Byron Shire Echo – Issue 32.11 – 23/08/2017

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Clowns wrapped in burqas and section 44

Volume 32 #11

August 23, 2017

Republican musings The referendum for a republic was sabotaged in 1999 by John Howard choosing a constitutional framework certain to be rejected. It is true that republics can be tyrannous and monarchies can be free, but all things being equal I am a republican. Monarchies are never egalitarian. Polls say Australians would still vote for a republic, but in order not to be disappointed at the long delay I do not read articles supporting the change. Instead I subscribe to the emails of the Monarchists League, written by its chairman Philip Benwell. Philip fires off an outraged press release, probably from the smoking room of his club, whenever anybody, anywhere, expresses the slightest opinion in favour of a republic. He spent a decade in Sri Lanka fighting off extradition to Sydney for alleged corporate fraud, and his website has many photos of young supporters who dress, like young Christians, in clothes too old for their age. The media are invited wistfully to treat these smiling loonies as spokespersons for the monarchist movement. Alas, neither these ‘media spokespersons’ nor poor Philip ever get noticed in the press; when the real push for change comes it will be the likes of Alan Jones and David Flint who will garner all the publicity for manning the barricades against godless republicans. Despite my distaste for monarchists as a tribe I once thought that not all their arguments in favour of constitutional monarchy are to be dismissed. Other countries have trimmed their monarchs down to fit into a democracy, although it has sometimes taken time. I pointed out to a Japanese friend that the Emperor is now a constitutional monarch just like the Queen of England, although in the Emperor’s case it is scarce a lifetime since his throne conferred untrammelled and godlike power. My friend agreed with the parallel between Japan and England, but expressed herself perplexed by how monarchy applies to Australia. Japan, she said, did not send a fleet to the northern hemisphere two hundred years ago, annex an island, tell the bewildered natives their country was hitherto uninhabited, and set the Mikado up as its constitutional monarch. She’s right. The situation is absurd and it’s time for change. David Lovejoy News tips are welcome: editor@echo.net.au

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he good news for Malcolm Turnbull is that his government is not in immediate danger of falling – at least, not any more than usual. The laws of mathematics (the ones Turnbull believes can be overridden by the laws of Australia, but let that pass for the moment) reveal that the coalition currently has 76 members, Labor 69, and the crossbenchers the other five. If Barnaby Joyce is found ineligible (which the High Court, defying the prime minister, may well determine) that will leave the government with 75 – six more than the opposition. They cannot rely on the Greens Adam Bandt or the maverick Bob Katter for support, Andrew Wilkie and Rebekha Sharkie are wavering, but Cathy McGowan is standing firm against a vote of no confidence. And in any case, even if Joyce was temporarily rubbed out, he would stand in a byelection in his safe electorate and win in a canter – if the quixotic Tony Windsor ran again, he would be crushed by a coalition onslaught willing to spend anything, throw anything, to bleach its black New Zealand ram white again. So despite the feverish headlines of last week, the Turnbull government is not about to fall. But the bad news is that its leader and his ministers are doing their level best to push it to the brink. Many years ago a court found that it was defamatory to claim a minister couldn’t run a chook raffle in a pub, so I will forbear, merely observing that our beloved leader and his troops would struggle to access sexual intercourse in a house of ill repute with a hundred dollar note attached to their nether garments – and that applies to Julie Bishop as much if not

more than her male counterparts. The great Kiwi conspiracy apparently started when Barnaby Joyce’s father was treacherously born in the land of the long flat vowel and continued when he covertly married an Australian and surreptitiously sired our current deputy prime minister. New Zealand law was deliberately and deceitfully designed to ensure that not only did Joyce have dual citizenship, but covert brainwashing was instigated over many years to addle his mind so he could never become aware of it.

