Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Saturday, 4 November 2017
Palaszczuk says she will veto federal Adani loan as she accuses LNP of 'smear'
Queensland premier says the LNP ‘intends to smear me and my partner’
over his work for PwC on Adani’s application for funding through
Northern Australia Infrastructure Facility
Annastacia Palaszczuk, campaigning with deputy premier Jackie Trad on
Friday. The Queensland premier has accused the LNP of intending to smear
her.
Photograph: Darren England/AAP
The Queensland government will veto Adani’s application for a $1bn
commonwealth loan to build a rail line for its massive Carmichael mine, Annastacia Palaszczuk has said.
Palaszczuk said the dramatic move, amid her campaign for re-election,
came in response to what she believed was a federal Coalition plan to
“smear” her and her partner, Shaun Drabsch, over his role in Adani’s
loan application to the Northern Australia Infrastructure Facility
(Naif).
As the government is in caretaker mode, any move to veto the loan would need bipartisan support.
The move will be a heavy blow to the Indian mining giant’s attempt to win finance in China for the controversial coalmine, but puts the state Labor government on the right side of opinion polls on the issue.
Palaszczuk has accused some in the federal government of breaching
commercial in confidence obligations around Naif to try to sabotage her
campaign.
But the upshot of the rumours is that Palaszczuk has discovered she
unwittingly had a perceived conflict of interest because her partner
worked on an Adani loan bid her government may have been asked to sign
off on.
Palaszczuk said she learned on Tuesday of “a rumour circulating among
LNP senators” about Drabsch’s work as managing partner for PwC, which
helped Adani with its Naif loan application.
“I am told they planned to use this during the election campaign to
impugn my character and suggest something untoward,” she said.
Drabsch was involved in PwC’s work for Adani and its bid for the
federal loan but she did not know this until after the rumour arose this
week, Palaszczuk said.
Palaszczuk sought the advice of the Queensland
integrity commissioner, who told her “a reasonable member of the
public, properly informed” would perceive she now had a conflict of
interest.
Palaszczuk said she now wanted to “remove doubt about any perception
of conflict” by notifying the prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull, that “my
government will exercise its ‘veto’ to not support the Naif loan”.
The premier said she had kept a 2015 election promise that “not one
cent of taxpayers’ money would go to this company” and stopped the
former LNP government “gifting $500m of taxpayers’ money to Adani”
through a state loan for its Carmichael rail line.
Fact v fiction: Adani's Carmichael coal mine – video explainer
Palaszczuk said her announcement on Friday in Brisbane would be the
first Adani was hearing of her decision. She will ask LNP leader Tim
Nicholls to endorse her decision.
If
Nicholls refuses, the issue of enabling federal financing for Adani
will likely become the decisive dividing issue for Labor and LNP in the
Queensland campaign until polling day on 25 November.
Labor strategists believe voters in regional Queensland who support
the mine - and whom the party needs to win over to retain power - will
not feel so strongly about taxpayer support being withdrawn.
“In terms of the project itself, Adani representatives have been on
the public record numerous times indicating that they do not need Naif
to proceed with this project,” Palaszczuk said.
“Malcolm Turnbull can still give taxpayers’ money to Adani if he
wants to, but I won’t stand for his LNP operatives trying to smear my
good name.”
Palaszczuk said she still supported the project and jobs for
north Queensland but “I do acknowledge many Queenslanders have concerns
about the potential for the federal government providing a loan to
Adani”.
She released the integrity commissioner’s advice, which said it could
be perceived that Palaszczuk “may personally benefit” from influencing
decisions in favour of Drabsch or against rival Naif contenders.
The integrity commissioner, Nikola Stepanov, told Palaszczuk her
conflict arose through her role in the government’s Cabinet Budget
Review Committee (CBRC) – the state’s “approving authority” to execute
Naif loans – and Drabsch’s business dealings.
The premier’s move to veto the loan goes well beyond the strongly
“preferred option” recommended by Stepanov – that Palaszczuk declare a
conflict of interest and exclude herself from CBRC discussions and
decisions on Naif projects.
Palaszczuk also released letters in 2015 showing the integrity
commissioner raised no concerns about her ethical position when Drabsch
joined PWC to advise on infrastructure projects at a federal but not
state level.
Palaszczuk
said Drabsch had kept his work on the Adani application from May 2016 a
secret from her under his “commercial-in-confidence” obligations.
“Shaun has always told me he’s worked at PwC, working on infrastructure, and that is it,” she said.
The only people who knew were PwC and Naif, and of course the Naif reports to the federal government,” Palaszczuk said.
“I understand LNP senators were seeking to use this as a smear against me in the middle of an election campaign.”
Palaszczuk’s chief of staff David Barbagallo told her on Tuesday that
he had, after becoming aware of “rumours being circulated by LNP
senators in Canberra”, confirmed that Drabsch worked on the Adani bid.
Palaszczuk said the LNP senators “obviously” sought to “break that
commercial in confidence” around Drabsch, saying the extent of knowledge
about this was a matter for both Turnbull and Nicholls to address.
“What does that say about the federal government when they are
breaching commercial in confidence arrangements between a company and
the federal government?”
Efforts to discredit her would involve “trying to allege there was a
massive conflict of interest and seeking to tear down my position as
premier of this state and tear down my integrity and honesty”, she said.
“I’m putting on the record every step I have taken and to put beyond any doubt about this, we will veto that loan.
“I entered politics to make a change, I actually want to make a change to people’s lives, not to be smeared at.
“And this sort of level of politics, I think the public find truly and utterly disgusting, as I do.”
The Guardian has been told the state Labor government was first
warned by federal colleagues weeks ago that the LNP planned to raise in
federal parliament allegations about a conflict of interest involving a
Queensland minister. It was not clear at the time this was Palaszczuk.
The
Queensland government does not assess Naif loans but can veto them by
objecting at both a project’s “due diligence” and “investment decision
and execution” stages.
Labor was first pressed on its veto power over the Adani loan when
activists and others, including Greens Maiwar candidate and
environmental lawyer Michael Berkman, raised it earlier this year.
The state government had previously refused to contemplate its veto
power. Strategists within Labor judged that - even while polls show a
majority in the state and nationwide oppose Adani receiving the
government loan – supporting the project was a critical step to
retaining marginal seats in regional Queensland, especially Townsville.
No comments:
Post a Comment