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<channel><title><![CDATA[Steve Bishop and The Most Dangerous Detective - NEWMAN CON TRICK AS MAJOR ELECTION PROMISE DITCHED]]></title><link><![CDATA[http://www.stevebishop.net/newman-con-trick-as-major-election-promise-ditched]]></link><description><![CDATA[NEWMAN CON TRICK AS MAJOR ELECTION PROMISE DITCHED]]></description><pubDate>Thu, 05 Mar 2026 05:40:44 +1000</pubDate><generator>Weebly</generator><item><title><![CDATA[NEWMAN CON TRICK AS MAJOR ELECTION PROMISE DITCHED]]></title><link><![CDATA[http://www.stevebishop.net/newman-con-trick-as-major-election-promise-ditched/-newman-con-trick-as-major-election-promise-ditched]]></link><comments><![CDATA[http://www.stevebishop.net/newman-con-trick-as-major-election-promise-ditched/-newman-con-trick-as-major-election-promise-ditched#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Mon, 27 May 2013 05:50:48 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.stevebishop.net/newman-con-trick-as-major-election-promise-ditched/-newman-con-trick-as-major-election-promise-ditched</guid><description><![CDATA[Campbell Newman is conning The&nbsp;Courier-Mail and the Brisbane Times &ndash; and their readers &ndash; with the budgetary&nbsp;equivalent of the pea and thimble trick.&nbsp; The story that should have led&nbsp;both media today was the Liberal-National State Government had broken one of the&nbsp;five major promises which helped it win a landslide majority in&nbsp;2012.&nbsp; Instead &ndash; and all journalists&nbsp;should gag at this &ndash; the single-column &ldquo;exclusive&rdquo;story on pa [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;"><font size="5"><br /><span></span><br /><span></span><font color="#000000">Campbell Newman is conning The&nbsp;Courier-Mail and the Brisbane Times &ndash; and their readers &ndash; with the budgetary&nbsp;equivalent of the pea and thimble trick.<br />&nbsp;<br /> The story that should have led&nbsp;both media today was the Liberal-National State Government had broken one of the&nbsp;five major promises which helped it win a landslide majority in&nbsp;2012.<br />&nbsp;<br /> Instead &ndash; and all journalists&nbsp;should gag at this &ndash; the single-column &ldquo;exclusive&rdquo;story on page one of The&nbsp;Courier-Mail started with the statement that:&nbsp;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"Households will not be forced&nbsp;to pay a levy to fund flood-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;proofing infrastructure after the Newman Government&nbsp;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ditched the plan during final Budget&nbsp;deliberations.&rdquo;<br /><span></span><br />Only then is it mentioned that the Government has&nbsp;scrapped plans for a rebate on electricity bills &ndash; which would have delivered on&nbsp;a key election promise.<br /><span></span><br />The fact is that householders were never going to be&nbsp;hit with such a levy.<br /><span></span><br />For months the Liberal-National Queensland&nbsp;Government has known that it would be unable to deliver on one of its core <br /> election promises.<br />&nbsp;<br /> The second of five major promises to persuade voters&nbsp;to elect a Liberal-National Government was:&nbsp;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;We will freeze family car rego for the first term&nbsp;of an LNP Government, reduce water prices and reform electricity tariffs to save&nbsp;families up to $330 a year.&rdquo;<br /><span></span><br />Note that this saving of was not going to be a&nbsp;one-off reduction.&nbsp;<br /><span></span><br /> The promise was to save families up to $330 every&nbsp;year.&nbsp;<br />&nbsp;<br /> And it wasn&rsquo;t going to be a matter of funding the&nbsp;reduction in electricity prices from the budget (as the Government is saying <br /> now). The saving would be made possible by &ldquo;reforming electricity&nbsp;tariffs&rdquo;.<br /><span></span><br />The&nbsp;Premier told Parliament at the end of March that about 1,238,000 customers had saved an average of $120 on their <br /> electricity costs, after Tariff 11 was frozen for 12&nbsp;months.<br /><span></span><br />Again, note that this freeze&nbsp;was only for a year.<br /><span></span><br />But Queensland Competition&nbsp;Authority says that far from saving money, any household using more than around&nbsp;6,500 kilowatt hours a year has been worse off on the frozen Tariff 11 than it <br /> would have been without it.