The High Court’s high-stakes ruling threatens liberty
BY SATYA MARAR | THE SPECTATOR
Conservatives and left-wingers alike should oppose today’s High Court decision which found that the Australian Public Service, specifically the Department of Immigration and Border Protection, had not violated the constitutionally-protected implied freedom of political communication of one of its employees by firing her for tweets which were critical of the government.
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Many unhappy returns for hard working small business owners
By Emilie Dye | The Daily Telegraph
When even America’s IRS has a better reputation for dealing with taxpayers, it’s time to look at some serious reform, writes Emilie Dye.
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An end to parliamentary rorts in one easy step
By Emilie Dye | The Spectator
This week, Labor MP Joel Fitzgibbon passionately defended the $46,000 electoral allowance which he, like other MPs, receives from taxpayers each year in order to ‘engage’ with constituents: even though they are allowed to pocket what’s left of the allowance as additional income. This is in addition to his $264,000 annual salary and the over $50,000 he receives for travel.
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An Easy Fix for Soccer's Gender Pay Gap
By Satya Marar | The Daily Telegraph
Earlier this year, women’s team members sued the US Soccer Federation for gender discrimination, citing the pay disparity between themselves and the US men’s team.
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Gender equality quotas miss the mark
Satya Marar | The Daily Telegraph
The results of Norway’s ‘gender quota’ law, which states there must be a 40 per cent female quota on corporate boards, has been revealed. It found companies were punished with a profit decline. So is hiring women a bad idea? No quite.
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Is low-nicotine tobacco just another WHO smokescreen?
By Satya Marar | Los Angeles Daily News
Could nicotine-free tobacco eliminate the scourge of smoking once and for all? The World Health Organization (WHO) seems to think it could. Now, they’re pointing to research from the Technical University of Dortmund, which is currently developing tobacco with the world’s lowest nicotine levels in hopes of helping smokers quit or reduce their habit. They’re asking for trouble.
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Plain packaging: a failed policy export
By Jack Johnstone | LibertyWorks
We all know plain packaging is incredibly unappealing to look at, but statistics are consistently showing that it is also completely useless – and may even have effects that go against its intended outcome of reducing smoking.
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More evidence plain packaging has failed (unless you’re out to hurt the poor)
By Emilie Dye | The Spectator
Recent studies are sending the premise of plain packaging up in smoke. Plain packaging does not actually reduce cigarette consumption. In fact, evidence shows that the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control has actually increased smoking in low and middle-income countries.
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Want more women at the top? Don't overtax the ones already there
By Emilie Dye | LibertyWorks
Lowering the 32.5 percent marginal tax rate to 30 percent and abolishing the 37 percent tax bracket for people earning $125,000 to $200,000 helps women. Australian Taxpayers Alliance Policy Director, Satya Marar, published an op-ed this week in the Daily Telegraph pointing out that this tax cut would not only provide Australia’s economy with a much-needed productivity boost. It would also promote women’s workforce participation and would bring more highly educated and qualified women back into the workforce, and reward them with higher paying jobs.
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Queensland’s lockout laws have failed. Will NSW Nannies come clean?
By Emilie Dye | The Spectator
A recent study from Griffith University has found that instead of sobering louts up, lockout laws in Queensland have instead lead to people getting drunker. That’s right. The average blood alcohol content of club customers has increased from .07 per cent to .09 per cent since the implementation of alcohol restrictions. So much for reducing irresponsible drinking to combat alcohol-fuelled violence.
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Keep Sydney safe: rein in the police
By Emilie Dye | The Spectator
Last weekend, Christie Aucamp-Aschutte and a group of friends dancing to the lights of Sydney’s Vivid son et lumière festival with an old boom box were approached by the police and told to ‘move along’ without being allowed to so much as finish their song. Their crime: honestly, no one knows.
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Lockout laws don't stop crime. They send it elsewhere
By Emilie Dye | News Corp Australia Network
Regulating when individuals can consume alcohol does little to improve overall alcohol related crime, writes Emilie Dye. We only need to look at America’s failings to realise Australia should abolish its lockout laws.
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