Extract from ABC News website:
Updated
The major parties are headed for a Senate stalemate
on the future of the carbon tax, provoking the likelihood the Government
will need to call a double dissolution election to scrap the tax by the
July deadline.
After a meeting today, Labor leader Bill Shorten
said his frontbench had unanimously voted to oppose the Federal
Government's existing plans to repeal the carbon price, unless it
included a move to an Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS).This is at odds with the Federal Government's long-held plans to replace the carbon price with its Direct Action policy that does not link to overseas emissions reduction schemes.
Mr Shorten says he is confident the Labor Caucus will endorse his position.
"We believe the best, most cost-effective way to deal with carbon pollution is through an Emissions Trading Scheme," he said.
"If our amendments are not successful, we will oppose the Government's repeal legislation in line with our long-held principle position to act on climate change."
Mr Shorten says Labor does not have any faith that there is credible science behind the Coalition's Direct Action policy.
Analysis
- The carbon pricing argument is critical to Bill Shorten's survival as Labor leader, writes Barrie Cassidy.
- ABC Fact Check says the Coalition is in the ballpark on household savings from axing the carbon tax
"No credible expert argues that the Coalition's Direct Action policies will work; instead they are Tony Abbott's policies to pay taxpayer money to big polluters," he said.
The Government has repeatedly used Labor's opposition to the repeal legislation as a political tool and it wants to push the bills through parliament this year.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott believes ditching the tax will save households $550 per year and he has accused Labor of choosing to withhold that money.
Mr Abbott also says the outcome of this year's federal election has given the Coalition a strong mandate to implement its election promises and he has taunted Mr Shorten directly, labelling him 'Bill-shock Shorten' and 'Electricity Bill'.
But Mr Shorten says Labor will not be swayed.
"Labor will never be a rubber stamp for Tony Abbott," he said.
"What we won't do is mortgage our children's future, what we won't do is ignore the best science available just to keep Tony Abbott happy."
Environment Minister Greg Hunt accused Mr Shorten of "not caring about the result of the election".
"We will not stop until the carbon tax is repealed," he said.
"Bill Shorten is voting to keep the carbon tax but he doesn't have the courage to say so."
The detail of Labor's amendments will be made public before Parliament sits in less than two weeks.
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[Environment Minister Greg Hunt says and I quote, "not caring about the result of the election". If the Australian Government during the Second World War did not enact the special war powers, we might have lost the war. As than and as now we have a war to fight of a different kind, a fight against Climate Change and going on the best available Scientific information putting a price on Carbon is the way to go and not the Abbott Governments direct action "greenwashing" policy.]
The Worker
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