Ludlam plea to Coalition to debate Telstra bill

 

Slow progress.

Greens Senator Scott Ludlam has issued a plea to Coalition Senators this afternoon to "stop wasting time" that could be spent working through 20 pages of amendments to the Telstra split bill.

The plea came after another day of Coalition attempts to stifle committee debate on the bill.

The Government appeared to have the numbers to see the bill passed, but faced a battle to progress it to a point where it could be voted on.

Ludlam accused the leader of the opposition in the senate Eric Abetz of having "a pretty warped idea of scrutiny".

"All I'd ask on behalf of anybody listening in to the Senate today is we've got approximately 20 pages of amendments [to get through]," he said.

"Can we stop wasting time and get on with a substantive debate?"

The debate had been bogged down on just two amendments proposed by the Greens since yesterday.

Liberal Senator Ian Macdonald accused Ludlam of being "sanctimonius".

He claimed that the debate had moved slowly partially because Ludlam had left the chamber during one of Macdonald's speeches yesterday, allegedly not allowing Macdonald to get answers to questions he had.

"Yesterday he wasn't even here for the entirety of my speech and now [he's] leaving again," Macdonald said.

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Ludlam plea to Coalition to debate Telstra bill
"This morning's start to Senate Committee debate on amendments wasn't too flippant, I thought, and remarkably even the Greens stepped in to oppose the ACCC being compelled (rather than having ..."
By umbria
 
 
 
Comments: 2
noelpeters
Nov 25, 2010 5:11 PM
Why does parliament adjourn so early before the end of the year and for so long. Why can't politicians put in more hours if the situation requirs them to. I'm sure many Australian workers would like to be winding down and kicking back for Christmas now also.
umbria
Nov 26, 2010 11:51 AM
This morning's start to Senate Committee debate on amendments wasn't too flippant, I thought, and remarkably even the Greens stepped in to oppose the ACCC being compelled (rather than having discretion) to act against Telstra for minor procedural breaches during the separation and customer migration process.

It's revealing to look at the TLS share price over the past six months. It rose from $2.90 to $3.30 when Telstra signed the agreement with the NBN, i.e. announcing it was keen to become a retailer rather than digging up and repairing old copper forever. It fell straight after the election as Turnbull et al began his FUD campaign about the dire prospects for Telstra under the draconian NBN yoke. It hit $2.56 when the separation bill looked like being defeated last week. As the bill's prospects brightened, TLS has risen from 2.56 to 2.95, fully 15%, and will no doubt double by the time shareholders endorse David Thodey's future vision in mid-2011.

Now, can anyone tell me what TLS shares Malcolm Turnbull has been trading? Did he sell before he started talking the price down, then start buying last week, for instance? Messrs Thodey and Livingstone have substantially increased their personal holdings lately, realising that separation and no USO means a profitable future for Telstra.
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