ID :
154664
Fri, 12/24/2010 - 21:17
Auther :

Keneally lied to public: O'Farrell



NSW Premier Kristina Keneally has lied to the public about her intentions to shut
down parliament, Opposition Leader Barry O'Farrell says.
Comments made by Treasurer Eric Roozendaal proved Ms Keneally lied when she denied
her decision to prorogue parliament was an attempt to kill off the upper house
inquiry into the $5.3 billion electricity sale, Mr O'Farrell told reporters in
Sydney on Friday.
"Like some character out of the Griswolds' Family Christmas, Eric Roozendaal's
arrived back in town just to destroy the premier's claim that parliament wasn't shut
down to stop this parliamentary inquiry," Mr O'Farrell said, referring to the
National Lampoon film.
News Ltd reported on Friday that Mr Roozendaal had admitted parliament had been
closed early to scuttle the inquiry.
"It has been prorogued early, it has been prorogued later (before past elections)
but at the end of the day we have got to work in the interests of the people of
NSW," Mr Roozendaal was reported as saying.
Mr O'Farrell said Mr Roozendaal's comments proved Ms Keneally had lied to the public.
"This is just a new low that Kristina Keneally has sunk to," he said.
"First, a power sale where she refuses to divulge the details; secondly, rejecting a
judicial inquiry; thirdly, trying to close the parliament down and fourthly, lying
about the reasons for that closure."
"There are meant to be some standards that are attached to the office of premier and
I have to say Kristina Keneally has failed them overnight and that has been
confirmed by Eric Roozendaal, her most senior supporter."
The state government was accused this week of trying to derail the upper house
inquiry into the part-privatisation of publicly owned electricity assets, after
Governor Marie Bashir prorogued parliament two months earlier than expected.
Ms Keneally said on Thursday that the inquiry would be illegal and witnesses would
not be protected by parliamentary privilege.
As a result, three Labor MPs boycotted a parliamentary committee meeting that day to
draft the terms of reference for the inquiry into the contentious partial
privatisation.
However, the government's attempts to kill off the inquiry backfired after the clerk
of the upper house, Lynn Lovelock, advised the committee's chair - Christian
Democrat Fred Nile - there was nothing to stop the inquiry going ahead.



------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This email is intended for the use of the addressee only. If you receive this email
in error, please delete it immediately. This email may contain information which is
confidential and/or legally privileged. You must not use or disclose the contents of
this email, or add the sender's email address to any database, list or mailing list
unless you are expressly authorised to do so. The statements or views expressed in
this email are those of the individual sender and are not those of Australian
Associated Press Pty Ltd (AAP). These statements are not binding on AAP, except
where the sender expressly and with authority, states them to be. AAP is unable to
review the contents of all the email on its system. To the extent permitted by law,
AAP disclaims all liability for any loss or damage caused by the contents of this
email. www.aap.com.au


Delete & Prev | Delete & Next

X