Australia politics live: telcos face steeper outage fines; Hastie warns Liberals can’t keep living in the Howard era | Australia news

Telcos to face $30m fines for failing to connect customers to triple zero Dan Jervis-Bardy The fines for telcos that fail to connect customers to the triple zero connect will triple to $30m after Labor agreed to calls from the Greens and Coalition for higher penalties. The larger fines were agreed on Monday during debate…

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Telcos to face $30m fines for failing to connect customers to triple zero

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Dan Jervis-Bardy

The fines for telcos that fail to connect customers to the triple zero connect will triple to $30m after Labor agreed to calls from the Greens and Coalition for higher penalties.

The larger fines were agreed on Monday during debate on the government’s legislation to establish a “custodian” to oversee the emergency network.

The Labor senator Nita Green, who was steering the laws through the upper house on behalf of communications minister Anika Wells, said:

We are not on the side of corporate criminals on this side of the chamber and we will certainly make sure that these penalties signify what the community standard and expectation is, but also from the government.

The Greens communications spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young, who pushed to raise the penalty to $30m, said:

This should send a message to all the telcos that they are on notice. Failure to ensure that this most basic emergency service is available will result in bigger penalties.

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Key events

Moving onto a different issue, “what on earth is going on” in the Liberal party with net zero, asks host Sally Sara?

Julian Leeser doesn’t give much away, he gives us the standard lines of “we are going through a process” and “we’re reviewing our policies”.

A recap, shadow energy minister Dan Tehan is taking a relook at the net zero commitment, which is tricky because the Liberal moderates want it to stay, but the hardline conservatives want it scrapped completely.

Sara asks if the Liberals can be an “effect opposition” at this time without a policy. Leeser says:

We’re a couple of years away from an election. This is the policy formulation process. Well, it’s only five months since the last election, and this is a sort of Bismarck laws and sausages moment. We are looking at our new direction, and we’re having a debate, and people are expressing different views.

Ok … so I just had to google that one – 18th century Prussian politician Otto von Bismarck apparently said “Laws are like sausages. It’s better not to see them being made” (or something similar to that effect).

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