Canberra runners - The Chronicle

CANBERRA RUNNERS

At 71 years old, Dick Telford tells me that he ‘only’ runs twice a day. Whippet-thin and fluid in his movements, Telford’s sport career started playing AFL for Collingwood and Fitzroy. When he switched to running, he realised he was pretty good at it. He’s run a marathon in 2 hours 27 minutes, and helped train Rob de Castella, Lisa Ondieki, Martin Dent and Carolyn Schuwalow through the Australian Institute of Sport.

There are few better cities for runners than Canberra. Loping around Lake Burley-Griffin, you might see the sun rise, and watch the kayakers spreading ripples across the smooth surface. On the dirt trails of Mount Ainslie, you’ll dodge kangaroos and test your muscles against the hills. Local ovals are perfect for beginners just starting jogging, or sprinters keen to feel the wind in their ears.

With three young boys and an unpredictable job, I find there’s nothing better than running to clear the cobwebs and keep the mind in perspective.  It’s also a great way to get to know the active and unpretentious running community. For an energetic start to the weekend, try the Saturday morning 5 kilometre Parkrun events organised every weekend at Gungahlin, Belconnen and Tuggeranong. If you want a bit more of a challenge, sign up for the YMCA’s Half Marathon on 22 May. Most of us won’t run as far or fast as Dick Telford. But with a runners’ paradise on our doorstep, why not take the chance to check it out?

Andrew Leigh is the shadow assistant treasurer and Member for Fraser. 

This piece was originally published in The Chronicle.

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Government Chases Labor's Lead on Multinationals

E&OE TRANSCRIPT

TV INTERVIEW

SKY NEWS - THE LATEST WITH LAURA JAYES

MONDAY, 2 MAY 2016

SUBJECT/S: 2016 Budget; Labor’s plan to clamp down on multinationals; Higher education funding.

LAURA JAYES: Andrew Leigh thanks so much for your time.

ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: Pleasure.

JAYES: There has been a lot of talk about income tax cuts in the budget tomorrow and the talk is that it will be at a $80,000 level, will Labor support that?

LEIGH: Laura, there has been a lot of talk about a lot of things in this budget. It has had the suggestion that the Government was going to cut company taxes, remove funding to public schools, that it was going to give income tax powers to the states and raise the GST. Rather than speculating, why don't we wait and actually see what's in the budget. We do know that a tax cut which comes in at $80,000 would only go to the top quarter of Australian workers and that would be something which would see the typical Australian worker miss out.

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A Budget for the Big End of Town - ABC NewsRadio

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ABC NEWSRADIO BREAKFAST

TUESDAY, 3 MAY 2016

SUBJECT/S: Parliamentary Budget Office policy costings, Labor’s policies, Government’s protection of the big end of town, Interest rates

MARK TAMHANE, REPORTER: Andrew Leigh, Good morning.

ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: Good morning, Mark.

TAMHANE: Treasury has found a $20 billion hole in your policy costings, is that the end of all that extra revenue Labor promised to see all the Gonski education reforms through in full if elected

LEIGH: Well Mark,  let's go back a little bit. We announced this important policy on tobacco excise, making a controversial decision, and were attacked at the time by the Government. But our numbers were determined by the Parliamentary Budget Office and we're confident that the Parliamentary Budget Office stands at arm's length from Labor. 

This is the same outfit that did the costings at the last election. The Parliamentary Budget Office works with Treasury, using their numbers, and of course Labor's numbers will be updated as we get closer to the election. But the Government's really just trying to cover up the fact they've spent months attacking Labor and they're now adopting Labor policy.

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Turnbull Government with a plan for the election, not the economy - Media Conference

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DOORSTOP

PARLIAMENT

MONDAY, 2 MAY 2016

SUBJECTS: Turnbull Government's plan for the election, not the economy; Malcolm Turnbull and Scott Morrison hope Australians have collective amnesia; Labor’s plan for the economy and tax; superannuation; multinational tax; company tax cuts; income tax cuts; infrastructure

CHRIS BOWEN, SHADOW TREASURER: Thanks everybody. After more than six months of telling the Australian people that they had an economics plan, Malcolm Turnbull and Scott Morrison are now telling us they’ll get around to announcing the economic plan tomorrow night. They haven’t had a plan. They had a plan to knock off Tony Abbott, but they had little idea about what to do next. We’ve seen six months of thought bubbles, half-baked ideas, policies which have lasted less than 24 hours, and now, Scott Morrison expects the Australian people to believe that he’s got it all together for tomorrow night.

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Labor continues to shine a light on the dark corners of multinational tax - Media Release

LABOR CONTINUES TO SHINE LIGHT ON THE DARK CORNERS OF MULTINATIONAL TAX

Making multinationals pay their fair share has always been a Labor agenda. In government, we closed loopholes and improved transparency, over the repeated objections of the Liberals.

From Opposition, we have led the debate, releasing strong policies to reduce excessive debt-loading and properly resource the tax office. The Government is still welcome to adopt our $7.2 billion package.

If elected to Government, Labor will introduce an additional comprehensive suite of new measures to increase transparency on the tax affairs of multinational corporations.

In Government, Labor will:

  • Increase penalties for non-compliance with country-by-country reporting:

It is simply wrong that the current penalty for failing to file country-by-country reports is a mere $5400 – less than you get for streaking across the SCG. Labor will increase that penalty 50 times. Should a company continue non-compliance after the maximum fine is reached, the Commissioner of Taxation is empowered to conduct a broad review of the company’s tax affairs.

