To force the government to take on financial corruption, it is crucial that all financial victims with experience of ASIC’s failings make a submission to the Senate Economics Committee inquiry by 3 February.
Participate in the Senate inquiry into lifting the world’s only ban on developing nuclear power (details below).
With energy prices out of control, South Australia’s Labor Premier Peter Malinauskas has pulled the rug out from under Energy Minister Chris Bowen and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese by proposing an open-minded approach to nuclear power.
Bankers are dictating the Albanese government’s policies on fining executives, cashless banking.
Who’s running Australia? The banks.
If there was any doubt, events this week in federal Parliament dispelled it—in technicolour!
Australians smashed by interest rate rises are paying the price for decades of the Reserve Bank of Australia ignoring its lawful mandate in favour of a policy dictated by neoliberal think tanks.
All financial victims who have been failed by the regulator should make a submission to the new Senate inquiry—see details below.
ASIC is a trigger word for financial victims, invoking the emotional nightmare they endured when struggling to deal with the reality of being ripped off.
Albanese government minister Stephen Jones promised compensation for financial victims and civil penalties for bad banking—demand he deliver for the people, not the banks.