As the year draws to a close, Jeremy Corbyn, the left-wing British Labour Party leader, might give a short sigh of relief. After one of the stormiest year in British politics for generations, he is one of the few who will enter 2017 in a stronger position.
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The date November 30, 2016 will surely go down in infamy through all history 鈥 or at least until the developing ecoholocaust being worsened by Australian government policies destroys the basis for human civilisation and renders meaningless the concept of history. So until about 2030, at least.
On that day, in Canberra, a terrible assault on democracy took place. It pains me to write this, but Parliamentary Question Time 鈥 that institution all freedom loving people throughout the world hold so dear 鈥 was delayed for 40 minutes by chanting protesters in the public gallery.
The Victorian government has backed down on its plan to transfer Aboriginal teenagers from a youth detention centre to a maximum-security prison.
The government had planned to transfer 40 children in youth custody to a segregated wing of Barwon prison while the Melbourne Youth Justice Centre at Parkville was being repaired.
Hundreds of days of protests by refugees on Nauru, landmark court decisions, the Nauru Files, politicians鈥 offices occupied, parliament interrupted, suicides in detention, damning international reports and many more people becoming active in the campaign for refugee justice is the story of the refugee campaign this year.
The significant growth of campaign groups and the development of new ones means we are in a better position to end the indefinite and cruel mandatory detention of asylum seekers and refugees.
At a packed meeting on November 25, National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) members at Murdoch University in Perth expressed no confidence in the university bargaining team and called on the Vice Chancellor to intervene in the negotiations.
They voted unanimously to begin industrial action with a stop work between 8.30am and 12.30pm on December 7.聽
They will be聽the first university workers in this round of collective bargaining to take industrial action.
NSW Premier Mike Baird鈥檚 vision of 鈥淣SW Inc鈥 is under increasing fire as the year ends. Dubbed the 鈥淪miling Assassin鈥, 鈥淢ike the Vandal鈥, and 鈥淩obert Askin with a smiling face鈥, Baird鈥檚 approval ratings have plummeted as a number of his pet projects face rising opposition.
The former Liberal NSW Premier Askin was notoriously corrupt, renowned for his dodgy dealings with developers and his demand that his driver 鈥渞un over the bastards鈥 during an anti-Vietnam War protest in 1966 against visiting US President Lyndon Johnson.
Earlier this year Fremantle City Council decided to cancel its Australia Day fireworks next month, describing them as 鈥渃ulturally insensitive鈥. Instead, the council announced plans to hold a free concert in Fremantle鈥檚 Esplanade Park on January 28.
The event, titled 鈥淥ne Day in Fremantle鈥, features a concert headlined by John Butler, Dan Sultan and Mama Kin and will celebrate diversity and multiculturalism in Australia today.
Hundreds of service workers were while striking for a US$15 minimum wage and the right to form a union in cities across the United States on November 29. Organisers say the strikers remain undaunted.
Supporters of the NSW Hunter Valley community of Wollar held simultaneous rallies in Sydney and Mudgee on November 29 against a coalmine expansion that threatens to wipe out the village.聽
The NSW Planning Assessment Commission (PAC) is reviewing the proposal to extend the Wilpinjong coalmine. It held a public hearing about the project in Mudgee but Wollar residents and supporters boycotted it and protested instead. They said the process is stacked against them and the community鈥檚 legal rights have been taken away.聽
Residents responded to ambulance workers鈥 calls to protest the proposed shut down of Fairfield鈥檚 Ambulance Office, with about 200 people gathering on November 26 to show their opposition to the NSW government鈥檚 plans to close it down.
The government plan involves basing all local ambulances at a new 鈥渟uperstation鈥 at Bankstown, to coordinate with outlying paramedic response points.
Australian Greens leader Richard Di Natale has pledged to introduce a private senator鈥檚 bill by the end of the year for a 鈥渟ugar tax鈥 which he estimates would claw $500 million from the country鈥檚 shopping list each year.
The legislation which Di Natale has hailed as an 鈥渙besity prevention strategy鈥, has raised ire among his own ranks who have labelled the policy a 鈥渃aptain鈥檚 call鈥.
The Age on November 26 contained a on 鈥淢elbourne鈥檚 Trump-land鈥, which is apparently located in Narre Warren North.
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