  • Restore the $100 million threshold for reporting the tax affairs of large private firms bringing them back in line with public companies:

Labor’s original threshold was watered-down in a dirty deal between the Coalition and the Greens last year, with 600 companies being shielded from public scrutiny as a result.

  • Obligation to disclose the beneficial ownership for Australian legal identities:

Labor will ensure that the G20 principles Australia committed to at the G20 summit in Brisbane in 2014, which are based on guidance from the Financial Action Task Force, are implemented fully and quickly to ensure that Australia cannot be used as a destination for money-laundering, tax evasion, terrorism financing or other criminal behaviour.

This will be achieved by establishing a publicly accessible central registry of the beneficial ownership of companies, trusts and other corporate structures.

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Are the Panama Papers just the tip of Australia's tax avoidance iceberg? - Huffington Post

ARE THE PANAMA PAPERS JUST THE TIP OF AUSTRALIA'S TAX AVOIDANCE ICEBERG?

Are It pays to pay attention to Senate Committees now and then, because they have a habit of asking public servants difficult questions from which we learn interesting things about Government claims. The recent Senate Economic Committee hearing was an excellent example, when Australian Tax Office officials (some of the few remaining after the Government slashed 4,700 tax office jobs) effectively dismissed out-of-hand the Prime Minister's exaggeration that Australia is 'leading the charge' on tax avoidance.

Tax Office Deputy Commissioner Mark Konza would allow only that Australia has been part of the OECD's "leadership group on tax avoidance" but demurred at the notion that Australia was "leading". Of course, this news wasn't new -- Australia has been part of this group for some years, under this and previous Governments -- but what the hearings did reveal is that the Australian involvement in the "Panama Papers" tax secrecy network might just be the tiny tip of an enormous iceberg.

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Australians aren't better off than at the last election - Sydney Morning Herald

AUSTRALIANS AREN’T BETTER OFF THAN AT THE LAST ELECTION

Are you better off than at the last election? If you answered no, you're in the majority. Living standards are lower today than they were in 2013.

Sure, we keep hearing about those 25 years of uninterrupted economic growth Australia will clock up this year. But what often gets ignored is that this is based on total national output – a measure called Gross Domestic Product. It isn't adjusted for population growth, money that gets paid to overseas shareholders, or the relative prices of exports to imports.

Each of these adjustments makes a difference, but the easiest one to get a handle on is the mistake of looking at total production rather than output per person. In recent years, Australia has had one of the fastest population growth rates in the advanced world. Looking only at the total is like measuring an exercise regime by adding up all the calories burned at your gym. When another person walks in the door, they raise the total, but that doesn't mean you're any healthier.

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Labor welcomes release of Australian Competition and Consumer Commission's East Coast Gas Inquiry Report - media release

LABOR WELCOMES RELEASE OF AUSTRALIAN COMPETITION AND CONSUMER COMMISSION’S EAST COAST GAS INQUIRY REPORT

Labor welcomes the release of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission’s East Coast Gas market review and we will carefully consider it. 

Security of energy supply is a considerable matter. A future Labor Government will implement a National Interest Test for Future gas export projects to ensure they are in the national interest.

The Commission’s report is a helpful contribution to the formation of Labor’s energy policy.

Friday 22 APRIL 2016

MEDIA CONTACT:  TAIMUS WERNER-GIBBINGS 0433 714 201

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Tax Avoidance: More Prime Ministerial Puffery Popping - Media Release

TAX AVOIDANCE: MORE PRIME MINISTERIAL PUFFERY POPPING

“What we are doing is we are taking a, we are part of a leadership group at the OECD, I don’t want to say we’re leading, but we’re batting above our weight”.

Mr Mark Konza, Deputy Commissioner, International, ATO
Economics References Committee – 21 April 2016 – timecode 12:57:25 here

“ Well, the, perhaps the Treasurer would be better able to respond to that but can I say to you that the enforcement of our taxation laws by our ATO, by Mr Jordan the Commissioner and by the Government is very strong. You may have seen the report in the media describing how the Australian Taxation Office is leading the charge globally in going through the Panama Papers”.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, Press Conference, 21 April 2016

More Prime Ministerial puffery popped today, with Australian Tax Office officials rejecting Malcolm Turnbull’s hyperbole that Australia is ‘leading the charge’ on tax avoidance.

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Australians were expecting Batman but they got the Joker - AM Agenda

E&OE TRANSCRIPT

TV INTERVIEW

SKY AM AGENDA

MONDAY, 18 APRIL 2016

SUBJECT/S: Recall of Parliament; ABCC; ASIC; Opinion polls

KIERAN GILBERT: On the program now Shadow Assistant Treasurer, Andrew Leigh. Good to see you. In terms of substance of why we are back for this special sitting today, the Government wants the Australian Building and Construction Commission legislation through or some would argue they don't want it through and they want to trigger for the double dissolution election. Either way, it's a special sitting. Does Labor really want to be fighting an election on this particular matter?

ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: Well Kieran, it's a strange set up isn't it, stopping Parliament and starting it again. Your viewers will of course know that the precedent for this goes back to King Charles recalling the English Parliament in 1640 to raise money to declare war on the Scots. Lord Wentworth then recommended it to King Charles that this would be a great idea, it turned out kind of badly for him. I suspect that Malcolm Turnbull could be going down the same path.

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Cnr Gungahlin Pl and Efkarpidis Street, Gungahlin ACT 2912 | 02 6247 4396 | [email protected] | Authorised by A. Leigh MP, Australian Labor Party (ACT Branch), Canberra.