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Former Prime Minister Held Fake Meetings To Stop Leaks

Courtesy of Phillip Coorey via news.com.au

Former finance minister, Lindsay Tanner, was ostracised by the now notorious leadership methods of Kevin Rudd. Phillip Coorey explains.

KEVIN RUDD and his senior ministers were so suspicious of Lindsay Tanner that they used to hold fake pre-budget meetings to ensure their plans did not leak.

According to accounts of the meetings of the now abandoned Strategic Priorities and Budget Committee, nicknamed the gang of four, some meetings with Mr Tanner would deliberately be light on detail. After the meeting concluded and the then finance minister had left, the other three members of the committee – Mr Rudd, Julia Gillard and Wayne Swan – would reconvene and discuss their budget plans in detail.

Departmental sources said the tactic was motivated by a suspicion that Mr Tanner was behind the leaking of budget stories early in the first term of the Rudd government.

Lindsay Tanner ... sidelined.

There was no evidence Mr Tanner ever leaked anything, but the mistrust displayed towards him explains the tensions between him and his senior colleagues during the first term of the Labor government.

Mr Tanner, who retired from politics at the last election, did not return calls yesterday.

It was generally known in politics that Mr Tanner, who was well regarded for his political and financial prowess, was often frustrated during the first term at the lack of will to cut spending and take hard and unpopular decisions. He was the only member of the gang of four who argued against the shelving of the emissions trading scheme, a decision that destroyed Mr Rudd’s credibility and led to his demise as prime minister and almost the collapse of the Labor government.

He desired the job of treasurer but was always going to be blocked by Mr Swan.

It has already been documented that Mr Tanner was shut out of the process on some other big decisions such as the second stimulus package. He was consulted about the first version of the mining tax, which was scrapped following an outcry by miners and redesigned.

The revelation that he had been the victim of fake pre-budget meetings will only further sully the reputation of the management style of the Rudd government, which was deemed autocratic. Sources said Mr Tanner must have known that he was being conspired against with the fake meetings because he would have been informed by his department about budget decisions of which he was supposed to be aware.

Mr Tanner, who is writing a book, spoke to a business gathering in Sydney last week and asked that it be kept closed to the media.


"Crito, we owe a rooster to Asclepius. Please, don’t forget to pay the debt."

Greece is having a Patriot Act moment, drafting legislation that would break down privacy laws and significantly increase police power. But their catalyst is debt, not terrorism.

Draft legislation obtained by The Katimerini would create government agencies to regulate tax evasion, entitlement issues and use of public property. Police officers in these departments would have unprecedented power to eavesdrop on suspects’ conversations and communications and to disguise their identity in pursuit of a suspect.

This would be a major change for a country known for strict privacy laws, according to The Katimerini. (more) (sing-a-long) (Socratic drink)


Are whack jobs bugging our Hollywood Actors?

Actor Randy Quaid (aka General George S. Merlin, “Bug Buster”) and his wife, Evi… were in Canada seeking political asylum over their stated fears they would be “whacked” if they returned to Hollywood… they fled to Canada to escape the so-called “star whackers” – a cult that is bugging their phones and hacking their computers.

“They’re absolute businessmen. It’s the mafia; it’s organized crime,” said Mrs. Quaid… The couple has said this “mafia” is behind eight celebrity, including Heath Ledger, deaths in the last 5 years. (more) (trailer)


Don’t tell Mrs. Quaid. It will just upset her.

John McTiernan, director of the movie “Die Hard,” was sentenced to one year in prison for lying about his association with a private investigator, Anthony Pellicano, to illegally wiretap a movie producer. (more)


Hoist by a Voicemail Petard

Employees at a CBS affiliate in Anchorage left an accidental voicemail for an aide to GOP Senate candidate Joe Miller in which they discussed and laughed about the possibility of reporting on the appearance of sex offenders at a Miller rally. And they chatted about responding with a Twitter alert to “any sort of chaos whatsoever” including the candidate being “punched.”
 
Jerry Bever, general manager for KTVA, said in a statement that a call to Miller spokesman Randy DeSoto to discuss the candidate’s planned appearance on a newscast wasn’t disconnected after the conversation ended. The call took place during a KTVA staff meeting to plan coverage of that evening’s Miller rally in downtown Anchorage. (more)