
Cow manure delivery stunt lands MPs in steaming mess
A farmer delivered the package to Premier Jacinta Allan's office inside Victoria's parliament house on Tuesday during a protest at the building's entrance against an emergency services levy.
A note on the vacuum-sealed dung package read: "Dearest Jacinta, I have considered your levy and here's my feedback, it's bulls***. Love Brutus + family".
Legislative Council President Shaun Leane says two MPs have been referred to an independent body that investigates claims of parliamentary misconduct.
The Parliamentary Workplace Standards and Integrity Commission will decide whether to take the matter further.
"Surely we can't get to the point where it's commonplace that differences in policies ... that MPs in opposition to those policies usher angry stakeholders to other MPs parliament offices front doors with boxes full of turds," Mr Leane said in a statement on Friday.
He said the presiding officers found the incident "very disappointing".
Ms Allan said staff directly affected by the incident felt unsafe at their workplace.
"The behaviour on Tuesday breached workplace safety standards and also, too, it was a significant breach of community expectations in how members of parliament should behave," Ms Allan told reporters in Geelong on Friday.
Manager of government business Mary-Anne Thomas has accused Liberal MPs Bev McArthur and Nicole Werner of facilitating the placing of the "offensive prop".
Mrs McArthur confirmed she was with the farmer when the package was delivered, describing it as a "harmless stunt".
"Labor MPs are acting like they've never seen cow s*** before - maybe they don't get out of Melbourne much," the shadow cabinet member said in a statement.
Opposition Leader Brad Battin has refused to condemn the incident, describing it as "internally focused".
"I'm genuinely concerned that the premier is trying to make this the biggest issue for herself, rather than talking about Victorian community," Mr Battin told reporters at parliament on Friday.
"We need to start thinking about what's happening outside these doors, not inside".
The new levy is set to raise an extra $2.1 billion for emergency services when it replaces the Fire Services Property Levy from July 1.
The average annual bill was predicted to jump by $63 for residential home owners and $678 for primary producers, but rebates will be available for volunteers or life members of the CFA and SES.
The Victorian government also promised a lower rate for primary production land and partial rebates for drought-affected farmers.
Mr Battin has pledged to scrap the levy if the coalition wins government at the next state election in November 2026.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
Labor needs to 'earn trust' after election hammering
Tasmania's Labor opposition needs to earn back trust after an election drubbing and differentiate itself from the Liberals, according to the party's new leader. Former teacher Josh Willie held his first press conference on Thursday, a day after toppling Dean Winter, who only spent 16 months in the role. Mr Willie, from Labor's left faction, reaffirmed his party's support for a new AFL stadium in Hobart and traditional industries including salmon farming. Labor, which has been in opposition for 11 years, received 26 per cent of the primary vote at the July election - its lowest figure in more than a century. The party's bid on Tuesday to take power via a no-confidence motion fell spectacularly flat, with all of the 11-member cross bench deciding to effectively prop up an ongoing Liberal minority government. The early election was sparked after a successful Labor-led no-confidence motion in Liberal Premier Jeremy Rockliff in June. "I think we need to learn the lessons, and that's Tasmanians don't want politicians in their lives," Mr Willie told reporters. "We need to earn the trust back of Tasmanians and to do that we need to listen first." Mr Willie said Labor needed to differentiate itself from the Liberals, but didn't elaborate on how that would be done. The party needed to continue to focus on "jobs and opportunity" with renewed emphasis on health, cost of living, housing and education, he said. Mr Winter, from Labor's right faction, copped a hiding from the Greens and several independents on Tuesday for his lack of compromise during hung parliament talks. The Liberals made several policy concessions to appease the cross bench, including pledging to ban greyhound racing and undertake a review into the salmon farming industry. Mr Willie repeated Mr Winter's line that the Liberals had "walked away" from their commitments and turned Tasmanians' lives upside down. He said he had the "support of the Labor movement" despite reports claiming the majority of the parliamentary Labor Party wanted Mr Winter to continue. Mr Willie was announced as being elected unopposed after Labor decided not to trigger a ballot of members to decide the leadership. He suggested there wouldn't be any no-confidence motions in the minority Liberals in the short term, saying there were no shortcuts to government. Labor has 10 seats in the 35-seat lower house, with the Liberals holding 14.


