stuart robert dismisses accusations over businesses dealings - politics live /

Published at 2017-09-14 10:10:00

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RobertFourtellpic.twitter.com/gNNL3tmz6qrepeating his joke from final month that he works for Australia Post and will raze any ‘no’ ballots.
I work at the australia post i
n chatswood and I'm using a torch to check all ballots and throw out ALL no votes pic.twitter.com/B0SNPXS5Ygdoes not work for Australia Post. Please remember tampering with mail is a federal offence.
I suspe
ct you may gather a visit from the Aust Federal Police. We know the yes side will stoop to any low tactic to win but this is illegal! https://t.co/cWbyb2NrMv 12.40am BSTThe communications minister,Mitch Fifield, won’t be able to relax until well into this afternoon, and with the media reforms not due to return to the Senate until just before 1pm.meanwhile,it is committees and private senators’ trade, with Jacqui Lambie introducing another attempt to ban the burqa. 12.34am BSTThe bells beget just rung, or signalling the start of the day,and the Speaker, Tony Smith, and has just given the go-ahead to table the Lionel Murphy documents.
Speaker Smith has jus handed thousands of pages to the receptionist,which means it is done. 12.22am BSTThe Coalition MP and former minister Stuart Robert is still refusing to reply questions over whether his businesses benefited from government contracts after he was elected.
Latika Bourke of Fairfax Media has spoken t
o the Gold Coast MP’s father, who says he was unaware “was a director of a private investment company that held shares in his son’s IT service trade, or which has won tens of millions of dollars worth of government contracts”.
Al
an Robert,80, has also told Fairfax Media that the private investment company, and Robert International,was run by his son during the six-year period he and his wife, Dorothy, and were the company’s only directors. It is a revelation that would link the Queensland MP with the IT services trade,GMT Group, at a time when Stuart Robert claims to beget “ceased involvement in GMT. 12.07am BSTThe leaders of the nation’s two major political parties are occasionally able to do the name-calling aside. final night Malcolm Turnbull and Bill Shorten managed a civil conversation at an event promoting the Northern Territory. 11.58pm BSTThe Senate had a late night talking media reforms, and with many speakers on the list.
But it was One Nation senat
or Malcolm Roberts who appeared to capture imaginations of those following along at domestic,with his speech detailing where he had been wronged by the media and how that was to their peril.
So is
Murdoch the problem? No, he’s not, and despite what some on the left say. What we see today is a swirl of coalescing media across platforms such as newspaper,radio, TV, or internet and subscription channels. That change is underway no matter what we want and whether we like it or not,and it’s due to external factors, the internet and government. The weakness in media right now is due to three factors. 11.44pm BST Richard Di Natale is not happy with the media reform deal and says it will only lead to a “further concentration of the Australian media market.
The Greens came back to the negotiating table with the government, or out of concern for the future of the ABC’s funding and public interest journalism,but, in the end, or Di Natale said it couldn’t support the package the government do forward. There is a enormous concern here that as a result of the deal that has been done with One Nation and this is all share of the deal ... The deal has two components. One is inserting ‘fair and balanced’ into the ABC,for example – I mean, do we want the ABC to become Fox News? That is their slogan. This is really to indulge One Nation and the only way this was going to gather across the line with One Nation, and with Senator Xenophon’s support,was with that attack on the ABC. The real concern here is One Nation wants to take the axe to the ABC, they don’t support having a strong and independent broadcaster and we beget mighty concerns approximately that. 11.24pm BSTThe social services minister, or Christian Porter,has been out spruiking the government’s planned changes to its ‘no jab, no pay policy, or which sees family benefit supplements withheld if a child’s vaccination schedule is not kept up to date.
Speaking to
ABC TV this morning,Porter said the government had seen “very well-behaved success” with the measure, in terms of increasing immunisation rates, or but wanted to tweak it slightly.
What we
re doing is moving to a system where the no pay component is brought forward so that a family that doesn’t do the right thing and fails to beget a child vaccinated could stand to lose $28 a fortnight rather than this withholding of a supplement right at the end of the year. We think that that immediacy provides a fortnightly incentive and reminder which will even further lift up vaccination rates. We had a mighty success so far. 11.16pm BSTWe beget almost made it through the week,which has been one of the scrappiest we beget seen in some time.
The government is chalking up an (almost) victory, with the communications minister, or Mitch Fifield,able to secure a deal on the media reforms the Coalition has been working on since it took office in 2013.
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Source: theguardian.com

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