Australia-China Huang Xiangmo Chinese lobbyist blocked communist party
(Image: AAP/Lukas Coch)

HUANG IN LIMBO

Chinese political lobbyist and former Sydney resident Huang Xiangmo has been left stranded overseas after his permanent residency was blocked and long-stalled citizenship request denied by Home Affairs. Peter Dutton’s department allegedly cited character grounds, reliability in interviews and correspondence with authorities including ASIO.

A Sydney Morning Herald/Age investigation has revealed that Huang, a prominent billionaire who has donated almost $2.7 million to both Labor and the Coalition and was at the heart of former senator Sam Dastyari’s downfall, is now fighting to get back to Sydney where he has lived with his family since 2011. The move to block Huang’s passport counts as the first Australian enforcement action against a suspected Chinese Communist Party influence agent, after the Coalition’s counter-interference campaign was launched last year.

NO SNAP

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has ruled out using the Coalition’s potentially historic loss over offshore medical transfer amendments as a trigger for a snap election. However, fresh legal analysis suggests Labor and the crossbench could bring forward Kerryn Phelps’ original bill without an absolute majority.

While Morrison dismissed Phelps’ bill as “stupid” in a Sky News interview last night and confirmed the election will be in May, The Guardian reports that constitutional law professor Anne Twomey has outlined a case where a simple majority of 75 MPs or fewer could change standing orders that require 76 MPs to bring private member’s bills to a vote.

ROBODEBT ON TRIAL

Victoria Legal Aid has filed papers in the Federal Court alleging that the Coalition’s $3.7 million robo-debt system is unlawful and should end because it “outsources” the onus of proof and forces welfare recipients to do Centrelink’s work in checking potential overpayments.

According to The Australian ($)VLA’s Rowan McRae has argued that the ­Social Security Act makes clear that Centrelink has to be able to demonstrate a debt exists before one is raised. Of the more than 280,000 potential debts raised with individuals since the program launched in 2016, about 50,000 have been reduced or wiped entirely in part due to errors.

[free_worm]

THEY REALLY SAID THAT?

I was saying it would be nice if one of the hearings could be on a day we are doing a roadshow. Then we could do a little protest, we could have our placards and we could walk down there.

Geoff Wilson

The Wilson Asset Management fund manager reportedly claims to have contacted Liberal MP, first-cousin-once-removed and Wilson Asset Management shareholder Tim Wilson about having the franking credits inquiry on a politically useful date.

CRIKEY QUICKIE: THE BEST OF YESTERDAY

Hayne can’t turn an ASIC watchpoodle into an attack dog

“The obvious change was to move the financial services consumer protection function to the ACCC from ASIC. The latter has operated more like an enabler of consumer rip-offs than the ‘tough cop on the beat’ Scott Morrison claimed it was when he ferociously insisted there was no need for a royal commission. But Hayne rejects the ACCC option. He says there will be transitional costs and disruption to enforcement in such a move, and that the function will be demanding wherever it sits.”


Don’t kid yourself. Labor can still mess this up.

“Bowen had already given the Coalition a moment, with a rare outbreak of political honesty — ‘well if people don’t like it, they don’t need to vote for us’ — on clawing back this free money giveaway to self-funded retirees, and now he was taking the high ground against the Coalition’s big fear. I can see the point of doing that, I can understand not starting the artillery barrage too early, etc etc, but nevertheless, I was having an ely, and that tinkling ely was saying “2016. 2016. Democracts. Democrats”.”


The ballad of Ken Henry

Dr Ken Henry, one of the most highly regarded public servants in Australia, an exemplar of public sector leadership during his time as treasury secretary, seems sure to end his career irrevocably tarred. Henry is singled out in Kenneth Hayne’s  financial services royal commission report, which concluded that the National Australia Bank under Henry was slow to act, and seemingly indifferent or unable to grasp the seriousness of the issues it encountered. To be singled out as worse than the other three big banks (knowing what we now know) is damning indeed.”

READ ALL ABOUT IT

Banking royal commission: Labor accuses PM of squibbing 14 on recommendations ($)

Banks in $20b boost as brokers bomb

NT Speaker blocks attempt to seize official opposition status from Country Liberal Party

Queensland subcontractors owed $500 million across 50 building company collapses since 2013 ($)

Scott Morrison offers $100 million for busy freeways in outer burbs

Cory Bernardi says marriage equality has led to ‘advocacy’ for bestiality

Environment Minister David Speirs’ handling of Murray water deal could be investigated by State Parliament ($)

CSIRO questions whether all Australia’s emissions cuts are real

Coalition energy plan “unworkable”, as Taylor charges into coal

‘Why did they put chains on me? I’m not an animal’: Hakeem al-Araibi speaks from prison

THE COMMENTARIAT

A quick $22 million profit for royal commission insider trading? — Michael Pascoe (The New Daily): “Last week Josh Frydenberg ‘guaranteed’ the royal commission’s final report would not leak while the government sat on it for three days. About $22 million says that guarantee wasn’t worth anything. The welter of news in Kenneth Hayne’s report has tended to overshadow what appears to be some rather obvious insider trading.”

Someone is pulling the indies’ strings … like to take a guess? ($) — Janet Albrechtsen (The Australian): “The way they spin their own story, with the help of some of the media, provides a local example of fake news. These fake indies, inten­t on unseating a handful of ­senior Liberals, may not be member­s of major parties but their script about climate change action and representing the sensible ­centre screams uniformity, not ­difference.”

Disgraceful treatment of subcontractors must stop ($) — Sam Weir (The Courier-Mail): “The Palaszczuk Government says the Financial and Cyber Crime Group is adequately resourced. Yet, since 2013, no charges have been laid over the collapse of major builders in Queensland, and nobody who has lodged fraud complaints has been formally interviewed before their matters were shunted off to ASIC.”

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The Latest Headlines

WHAT’S ON TODAY

Sydney

  • Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia Philip Lowe will address the National Press Club.

  • NSW Police Minister Troy Grant, Commissioner Mick Fuller, Opposition Leader Michael Daley and Police Association president Tony King will meet with and address 100 police officers in Bankstown.

  • World Vision Australia Chief Advocate Tim Costello will deliver the 2019 UNSW Annual Gandhi Memorial Oration.

Melbourne

  • Prime Minister Scott Morrison will announce $100 million in funding for two busy freeways.

  • Victoria’s first Animal Justice MP Andy Meddick and other new state MPs will deliver their maiden speeches to parliament.

  • The Climate Council will launch a new report finding that climate change is increasing the frequency and/or severity of extreme weather across Australia.

Brisbane

  • Queensland grazier Bruce Currie will deliver a GetUp petition with over 27,200 signatures calling on the state government to reject Adani’s plans to drain Queensland’s groundwater.

  • Executive Director of International and National Engagement at the Australian Space Agency Karl Rodrigues will deliver a keynote address at a French-Australian Chamber of Commerce aerospace event.

  • The Department of Housing and Public Works will host hearings as part of an inquiry into building industry fairness reforms.

Washington DC, USA

  • US President Donald Trump will deliver the delayed annual State of the Union address before Congress (expected to start at 13:00 AEST).