‘Union boss Premier has lost control’: Tarzia attacks Mali in fiery debut
Opposition Leader Vincent Tarzia has targeted his rival over the militant CFMEU during his debut parliamentary performance.
Stories about the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union
Opposition Leader Vincent Tarzia has targeted his rival over the militant CFMEU during his debut parliamentary performance.
There were wild scenes on the streets of multiple cities as thousands of protesters supporting the embattled CFMEU chanted “f**k Albo” and “hands off our union”.
Thousands of CFMEU members stormed Brisbane’s CBD, carrying anti-government messages and vowing to fight back in a mass rally on Tuesday.
A cartoon depicting Anthony Albanese as Hitler with the tagline “Albanazi” has been shared by CFMEU protest supporters online, sparking outrage and prompting calls for a police investigation.
The Premier is demanding CFMEU members who stormed a Brisbane CBD building apologise to public servants, labelling the protest as “disgraceful”.
The estranged wife of John Setka has been sent an appalling, abusive letter accusing her of making up lies about the controversial union boss.
Public servants were put at risk, events cancelled and a government building forced into lock down after hundreds of militant construction union members stormed a CBD building.
Completing the North-South Corridor and new WCH could blow out by $315m, the Opposition says, after a union takeover. But the government says they’ve got a critical fact wrong.
Michaelia Cash argues the abolition of the Australian Building and Construction Commission will be a disaster, but John Setka says the body has been a failure from day one.
Construction giants working on the West Gate Tunnel are facing unprecedented legal action over claims they dumped staff who weren’t CFMEU members.
Accused of betrayal by the militant CFMEU, Premier Peter Malinauskas has a tricky tightrope to walk, Paul Starick writes.
Premier Peter Malinauskas’ move to stand up to the CFMEU by handing back a controversial $125,000 donation has sparked fierce backlash from union bosses.
Peter Malinauskas’s political antenna has failed him dismally for the first time as Premier. Paul Starick explains why.
The Labor leader says a $125,000 boost to his party’s election war chest will be paid back or donated, as he labelled vandalism attacks on the cars of construction workers “criminal”.
Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/topics/cfmeu/page/51