7NEWS
2 hours ago
- 7NEWS
‘Fundamental reset' of childcare system required
Childcare workers should be able to have their clearances pulled based on unproven allegations, a snap review has found. The sweeping review of Victoria's childcare sector, led by former South Australian premier Jay Weatherill and veteran public servant Pamela White, was released on Wednesday. Chief among its 22 recommendations was for working with children checks to be overhauled so they can be suspended or refused when there are 'credible allegations or patterns of behaviour' with children. The review was set up in early-July after authorities lifted the lid on Melbourne childcare worker Joshua Dale Brown being charged with more than 70 sexual abuse offences. He had a valid working with children check. The review said the state's permit regime, along with the reportable conduct scheme, should no longer sit within the separate entities of the Department of Government Services and Commission for Children and Young People. The systems should be brought together under the same roof of the social services regulator as the trail of information that can identify a predator's behaviour sits in 'too many places'. Limitations on the commission's ability to share information on unsubstantiated allegations must also be removed, the review said. 'The review heard repeatedly about the 'breadcrumbs' that can be missed by the failure to piece information together,' the 103-page document reads. The changes to the schemes should be implemented in concert with harsher penalties to match the seriousness of breaches, as well as more frequent unannounced compliance visits. 'No matter how hard we try to keep predators out, some will get through,' the review said. 'The system needs to be able to spot them and act quickly.' However, the review stopped short of calling for mandatory CCTV in all childcare state facilities and instead recommended a national trial. A national review should also be set up to consider introducing a 'four eyes' rule of two adults visible to each other while with children and a federal funding program to improve sight lines in centres. A parent told the review families' distress stemmed from childcare being a necessity rather than a lifestyle choice. 'We live in a society and an economy now where it is very rare for a household to stay afloat on one income,' they said. The review found the sector has undergone rapid growth over the past decade without a 'coherent plan'. Long day care services in Victoria have grown from 1280 to 2049 since 2015, with 94 per cent of new centres for-profit providers. At the same time, the sector is facing significant workforce challenges from shortages, casualisation and high turnover rates. The review called for a national Early Childhood Reform Commission to be established to support a 'fundamental reset' of the sector. 'Removing bad actors from the system cannot wait for this longer-term work to occur,' the 103-page document read. 'There is no silver bullet.' The Victorian government will release its formal response later on Wednesday, but previously committed to enact all recommendations. Many of the recommendations are directed at the federal government, with the state urged to share the review with the Commonwealth and other jurisdictions as soon as possible. Federal, state and territory education ministers are due to meet on Friday. KEY RECOMMENDATIONS: Create a national early childhood reform commission Accelerate a national early childhood worker register Establish a process for high-quality providers to take over a cancelled service Overhaul working with children check and reportable conduct schemes Establish an independent early childhood education and care regulator Set up a more rigorous inspection regime, including increased unannounced inspections Increase penalties for offences Trial CCTV in early childhood education and care settings across the nation Improve staff ratios and lines of sight in centres. In an emergency, call 000.


Perth Now
2 hours ago
- Perth Now
Anti-corruption watchdog boss defends cloak of secrecy
The national anti-corruption watchdog is investigating dozens of cases, its commissioner has revealed as he defended holding private hearings. Paul Brereton said the national anti-corruption commission (NACC) had launched about 35 preliminary investigations and 38 corruption investigations, including 12 joint operations with other agencies, and held 31 private hearings. It is also overseeing 16 cases being run by other agencies. Four matters were before the courts and the commission had received 458 referrals since July 1, he added. Mr Brereton also defended withholding the name of a Home Affairs Department official the commission found had abused public office to get her brother-in-law hired. A public revelation wouldn't have achieved anything further as a deterrent had already been put in place through the release of the commission's findings. "I don't think there will be too many public servants recruiting their brother-in-law into their department in the immediate future," he told Transparency International Australia's anti-corruption summit in Melbourne on Thursday. It was a discretionary decision that had to weigh the ongoing consequences of exposing an individual, including their safety, Mr Brereton said. Naming the person "would have avoided a whole lot of grief" after anger at the decision but it wasn't the right thing to do. "It's not right in all circumstances to name these individuals who aren't secretaries or heads of agencies but medium-level officials who aren't public figures," he said. The commissioner said he was certain officials would be named in the future and it was "unfortunate" the commission's first finding didn't warrant a public naming. He added he was confident there would also be public hearings, which are allowed if they meet a threshold of "exceptional circumstances". Former South Australian premier Jay Weatherill, who now acts as the McKinnon Foundation's executive director of democracy, defended hearings being held in private, saying frivolous referrals could ruin careers. Mr Weatherill said investigations and hearings he was dragged into on the periphery of a corruption investigation during his time in office would have ruined his career and handicapped his government, despite eventually being cleared. "If that had played out in the public I wouldn't be sitting here right now," he said. "You've got to realise that this plays into a real-world political context where people will weaponise allegations. "It might be fine to say in six months' time that we were entirely exonerated, but there's nothing left of you ... people have made up their mind at the first unsubstantiated allegation." Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission chief executive Alison Byrne called for Victorian legislation to be changed to allow the agency to make findings of corruption, which it couldn't do under the existing legal definition. Greens senator David Shoebridge hit back against the lack of public hearings by the national anti-corruption commission, saying public servants were being shielded from scrutiny. "Commissioner Brereton is correct in saying leadership and culture are essential to tackle corruption," he told AAP. "But unfortunately with the NACC, that leadership has been solely absent in its first two years. "It has held 31 entirely secret hearings and delivered a report where it protected the corrupt official by refusing to release their name - that's not the leadership the public are looking for."