Long white cloud hangs over Giles’ visa policy
Andrew Giles shelved a plan to tighten visa rules that would help ensure foreign-born criminals who terrorised family members were kicked out.
Andrew Giles shelved a plan to tighten visa rules that would help ensure foreign-born criminals who terrorised family members were kicked out.
The Immigration Minister was warned months after Labor was elected that up to 2800 cases could be impacted by its decision to soften section 501 visa cancellations.
While Andrew Giles’s mismanagement of his brief may well warrant a ministerial scalp, the PM himself has now been drawn into the orbit of this cascading disaster.
Parliament’s newest Liberal MP, Simon Kennedy, has accused corporate Australia of using its power to ‘tell individuals and families how or what to think’ and crush small business.
Middle Australia may hear the outrage but doesn’t necessarily share it. Instinctively even the PM must know that the more Labor talks about migration, the potential for it to get worse only increases.
As a signatory to the Rome Statute that established the ICC, Australia would be obliged to arrest the Israeli prime minister. Does Anthony Albanese seriously believe this is a defensible position to hold?
The former prime minister calls on the party to withdraw completely from local government while demanding leaders stamp out rampant factionalism.
Angus Taylor says Labor’s spending was now out of control and only adding to the cost of living crisis. In nominal terms, factoring inflation in, spending is more than double the growth rate of the economy.
The AEMO report highlights the desperation creeping into the government camp on the issue of energy reliability.
The increasingly likely outcome of the next election is that neither Anthony Albanese nor Peter Dutton can win it outright.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/simon-benson/page/28