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Dear Scomo 7


Here's my latest letter to our dear Prime Minister.  I've broadened the ask to take in three things that are uppermost in my heart at the moment.  After all, you're allowed to ask for more than one thing for Christmas aren't you?

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Dear Prime Minister

I trust you have an excellent Christmas and New Year, and return to work ready to face the considerable demands that 2021 will bring.

I have many wishes for 2021, some of which have nothing to do with you.  However, one of my wishes is for better government in 2021, from you and your colleagues.  This wish could be summed up in one main theme – end the divisive, partisan slanging match that politics has become, and get on with making the difficult decisions that we all need.

The silver lining in the cloud of 2020’s pandemic is that for a short time, our governments (State/Territory and Commonwealth) worked together irrespective of political colour via the National Cabinet.  However, it didn’t take long to return to ‘politics as usual’ with slanging between Coalition and Labour States and with members of your Government acting as attack dogs towards Labor premiers.  It was a very unedifying spectacle and one that made me despair of our major parties.

My hope and prayer for 2021 is that we will return to a responsible, adult approach to governance in which our leaders work together to solve serious problems.  Here are three problems I believe are readily solvable with goodwill and creativity.


1.       Climate change


I have written to you many times about climate change and promise that I will keep doing so for as long as you are Prime Minister.  It appals me that despite the horrific bushfires of 2019-20, not to mention drought, fish kills and record high temperatures, your government is still playing politics with our climate.  The Climate Ambition Summit showed just how out of step we are with the rest of the world, and the election of Joe Biden will shift the conversation significantly in the right direction.  2021 provides a fabulous opportunity for us to forge a bipartisan approach to this issue which will set us on the course to economic transition and net zero emissions well before 2050.

Zali Steggall’s proposed Climate Act provides a perfect opportunity to build a climate response which can withstand changes in government and set us on course for net zero.  I would suggest that instead of simply using your numbers to dismiss it, as you so easily could, your government work with Ms Steggall and others across the Parliament to pass it in a form that everyone can work with.  Everyone in Australia knows that the days of fossil fuels are numbered and that we need to get on with the job of transformation.  You have a chance to be the Prime Minister who made it happen.


2.       Homelessness


One of the things we have learned in 2020 is that it is actually much easier to house homeless people than we have been pretending it is.  During the pandemic, State Governments and community agencies moved quickly to provide temporary accommodation to thousands of people who would otherwise have been sleeping on the streets, in their cars or in other situations that put them at risk.  Some were housed in vacant hotels or student accommodation, others in existing crisis accommodation.  On the Sunshine Coast some colleagues of mine took over a community sports facility that couldn’t be used during the lockdown and used that as a hub and temporary accommodation.

Our challenge in 2021 will be ensuring that we don’t just slip back into accepting homelessness as normal.  The key vehicle for this is the National Housing and Homelessness Agreement under which Commonwealth and States jointly provide funding for the homelessness and social housing systems.  A substantial boost to funding under this agreement can construct the extra housing we need to provide permanent homes for those we have accommodated temporarily, and as a side benefit can also stimulate the construction industry to boost the post-COVID recovery.

3.       Resolving the asylum seeker impasse


My final wish for 2021 is that this will be the year we finally resolve the impasse over asylum seekers.  As you know from your own time as Minister for Immigration, it was in 2013 that Kevin Rudd decreed that no asylum seeker arriving by boat would be settled in Australia.  Subsequently, over 3,000 asylum seekers were detained on Manus and Nauru and various Australian detention centres before the patrols in our northern waters eventually stopped them.

The logical next step would have been to set up an effective system to resettle these people in other countries, but this has never happened.  As a result, eight years later we still have about 1,500 of these people in detention, about 90% of whom have been determined to be genuine refugees, with no solution in sight.

Over the past couple of months I have been taking part in fortnightly multi-faith vigils outside the Mantra Hotel in Kangaroo Point, a couple of kilometres from my home.  This hotel has been converted into a place of immigration detention for 120 men.  As a result of COVID these men were prevented from receiving visitors – even family members – and although we have not had community transmission in Queensland for months, visits have not been resumed.  When I first started attending some of the men would come out onto the verandahs to watch and wave to us, but in recent weeks they have been prevented from even doing this and we sing, pray and speak to blank walls with the occasional face appearing in the window.  We hear that the mental health of many is deteriorating badly as a result of their prolonged isolation.

It is time for this cruelty to stop.  Whatever these men may have done back in 2013, it doesn’t justify their continued detention in 2020.  2021 needs to be the year that the remaining 1,500 people are resettled – if not in the US, or in New Zealand, then here in Australia.  Enough is enough.

 

All of these three issues can be resolved using resources and knowledge we already have.  Our community will be better off, and better, with progress made on these things.  But they will require your government to get out of the trenches and focus on governing and solving problems.  I know you can do it, and I trust that you will

 

Have a blessed Christmas celebrating the amazing gift of the Christ-Child, and a blessed and peaceful New Year.

Yours sincerely

Jon

Comments

Hermit said…
It would be good to see a Government work to overcome these problems in society. I do think the Govt needs to get more involved in housing the underprivileged. Climate change? I think making the "solutions" (solar panels, big batteries, electricity production for powering electric cars, etc.) probably do more damage than the problems they seek to overcome.
Jon said…
No technology is problem-free, but I think you haven't fully appreciated just how dangerous climate change is. Last year's bushfires are just a taster of what we will see if we fail to limit warming under 2 degrees - we are already at 1.