Extract from ABC News Website:
Updated
Opposition Leader Tony Abbott has warned the Labor
Party it would be "committing suicide twice" if it tried to block his
efforts to repeal the carbon tax.
Labor says it will not "cave in"
to the Coalition's moves to replace the tax with its Direct Action
policy if Mr Abbott wins Saturday's poll, adding currency to the
Opposition Leader's threat to hold a double dissolution election next
year.Mr Abbott is standing firm, again indicating that he will retain the option of calling a double dissolution election on the issue.
"A Labor Party which persists in support of the carbon tax is just setting itself up to lose not one election but two," he said.
Key points
- Tony Abbott says Labor would lose a double dissolution if it blocks repeal of carbon tax
- Mr Abbott reiterates view that election is 'referendum' on the issue
- Labor's Mark Butler says party will not 'cave in' to Coalition demands
- Labor says Direct Action policy 'a complete dud'
- Greens pledge to hold both major parties to account
He added that "no sane political party" would stand by a tax that had become such "electoral poison".
"If the Coalition wins the election on Saturday, the carbon tax will go," he said.
"No ifs, no buts, it is gone.
"We will do whatever is necessary to abolish the carbon tax.
"I tell you this, if we win the election, which is a referendum on the carbon tax, the last thing the Labor Party will do is commit political suicide twice by continuing to support this absolutely toxic tax."
But Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has said "absolutely" carbon pricing is an article of faith for the ALP. "Carbon pricing is fundamental to how you deal with climate change," he said.
"Any alternative response to that is just intellectually dishonest."
Mark Butler says Labor won't cave in on carbon tax
Earlier, Environment Minister Mark Butler said Labor would maintain its long-held support for an emissions trading scheme and would not support Direct Action."This mandate argument that says that if you lose an election, hypothetically, you junk all of your long standing policy positions and simply cave in to the government of the day is an utter fallacy," he told Radio National Breakfast.
"It's never been that way, and frankly it never should.
"Why have an opposition if you're not going to have opposition MPs argue strongly for policy platforms that you took to the election?
"And if we happen to lose on Saturday that is what the Labor party will be doing on climate change, and on industrial relations and on a range of other core policy positions that we've had for years."
Labor seizes on Tony Abbott's Direct Action comments
Yesterday, in his National Press Club speech, Mr Abbott conceded the Opposition Direct Action policy may not succeed in cutting greenhouse gas emissions by the stated aim of five per cent by 2020.He said a Coalition government would not spend more than what has been budgeted, which on its 2010 document was $3.2 billion over four years.
"We will get as much environmental improvement as much emissions reduction for the spending that we've budgeted," he said.
Labor says it has shown up the policy for what it really is.
"The Direct Action policy is a complete dud," Mr Butler told RN.
"Experts have now been saying for months that the only way Tony Abbott could actually achieve the sort of reduction in carbon pollution he's signed up to is by spending literally billions and billions more than he's budgeted."
* * *
Great stuff Labor stand firm, it is the right thing to do, the emissions trading scheme is one of the only ways that we know of to reduce the effects of Climate Change, in Abbotts mind he still thinks the Earth is flat!
James Hansen explains Climate Change and the Solution:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nM5-recP7-E
The Worker
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