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‘Insane': Barnaby's backbench rebellion

‘Insane': Barnaby's backbench rebellion

Perth Now18 hours ago
Nationals maverick Barnaby Joyce has defended his backbench rebellion on net zero, decrying the opposition's embrace of the 2050 target as a 'singular crusade' that he never voted for.
Mr Joyce will introduce a private member's bill to repeal net zero and has gained the support of fellow former party leader Michael McCormack.
Both MPs were banished to the backbench after the Liberals and Nationals had their brief post-election split – a move Nationals leader David Littleproud at the time put down to 'generational change'.
But up the back, neither of the heavyweights need to follow the party line, posing a real threat to Mr Littleproud's tenuous authority and Liberal leader Sussan Ley's efforts to project a modern, united opposition.
Cornered by reporters in a press gallery hallway, Mr Joyce was asked on Wednesday why he was rehashing a conversation that Australians had already had at two federal elections. Nationals MP Barnaby Joyce is leading a backbench rebellion on net zero. Martin Ollman / NewsWire Credit: News Corp Australia
'No one can dispute power prices are going through the roof,' he said.
'No one can dispute that the power grid is becoming unreliable.'
He also said it is indisputable 'that the geopolitical times that we live in have become vastly more precarious'.
'No one can dispute that you need a strong economic base if you want to defend our nation,' Mr Joyce said.
'And we are trying to achieve net zero – something that neither Russia nor China nor the United States, nor Indonesia nor Brazil or the majority of African countries or Southeast Asian nations are part of.
'You're in the minority group here, the minority of people in the globe, the vast majority of the GDP of the globe.'
He went on to say that 'even if you believe every chapter, verse of what net zero was going to achieve, it's not going to achieve it because the world's not participating in it'.
'So why are we on this sort of singular crusade by ourselves that has no effect on the climate but incredibly deleterious to the standard of living and the cost of living with the Australian people.
'It's insane.'
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He said Australia needed "energy abundance" and noted state governments were "looking to extend the life of coal-fired power stations." Climate and Energy Minister Chris Bowen said both parties had gone to the election with a commitment to net zero and that "now the Coalition, held hostage by Barnaby Joyce and Michael McCormack, has walked away from that commitment." "Even Peter Dutton backed net zero," Mr Bowen said. Climate Council chief executive Amanda McKenzie described Mr Joyce's push to repeal net zero as " disgraceful, delusional, and totally out of step with the Parliament and the country." "It's a stunt and it'll be swiftly squashed in Federal Parliament." Nationals MP Barnaby Joyce insists that he's not railing against the science of climate change. As the former deputy prime minister prepares to table a private member's bill to abolish Australia's net zero by 2050 emissions reduction target, the backbencher says he is squarely focused on advocating for the powerless. In his regional NSW electorate of New England, Mr Joyce tells this masthead, people are suffering with the soaring cost of living, chiefly high electricity prices. "We represent the poorest people, power bills they cannot afford," he said. "Cost of living is beyond them ... Small businesses are saying 'I can no longer afford to run like this, it's just not viable'." Australia's net zero target was no more than "a virtue signal", he said, arguing it would not make a difference in the global scheme of things. "I'm not here to say I deny climate change. It's not about that. It's about what you're doing now is not working," he said. "I want the honest cheapest form of power - and if that's coal, okay, it's coal .. if that is nuclear, it's nuclear," he said, acknowledging a role for renewables, which he calls "intermittent power". 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READ MORE: Nationals net-zero pushback intensifies, Littleproud open to dropping policy "Every single person in our party rooms can feed into that," she told Channel 9's Today. "Our policy will be underpinned by two goals, playing our part internationally in reducing emissions transparently and producing a reliable stable energy grid, so we've got affordable energy for households and businesses." Nationals senator Bridget McKenzie, the party's leader in the Senate, told reporters in Canberra on Wednesday it was "important to recognise the difference between recognising climate change is real [and] how we deal with that challenge." "We have a problem with how the Labor Party is addressing this question," Senator McKenzie said. "We actually care about the jobs [and] our communities, the businesses and the humans ... impacted by this government's policies." Nationals senator Matt Canavan said: "We need to tell