourage everyone to get a
Year 12 qualification, we don't provide enough apprenticeships
or enough places at university or TAFE for them.
Our Vice Chancellors advise us that 20,000
qualified young Australians are turned away every year. The cost
to them and our country is enormous.
Finding those places must be our objective.
And we must have a new agreement with the States to create more
TAFE places.
We also need to give adults more assistance
in upgrading their skills throughout their working lives. We
must destroy the blight on our society of middle-age long-term
unemployment.
That's why my new deal for Australian
families is a comprehensive plan for lifelong learning - a bridge
to the future for all of us.
Just as I have done with Medicare tonight,
I will outline in the coming months my plans to build a better
education system for all Australians.
As a result of the changes outlined in
Tuesday's Budget, students and their families will be forced
into massive debt to obtain a university degree.
Fees will increase by up to 30 per cent,
leaving students with HECS debts of up to $40,000 or more.
Many more degrees will cost over $100,000.
And students paying those fees will be hit with a 6 per cent
interest charge.
Mr Speaker, how can we expect our young
people to ever be able to buy a home and start a family with
debts like these?
In the interest of keeping student and
family debt down, we will support lifting the HECS threshold
to $30,000, but will not support the unfair elements of this
Government's unfair university package.
Tonight I make this pledge to Australian
families: I will not allow this Government to slug you and your
children with a 30 per cent increase in your university fees.
I will not allow this Government to saddle
you and your children with $800 million of new debt.
And I will not allow the wealthy to jump
the queue and take the university places that rightly belong
to the hardest working and the most able young Australians.
The Treasurer said last night that Labor's
refusal to pass these measures means we are blocking his big,
bold reforms.
Charging students tens of thousands of
dollars for a degree is not a big bold reform, Treasurer. Opening
up our universities to all Australians - like the Whitlam and
Hawke Governments did - is a big bold reform. And I will do it
again.
The Liberals only ever see education
as a cost and something they can slug you for. Labor knows -
as every parent knows - that education is the greatest investment
we can make in our shared future.
Water
Mr Speaker.
Our shared future must involve a commitment
to save our natural environment.
We all love Australia's rugged environment.
As a keen bushwalker, I've seen first hand how beautiful, but
also how fragile, our country is.
I recently visited the mouth of the Murray
River in South Australia.
What I saw distressed me. It also angered
me.
It will do the same for all Australians
who see it.
The once mighty river's mouth has all
but closed. It has shrunk to the length of a cricket pitch. The
water is only knee deep. Barely a trickle flows to the sea. In
some places it's flowing backwards!
Mr Speaker, the Murray is dying. Native
fish are facing extinction, exotic species are choking the river
and salinity is spreading.
If we don't restore the health of the
Murray, there will no longer be a river system capable of supporting
our farmers into the future.
This is a great national challenge and
it will require a significant long-term investment.
My new deal for Australia will save the
Murray.
I announce tonight that Labor will restore
enough environmental flows to keep the mouth of the Murray open
and to restore the health of the river.
We will stop large-scale and indiscriminate
land clearing to prevent salinity.
And we will ratify the Kyoto Protocol
to prevent more severe droughts in the future.
Restoring the flows of our rivers will
take serious levels of investment.
A Labor Government will therefore create
the Murray-Darling Riverbank - a special new Government corporation
to secure long-term funding for much-needed investment in Australia's
water resources.
We will make an initial capital injection
of $150 million as the first down payment to save our rivers
and attract matching funds from the States and the private sector.
Riverbank will invest in innovative projects
that will set a new direction for water use in Australia, will
help farmers achieve on-farm efficiency improvements and encourage
increased water reuse and recycling.
It will finance projects in its own right
and participate in joint ventures with State and Territory governments
and the private sector. This will greatly increase the funds
available for this urgent national priority.
Mr Speaker. Just as Bob Hawke saved the
Franklin River 20 years ago, my pledge is to save the Murray
River - the lifeblood of our nation.
Tax and the Budget
Mr Speaker.
My father was fond of quoting the American
jurist Oliver Wendell Holmes, who famously said: "When you
pay taxes you buy civilisation".
If you ask me what a civilised society
means today, my answer is this: a country where anyone, regardless
of where they live or how much they earn, can get the same standard
of medical care when they get sick.
A country where education is available
on the basis of ability, not your ability to pay.
And a country that protects its natural
environment for future generations to enjoy.
That's the sort of civilised society
I want Australia to be.
This is the vision that should have been
Tuesday night's Budget. Sadly it was not.
We all know why.
This Government thinks that by giving
you $4 a week you won't notice its real agenda - you pay more.
You pay more to see a doctor. You pay more for an education.
And you go further and further into debt.
It's John Howard's message to all Australians:
"Sorry about Medicare, sorry about your kids' education,
sorry about your credit card debt, but here's four dollars instead."
The highest taxing government in our
history has given you the smallest tax cut in our history.
The Prime Minister and the Treasurer
think that Australians earning between $30,000 and $50,000 a
year are so affluent that you only need another $4 a week.
But while they give with one hand they
slug you with the other.
Up to $50 to go to the doctor. $32 per
week in extra HECS debt. And $125 per week to pay for your new
student loan.
Mr Speaker, Australians have earned the
tax cut in the Budget. Labor will pass it on. But Australians
deserve more from their government.
