Labor plans to kick with the wind for a second time
The dynamic could not be more different to this time last year when parliament wound up with the government blowing smoke and the prime minister resembling a shot duck.
At 1.59pm on Thursday, as members of the House of Representatives took their seats for the final question time of the year, Treasurer Jim Chalmers stuck it to his opposition counterpart, Angus Taylor.
Blindsided by the government’s deal with the Senate crossbench to secure the structural shake-up of the Reserve Bank of Australia, Taylor was in the final throes of a 90-second tirade about the supposed dangers of dealing with the Greens on something as serious as the composition of the central bank.
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