Australian people that if we want to keep these jobs, we want to keep these industries, we actually have to return to a planet called reality and stop and stop telling ourselves fairy tales that we can keep these jobs while still pursuing these fantastical objectives." Mr Tehan told Sky on Wednesday: "We can reconcile this, and we can work through it like we always do." He said Australia needed "energy abundance" and noted state governments were "looking to extend the life of coal-fired power stations." Climate and Energy Minister Chris Bowen said both parties had gone to the election with a commitment to net zero and that "now the Coalition, held hostage by Barnaby Joyce and Michael McCormack, has walked away from that commitment." "Even Peter Dutton backed net zero," Mr Bowen said. Climate Council chief executive Amanda McKenzie described Mr Joyce's push to repeal net zero as " disgraceful, delusional, and totally out of step with the Parliament and the country." "It's a stunt and it'll be swiftly squashed in Federal Parliament." Nationals MP Barnaby Joyce insists that he's not railing against the science of climate change. As the former deputy prime minister prepares to table a private member's bill to abolish Australia's net zero by 2050 emissions reduction target, the backbencher says he is squarely focused on advocating for the powerless. In his regional NSW electorate of New England, Mr Joyce tells this masthead, people are suffering with the soaring cost of living, chiefly high electricity prices. "We represent the poorest people, power bills they cannot afford," he said. "Cost of living is beyond them ... Small businesses are saying 'I can no longer afford to run like this, it's just not viable'." Australia's net zero target was no more than "a virtue signal", he said, arguing it would not make a difference in the global scheme of things. "I'm not here to say I deny climate change. It's not about that. It's about what you're doing now is not working," he said. "I want the honest cheapest form of power - and if that's coal, okay, it's coal .. if that is nuclear, it's nuclear," he said, acknowledging a role for renewables, which he calls "intermittent power". Mr Joyce's lastest move, which included giving a joint interview to The Australian with former Nationals leader Michael McCormack - sparking renewed speculation of a leadership challenge - has created a headache for Opposition Leader Sussan Ley as she seeks to reunite a fractured Coalition. She told the ABC when asked about the coverage: "Nobody's getting under my skin." Mr Joyce rejected any suggestion his bill was intended to lay the groundwork for a leadership challenge to Nationals Leader David Littleproud. "People are trying to attack me on this net zero, so they throw in red herrings," he told this masthead. "It's about him going for leadership. No, it's not." Ms Ley on Wednesday declined to recommit to net zero, saying only that the Coalition's review of policies it took to the election was probing the commitment through an energy working group led by opposition spokesman Dan Tehan. READ MORE: Nationals net-zero pushback intensifies, Littleproud open to dropping policy "Every single person in our party rooms can feed into that," she told Channel 9's Today. "Our policy will be underpinned by two goals, playing our part internationally in reducing emissions transparently and producing a reliable stable energy grid, so we've got affordable energy for households and businesses." Nationals senator Bridget McKenzie, the party's leader in the Senate, told reporters in Canberra on Wednesday it was "important to recognise the difference between recognising climate change is real [and] how we deal with that challenge." "We have a problem with how the Labor Party is addressing this question," Senator McKenzie said. "We actually care about the jobs [and] our communities, the businesses and the humans ... impacted by this government's policies." Nationals senator Matt Canavan said: "We need to tell Australian people that if we want to keep these jobs, we want to keep these industries, we actually have to return to a planet called reality and stop and stop telling ourselves fairy tales that we can keep these jobs while still pursuing these fantastical objectives." Mr Tehan told Sky on Wednesday: "We can reconcile this, and we can work through it like we always do." He said Australia needed "energy abundance" and noted state governments were "looking to extend the life of coal-fired power stations." Climate and Energy Minister Chris Bowen said both parties had gone to the election with a commitment to net zero and that "now the Coalition, held hostage by Barnaby Joyce and Michael McCormack, has walked away from that commitment." "Even Peter Dutton backed net zero," Mr Bowen said. Climate Council chief executive Amanda McKenzie described Mr Joyce's push to repeal net zero as " disgraceful, delusional, and totally out of step with the Parliament and the country." "It's a stunt and it'll be swiftly squashed in Federal Parliament."

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