<br /><span></span><br />And the Australian Energy&nbsp;Regulator&rsquo;s official figures show that an average household of three &ndash; let alone&nbsp;four &ndash; uses more than 6,500 kilowatt hours a year, which casts doubt on the&nbsp;Premier&rsquo;s figures.<br /><span></span><br />It wasn&rsquo;t even a reform of the&nbsp;tariff that led to this mess &ndash; it was an unsustainable and costly temporary&nbsp;slashing.<br /><span></span><br />Now, the projected electricity&nbsp;bill for a family with two parents and two children is likely to rise by $328 in&nbsp;the next financial year, says the competition authority. That&rsquo;s a 20 per cent&nbsp;increase.<br /><span></span><br />Ironic, isn&rsquo;t it, that the&nbsp;rise in price is almost exactly the same as the saving promised by the Libs and&nbsp;Nats.<br />&nbsp;<br /> Worse, because of a quirk in&nbsp;the system, a &ldquo;frugal, single, elderly&rdquo; person is faced with an increase of&nbsp;26%.<br /><span></span><br />Worse again, this is only the start of increases&nbsp;because the Newman Government has refused to let prices return to &ldquo;normal&rdquo; <br /> immediately. The recovery from the single year&rsquo;s price freeze for tariff 11&nbsp;residential customers will result in two more price&nbsp;rises.<br /><span></span><br />State Treasurer Tim Nicholls says a rebate to keep electricity prices down would have cost up to $600 million over two&nbsp;years.<br /><span></span><br />OK &ndash; I know that the promise included the words &ldquo;up&nbsp;to&rdquo; $330 a year but I suggest that voters were expecting a saving of that order.&nbsp;<br /><span></span><br /> And there was nothing to suggest that it was going to be massively&nbsp;less.<br /><span></span><br />There were warnings at election time that the&nbsp;Government had made ridiculous promises which it would be unable to afford.&nbsp;<br />&nbsp;<br /><span></span> Unfortunately, many people were gullible enough to&nbsp;believe Campbell Newman&rsquo;s wild&nbsp;promises.<br /><span></span><br />The Government has already&nbsp;announced it would break another core promise, to raise the tax-free threshold&nbsp;for payroll tax, which was due to start on July&nbsp;1.<br />&nbsp;<br /> </font></font><font color="#000000" size="5">And it has broken a second core promise, by failing to reach a fiscal&nbsp;surplus in two years.<br /><span></span><br />There would have been a degree of panic in the&nbsp;Government&rsquo;s inner sanctum. How to break the news to the public that it couldn&rsquo;t&nbsp;deliver on a third core promise?<br /><span></span><br />What has to be remembered is that government budgets&nbsp;are not fashioned in a few weeks. Budgetary planning starts immediately after&nbsp;one has been delivered. It would have been apparent months ago that the promise&nbsp;to cut electricity bills by tariff reform and deliver savings of up to $330 a&nbsp;year could not be met.&nbsp;<br /><span></span><br /> How could it manage the&nbsp;news?<br /><span></span><br />It would need to suggest that the public was gaining something else &ndash; but what, bearing in mind the deteriorating financial<br />situation which the State Government has added to with its disastrous&nbsp;policies?<br /><span></span><br />It had to create the myth of a major new tax which&nbsp;it could then announce triumphantly it would not go ahead&nbsp;with.<br /><span></span><br />That&rsquo;s why, less than a fortnight ago, the&nbsp;Government told The Courier-Mail it was considering a levy to flood-proof the <br /> rebuilding of infrastructure damaged by&nbsp;flooding.<br /><span></span><br />By then the budget (with its damaging news of the&nbsp;scrapping of the savings of up to $330 a year) would have been&nbsp;finalised.<br /><span></span><br />Campbell Newman was promising a dialogue with the&nbsp;people of Queensland about the possibility of the rebuilding levy. Some <br /> conversation. It&rsquo;s over in less than a&nbsp;fortnight.<br /><span></span><br /><span></span>But, then again, in reality there never was going to be such a debate.<br /><span></span><br />And last night the State&nbsp;Government played its pea and thimble trick on The Courier-Mail.&nbsp;<br />&nbsp;<br /> The newspaper even advertised the&nbsp;story as an exclusive, as if it had uncovered the news after extensive&nbsp;journalistic effort. In fact, it was almost certainly a&nbsp;handout.<br /><span></span><br />There&rsquo;s no mention in the story of the failure of the Government to&nbsp;deliver on its promise of savings of up to $330 a&nbsp;year.</font></div>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>