Liberal party rhetoric shown to be the pack of lies it has always been.
Abbott shouldn't complain about a carbon tax delayBy Mungo MacCallum
Mon 11 Nov 2013
Life turns out to be not as simple as Tony Abbott's slogans.
Prices were never going to plummet in the absence of a carbon tax, so the longer its scrapping is delayed, the longer this reality is kept hidden, writes Mungo MacCallum.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott and his ministers are having great fun lambasting Labor's decision to continue to oppose the repeal of the carbon tax unless it is replaced with an emissions trading scheme, as Kevin Rudd proposed before the last election.
It is, they claim, a travesty of democracy, denying the government's mandate and frustrating the clearly expressed will of the electorate. And some of them are adding privately, it is also a great relief because it enables Abbott to preserve what is left of his credibility on the issue - at least for a while longer.
Much of Abbott's railing against the great big new tax on everything has already been exposed for the bluster it always was. Whyalla has not been wiped out, the Sunday roast is still affordable, and the dreaded python squeeze has singularly failed to strangle the economy. This has been of little consequence to an electorate long inured to political hyperbole and happy to muddle along in spite of it. But the voters still react strongly to any twinges from what Ben Chifley identified as the most sensitive part of their anatomy, the hip pocket nerve: and they do believe that the carbon tax has significantly raised their cost of living. Their budgets long ago absorbed the compensation introduced by the last government and to be continued by the present one, and they believe, rightly or wrongly, that they are doing it tough.
Obviously the most direct impact has come from increases in their electricity and gas bills, but they are also inclined to credit Abbott's endlessly repeated claim that the carbon tax has put up the cost of just about everything. And they expect that as soon as the tax is repealed, prices will fall. After all, that is what Abbott and his team promised: instant relief, and plenty of it. Electricity down by 9 per cent, gas down by 7 per cent and across the board savings totalling $550 a year for the average family - whatever that is. What do we want? More money. When do we want it? Now.
But the brutal reality is that we are unlikely to get it - at least not much of it, and not for quite a while. Yet again, life turns out to be not as simple as Tony Abbott's slogans.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-11-11/maccallum-carbon-tax/5082476