Good morning, early birds. Democrats have filed two articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump, and a Liberal MP has admitted climate change is to blame for the nation’s unprecedented bushfires. It’s the news you need to know, with Rachel Withers. | | | | TRUMPED? Democrats have unveiled articles of impeachment against US President Donald Trump, setting the stage for him to be impeached by the House of Representatives next week. House judiciary chair Jerry Nadler, speaker Nancy Pelosi, intelligence chair Adam Schiff and other members of the Democratic leadership team have announced two articles of impeachment against Trump, one accusing him of abusing his presidential power and the other of obstructing Congress’s attempts to investigate his dealings with Ukraine. Leaders decided against including a third article relating to obstruction of justice based on special counsel Robert Mueller’s report into Russian election interference. Trump is likely to become the third president in US history to be impeached, although he is unlikely to be convicted and removed from office by the Senate. | YOU THINK? NSW Environment Minister Matt Kean says “this is not normal” as smoke-covered Sydney’s air quality reaches levels 11 times worse than “hazardous”. Buildings across Sydney are being regularly evacuated as fire alarms are triggered at random, while face masks have become a regular feature on the streets. Speaking at the Smart Energy Summit in Sydney, Kean said “no one can deny” that climate change is to blame for the conditions, saying it is “exactly what the scientists have warned us would happen”. Energy Minister Angus Taylor has addressed the UN Climate Change conference in Madrid, claiming Australia is backing an “unprecedented wave of clean energy investment” ($), while trade analyst Hervé Lemahieu warns Australia’s reputation and relationship with the EU is being damaged by the perception it’s “weaselling out” of its climate commitments. | CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTION LIMITED A second draft of the religious discrimination bill has been released with tightened conscientious objection rules, Nine reports. The government has defined “conscientious objection”, making it clear health workers will not have the right to discriminate against patients based on gender, sexuality or other characteristics, and limiting the protection to nurses, midwives, doctors, psychologists and pharmacists. Conscientious objectors must also be consistent in their denial of service, ensuring they object “to a procedure, not a person”. Religious charities will now also be able to hire staff based on their faith. Consultation is open until the end of January, with the government hoping to introduce the bill early next year. Meanwhile, head of Australia’s royal commission into child sex abuse Justice Peter McClellan has spoken publicly for the first time, condemning Catholic leaders for failing to recognise the sexual assault of children as a crime. | WE’RE CHUFFED YOU’VE MADE THE WORM A PART OF YOUR DAY But that’s just the start at Crikey HQ. By the time you’ve caught the Worm, we’re already working on our flagship newsletter, The Daily. It’s where our insights, analysis and the latest Inq stories live. Then on Wednesdays, our readers look forward to Side View, Bernard Keane’s curated guide to what’s new and overlooked, and we wrap it up all Saturday mornings with the Weekender. All of it is reader-funded, and that’s why your support matters. Join today and save $40 on an annual Crikey membership when you use the promocode CRIKEY2020. | |
| THEY REALLY SAID THAT? “ | Obviously I look a plonker now. I was a smart alec — too clever by half. — Jonathan Ashworth |
UK Labour’s shadow health minister admits he is a plonker, following an embarrassing leaked recording of him telling a friend why his party would lose. | READ ALL ABOUT IT | CRIKEY QUICKIE: THE BEST OF YESTERDAY | | “Amidst a shocking drought, we should be celebrating the remarkable productivity of Australian agriculture, and the key role water trading has played in it. At a time when even the government admits that Australia’s productivity has slumped on its watch, we could be learning from one of our great productivity success stories — or realising that maybe productivity is not all it’s cracked up to be if you look at it from a different perspective.” |
| | “We don’t know for sure that the methamphetamine that’s sold and bought in Australian cities and towns has its provenance in Mexico, and we certainly don’t know the intended destination of the meth made in News Corp’s jungle lab. The News Corp story actually makes this pretty clear: its authoritative map of how meth may or may not travel from Sinaloa to Sydney suggests that the drug arrives via three ports on three different continents. For a monstrous mixture that is apparently being specifically sent to ‘target Australia’, the aim of this dangerous enemy seems… rather wide.” |
| | | | | Know an early bird who doesn’t get the worm? Show them what they’re missing and share this email with a friend and let them know they can get a free trial here. |
| | THE COMMENTARIAT Scott Morrison is fiddling as Australia burns – Katharine Murphy (The Guardian) “Ultimately, we get the politics we deserve. The obfuscation, the false comfort, the changing of the subject, the head-patting, will keep happening as long as we let it. It will keep happening as long as soft and hard denialism is enabled in mainstream media outlets, as long as journalists prioritise other lines of inquiry over rigorously pursuing accountability on this issue, and as long as Australian voters abdicate responsibility by telling themselves all political parties are as bad as each other so it doesn’t matter who you vote for. The only way things will change is if we choose, as a country, to do something else. To take responsibility. To demand something better. Because, ultimately, this, the future, is on us.” The mystery of the missing tax refunds – Shane Wright (The Age/Sydney Morning Herald): “The world is full of mysteries. Why did the crew of the Mary Celeste abandon the ship? Do big cats reside in parts of Victoria and NSW? What do people see in the music of Nickelback? And here’s another one — what’s become of the tax refunds deposited in the bank accounts of millions of Australians since the start of the new financial year? The low- and middle-income tax offset, the centrepiece of the Josh Frydenberg’s first budget, promised people earning between $50,000 and almost $90,000 tax relief worth $1080. Millions of others would also get some respite.” Who listens to the radio? Far too few in the Pacific ($) – Annmaree O’Keeffe (The Australian): “The aid budget has hit a record high, defence engagement has been enhanced and diplomatic posts are being opened in the Cook Islands, French Polynesia, Niue, Palau and Marshall Islands. But Australia’s well-respected broadcasting voice into the region, Radio Australia, has been stepped down. While the government acknowledges that Australia’s future is deeply intertwined with the Pacific, it has failed to include in its tools of engagement its international public broadcaster, which for 80 years has been Australia’s looked-to voice of credible news and information.” | HOLD THE FRONT PAGE | WHAT’S ON TODAY Canberra Witness K lawyer Bernard Collaery is due to appear before the ACT Supreme Court. Communications Minister Paul Fletcher will address the National Press Club on keeping Australians safe online and the role of the eSafety commissioner. Melbourne The Lawyer X informer royal commission will hear evidence from Victoria Police chief commissioner Graham Ashton. Sydney The Sydney is Choking Climate Emergency rally will protest government inaction. Emergency service, insurance, local government and union officials will be among those appearing at a public hearing into flammable cladding on NSW buildings. A number of unions will attend a global rally protesting the horrific killing and arrest of trade union leaders in the Philippines. Griffith, New South Wales A public hearing will be held into the management and execution of the Murray Darling Basin plan. Brisbane John Shipton, the father of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, will hold a press conference. Climate protesters will shut down the Go Between toll bridge, dressed in red and orange to symbolise the fires that are uncontrollably burning across the continent. Emerald, Queensland Labor leader Anthony Albanese will continue his tour of regional Queensland with a visit to the Ensham coal mine. Darwin The alleged Darwin mass shooter will face court. Israel An Israeli court will assess whether former Melbourne school principal Malka Leifer is mentally fit to face an extradition trial on child sex abuse charges. |
| | | COPYRIGHT © 2019 PRIVATE MEDIA OPERATIONS PTY LTD, PUBLISHERS OF CRIKEY. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. |
|