Four dollars on its own, set against
the massive cost increases for health and education outlined
in this Budget, is miserly and a sleight of hand.
A Crean Labor Government will return
bracket creep through both tax cuts and better services.
Tonight I'm demonstrating how a combination
of those things can make a family better off.
A new deal on superannuation
A key test of your values, choices and
priorities is whether you believe in rewarding the many or the
few.
Tuesday night's Budget contains another
tax cut - one Peter Costello was too embarrassed to talk about.
His superannuation tax cut for the top few per cent of income
earners.
Especially at a time when superannuation
returns are going backwards, Australians need a retirement tax
cut to reward the many, not the few.
Labor will redirect Peter Costello's
unfair superannuation tax cut to pay for a superannuation tax
cut for all Australians, cutting your superannuation contribution
tax from 15 per cent to 13 per cent.
This means thousands of dollars more
for your retirement.
Labor has always been the party of pensioners,
but we are the party of superannuants as well.
Only Labor extended superannuation to
all; only Labor will improve it for all.
A new deal to protect your savings
But, Mr Speaker, there's no use investing
in superannuation if your savings aren't safe.
More than 50 per cent of Australians
now directly own shares and 90 per cent of Australian workers
have an interest in the share market through their superannuation.
The retirement savings of the whole nation
depend on a well-regulated corporate sector.
In the past two years there have been
a number of huge corporate collapses, including Ansett, HIH and
OneTel. When this happens, the executives in charge invariably
refuse to take responsibility for what they've done.
We have all heard of over-paid executives
awarding themselves massive bonuses and golden handshakes just
as their companies go belly-up.
But rather than punish them, the Howard
Government rewards these executives with a 30 per cent tax subsidy
paid with your taxes.
Why should a family struggling to cope
with financial pressures caused by bracket creep, the GST, bank
charges and other hidden taxes have to foot the bill for golden
handshakes as well - handshakes they don't get when they are
retrenched.
Enough is enough.
Labor will double current penalties when
executives break corporate law.
We will force top executives to further
disclose their pay packages in full, including their share options.
We will strengthen Australian shareholders'
rights by giving them a vote on these packages when they are
unfair and unreasonable.
And tonight I announce that Labor will
stop your taxes being used to subsidise by thirty per cent the
million dollar golden handshakes being given to some executives.
This means that under Labor all redundancy
payments over the value of $1 million will no longer be eligible
business deductions for companies.
Labor values Medicare, not corporate
greed.
A new deal for small business
Mr Speaker, there were two words missing
from the Treasurer's Budget speech on Tuesday night - "small
business".
While the Budget may not allow us to
cut taxes for small business, only Labor will cut their paperwork.
Peter Costello is spending $150 million
of your money to employ 1,230 new tax officials to make your
BAS nightmare even worse.
Labor will cut that red tape.
Under Labor's plan, small-business owners
will only have to make one simple calculation for each BAS statement
based on a per centage of your turnover. The time-consuming and
complicated reconciliation process will be eliminated.
By substantially reducing your BAS compliance
costs, Labor will put more money back into your pocket and give
many of Australia's small businesses more time to spend on their
business or with their families.
Protecting our national security
Mr Speaker.
The Government's Budget contains many
worthwhile initiatives to make our nation safer. But more needs
to be done.
Labor will coordinate our security in
Australia through a new Department of Homeland Security.
Labor will ensure our intelligence agencies
talk to each other through an Office of National Security, headed
by a National Security Adviser.
Labor will establish a Coast Guard -
a maritime cop on the beat, 24 hours a day, seven days a week,
to stop drug and gun runners and people smugglers.
And Labor will establish Community Safety
Zones to work with your local community to help fight crime.
Labor will protect your security, not
just national security.
Protecting our children
Mr Speaker, recent events highlight the
need to protect our children.
Something positive must come out of those
events.
Labor will establish a National Commissioner
for Children who will develop a National Code for the Protection
of Children and oversee checks on people who work with children
to ensure that potential child sexual abusers do not get access
to them.
Under my Government, all organisations
in receipt of Commonwealth funds will have to comply with this
code and those checks.
We must resolve as a nation to ensure
that allegations of child sexual abuse are never ignored in the
future and that the truth is never again swept under the carpet.
Labor will give parents more confidence
that their children are safe.
Conclusion
Mr Speaker, Tuesday night's Budget failed
Australian families.
The smallest tax cut from the highest
taxing government in our history.
More debt for our students and their
families.
And the destruction of Medicare.
Mr Speaker, we face serious challenges
in rebuilding Medicare, in improving access to affordable education
and repairing our environment.
These must be our nation's long-term
national priorities. They cannot be solved overnight, but they
must be our priorities.
Governments can make a difference.
Tonight I have laid out my new deal in
each of these areas, significant steps towards our long-term
goals.
Budgets are about choices. Now the choice
is yours.
Tonight I'm offering an alternative.
To make education affordable and accessible
to all based on ability.
To save the Murray River from its tragic
death.
To help you save for the future and to
make your savings income more secure.
To make Australians more secure and better
protect our children.
And tonight, Mr Speaker, a new deal to
save Medicare, not to destroy it.
That's what I want for Australia, That's
what I'll fight for.
A new deal for Australians and a new
deal for Australia."
Today's
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Shopping, the End of the World and the Politics of Bush
Larry Kearney
Two Morning Poems, May 2003
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