One Nation’s Malcolm Roberts will be a problem – he may or may not be an Indian or an Englishman but he is clearly some sort of alien – he came from outer space. by Mungo MacCallum And of course this was all Bill Shorten’s fault. As Bishop fulminated, the Labor leader was trying to undermine and overthrow the government of Australia. Well, yes – that is, after all, his job. Bishop may have discerned a hint in his title: leader of the opposition. It is true that Tony Abbott is trying to usurp the role, but as things are, Shorten is still sitting across the table from Turnbull. And if members of his party or their helpers have talked to similar parties overseas – fraternal organisations, as they are known – it is hardly a shocking revelation. Bishop’s Liberals constantly hob nob with the British Conservatives and the American Republicans among many others, and often attend conferences to show their friendship and solidarity. Is it really suggested that they never discuss their domestic problems over a chardonnay

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12 August 23, 2017 The Byron Shire Echo

could remain in cabinet when the apparently less culpable Matt Canavan could not, Turnbull declared that the High Court will – not may, not even should, but will – find Joyce eligible. If he had said so outside parliament, he could well have been charged with contempt, an attempt to intimidate the judges. Even under privilege, it was an attack on the doctrine of the separation of powers worthy of that other great New Zealand dual national, Joh BjelkePetersen. But who cares – this was an emergency; a confected one, certainly, but none the less real for Turnbull and his demented troops. Joyce himself had said the constitution was black and white, dual citizens were out. But, as Turnbull pointed out patronisingly, his deputy is not a constitutional lawyer. Nor, for that matter, is Turnbull; his advocacy skills lie elsewhere. And he may live to regret his bravado. But not for a while. The High Court have now five matters to consider – seven if you count

Scott Ludlum and Larissa Walters – and they will likely have to be dealt with separately. The three wayward Nats – Joyce, Canavan and Fiona Nash – and perhaps even Nick Xenophon may by taken as a job lot, as Turnbull hopes. But One Nation’s Malcolm Roberts will be a problem – he may or may not be an Indian or an Englishman but he is clearly some sort of alien – he came from outer space. And of course the court also has other urgent matters to consider, not least the validity or otherwise of the ABS postal plebiscite. It will be another messy few weeks. But just when it appeared that the only sensible course the coalition backbenchers could pursue was to take a few slow, deep breaths before moving on to a cup of tea, a Bex and a good lie down, Pauline Hanson arrived to save them. Her burqa stunt gave George Brandis a rare moment to shine, to the applause of the opposition and at least a sigh of relief from the government; a new atrocity swamped the front pages and the airwaves and with a very welcome week away from Canberra to recover there was a chance, just a chance, that they could regroup. So it was a truly fortuitous break – but was it a break? Might it not have been another conspiracy, this one hatched up between Hanson and Brandis – it is hard to believe that the serial bumbler could manage such passion and conviction without rehearsal? Even Julie Bishop can hardly blame the Kiwis for this one, but there may well be other sinister, treacherous forces at play. Spain, for instance – was the terrorist attack in Barcelona just a little too convenient to give Bishop and Turnbull a chance to draw breath and insist that they are not insane after all? Let’s face it, after the last week it is hard to believe that this government could have done anything right without help from outside. And that’s the really bad news.

The Byron Shire Echo

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or two? This is hardly treason, even when it comes to New Zealand – unless, of course, it involves cricket or rugby. The only interference with domestic politics came when Bishop interrupted the New Zealand election to threaten that she might somehow refuse to talk to ministers if the Labour Party across the ditch won the poll. Even the commentators of the right regarded this as stark, staring mad – straight out of Monty Python’s Flying Circus. But she wasn’t the only actor in the theatre of the absurd that took over parliament last week. Struggling to explain why Joyce

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Nicholas Shand 1948–1996 Founding Editor

General Manager Simon Haslam Editor Hans Lovejoy Photographer Jeff Dawson Advertising Manager Angela Cornell Production Manager Ziggi Browning ‘The job of a newspaper is to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.’ – Finley Peter Dunne 1867–1936 © 2017 Echo Publications Pty Ltd – ABN 86 004 000 239 Mullumbimby: Village Way, Stuart St. Ph 02 6684 1777 Fax 02 6684 1719 Printer: Fairfax Media Brisbane Reg. by Aust. Post Pub. No. NBF9237

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