Greens hobble proposed NBN sell-off

Nov 22, 2010 12:49 PM
Filed under Communications

Put to parliamentary vote.

The Greens have won concessions on the proposed sale of the NBN by the Government that will require a vote in parliament before it can proceed.

The breakthrough, revealed by the party's ICT spokesman Scott Ludlam on ABC AM this morning, meant the Government could now count on the Greens support to pass legislation currently before the Senate.

The proposed legislation would put in place a regulatory framework for the NBN and also structurally separate Telstra.

Debate was expected to resume later today.

"We've inserted a public interest test and we've made sure it would be submitted to a vote in parliament so that if a future government wants to privatise NBN... they'll be forced to prove whether or not it's in the public interest," Ludlam told ABC AM.

Within hours of the Greens deal, Communications Minister Stephen Conroy began pressuring Liberal and National Party Senators to allow passage of the bill.

"If the Liberals and Nationals are serious about improving competition in the telecommunications sector and delivering better services for their constituents, they need to support the bill," he said.

Without Coalition support, the Government would need to win over independents Nick Xenophon and Steve Fielding.

Fielding was the only independent known to have accepted a confidential briefing on the NBN Co business plan on the Government's terms, which included a non-disclosure agreement spanning seven years.

Other key independents had baulked at the condition. Xenophon told ABC AM that the non-disclosure period was now "two weeks" but that he still wouldn't accept a briefing.

Xenophon told the program he planned to meet with NBN Co chief Mike Quigley later today.

 
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Greens hobble proposed NBN sell-off
"This debacle like so many similar highlights to me how irrelevant Politicians and their Bankster puppet masters are becoming in a world that increasingly requires technology to overcome the ..."
 
 
 
 
Comments: 4
Francis
Nov 23, 2010 12:58 AM
I am totally in favour of the NBN but I am aghast at the secrecy of the detail and the manner in which it is being thrust down our throats by a power mad Minister.
While I loath the way the bitter and negative opposition are behaving (A legacy of John Winston Howard) I just pray that enough of the NBN is built before the next election that it can not be reversed and then I will vote for the other mob in the hope that they have enough talent to lift the veil of secrecy and build it properly.
I have no faith in Conboy or his heavy handed approach and will be glad to see the end of him.
gnome
Nov 23, 2010 1:54 PM

@Francis, not sure about your bitter JWH comment, given that it is the job of all oppositions to oppose. I warmly remember Paul Keating dealing with ANY opposition - unrepresentative swill, anyone?

More seriously, you're right about Conboy, but it would be a pity if the opposition confused his shifty ineptitude and love of censorship with the need to promptly pass the Telstra bill and get on with the NBN.
Francis
Nov 24, 2010 10:29 AM
@ gnome
Your first point, these people are in politics for the wrong reason, "EGO" instead of what politics should be, service to ones constituents.
Your second point I agree with. The biggest problem being this obsessive veil of secrecy and a lack of willingness to take on the concerns of others, some of whom may just happen to know a bit more a bout the nuts and bolts issues which could mean the difference between failure and success!

As a general wrap up. It is the job of Governments to Govern and the job of the Opposition to Oppose. But surely on important issues with merit, shouldn't they occasionally agree in the national interest?

Frankly Conboys obsession is running the risk of destroying this whole project and and probably the government as well and he should be roundly condemned for it.
pmc777
Nov 24, 2010 3:41 PM
This debacle like so many similar highlights to me how irrelevant Politicians and their Bankster puppet masters are becoming in a world that increasingly requires technology to overcome the problems of today and tomorrow.

The era of the tech head is nigh.
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