by Brodlach » Fri Feb 21, 2025 9:47 am
Brodlach wrote:Rory Laird might end up the best IMO, he is an absolute jet. He has been in great form at the Bloods
by tigerpie » Fri Feb 21, 2025 12:05 pm
Brodlach wrote:shoe boy wrote:Tarzia on radio this morning is an absolute train wreck!
The liberal party surly can find anyone better than this flog or maybe not.
That was hilarious, absolutely a train wreck. Did not answer a direct question, no point having him on as he will be in a retirement home by the time the Libs are in office. Gave nothing to his supporters.
Tarzia- hydrogen plant is no good, labour lied,
Tarzia also - we cannot confirm if we will cancel the hydrogen plant as we don’t know enough about it. We will announce our policy when we have one.
FFS.
by Booney » Fri Feb 21, 2025 12:08 pm
by Brodlach » Fri Feb 21, 2025 12:19 pm
Booney wrote:"Drove myself to Whyalla."
Nigel.
Brodlach wrote:Rory Laird might end up the best IMO, he is an absolute jet. He has been in great form at the Bloods
by Booney » Fri Feb 21, 2025 12:20 pm
Brodlach wrote:Booney wrote:"Drove myself to Whyalla."
Nigel.
Why did he keep repeating that?
Good onya mate.
by Dutchy » Fri Feb 21, 2025 12:38 pm
by Brodlach » Fri Feb 21, 2025 12:45 pm
Brodlach wrote:Rory Laird might end up the best IMO, he is an absolute jet. He has been in great form at the Bloods
by MW » Fri Feb 21, 2025 1:14 pm
Brodlach wrote:Australia as a country has to have a steel industry, what happens if we go to war, countries put tariffs on steel coming into the country.
We have an army in case of wars.
by Jim05 » Fri Feb 21, 2025 1:16 pm
Bluescope Pt Kembla is supposedly ramping up and will be powered by offshore wind turbinesBrodlach wrote:Australia as a country has to have a steel industry, what happens if we go to war, countries put tariffs on steel coming into the country.
We have an army in case of wars.
by Booney » Fri Feb 21, 2025 1:25 pm
Jim05 wrote:Bluescope Pt Kembla is supposedly ramping up and will be powered by offshore wind turbinesBrodlach wrote:Australia as a country has to have a steel industry, what happens if we go to war, countries put tariffs on steel coming into the country.
We have an army in case of wars.
by dedja » Fri Feb 21, 2025 1:30 pm
MW wrote:Brodlach wrote:Australia as a country has to have a steel industry, what happens if we go to war, countries put tariffs on steel coming into the country.
We have an army in case of wars.
Also do people think 'cheap' steel from overseas will still be cheap when the only place Australia can source steel is from overseas?
by MW » Fri Feb 21, 2025 1:34 pm
dedja wrote:MW wrote:Brodlach wrote:Australia as a country has to have a steel industry, what happens if we go to war, countries put tariffs on steel coming into the country.
We have an army in case of wars.
Also do people think 'cheap' steel from overseas will still be cheap when the only place Australia can source steel is from overseas?
Not suggesting that we shouldn’t try to keep the Whyalla Steelworks operational, but there are plenty of goods and products that Australia largely import which would cripple the country if they ceased or were disrupted. For example, we import a majority of our petroleum products from overseas and that supply is probably one of the most volatile of all our imports.
by Brodlach » Fri Feb 21, 2025 2:34 pm
Brodlach wrote:Rory Laird might end up the best IMO, he is an absolute jet. He has been in great form at the Bloods
by Jimmy_041 » Fri Feb 21, 2025 3:04 pm
Months in the making Premier Peter Malinauskas took the risk and now claims the reward
The surgical operation to remove GFG as steelworks owner unfolded on Wednesday in carefully co-ordinated lightning strikes and it was months in the making for the premier who took on the risk and now he claims the reward.
Paul Starick
Editor At Large
February 20, 2025 - 5:00AM
SA News
A lawyer was waiting in Sanjeev Gupta’s GFG Alliance Sydney office tower lift well, poised to serve a legal notice ousting the firm as Whyalla steelworks operator.
The surgical operation to remove GFG as steelworks owner unfolded on Wednesday in carefully co-ordinated lightning strikes, that had been meticulously planned over months.
The legal blitzkrieg was laden with the drama of a spy thriller, because of the subterfuge required to mount a successful ambush.
Lawyers were stationed at GFG offices across the nation. Laws were rammed through parliament in an extraordinary morning session. Even Governor Frances Adamson was on standby to greet the Premier and provide all-important assent to the freshly passed laws.
This legal assent was the trigger for the phalanx of lawyers representing the state government to strike and deliver the notices of legal execution for GFG’s Whyalla steelworks ownership.
Effectively, the state government called in SA Water and mining royalty debts to plunge GFG subsidiary OneSteel Manufacturing into administration.
It might sound simple but there were numerous potential fatal hurdles as the events rapidly unfolded.
Not least was Mr Gupta, who has remained a step ahead of critics and creditors for some years, would react rapidly to extinguish his debts to the government.
This would have spiked the administration move before the legal notices were served.
But the lawyers had been crawling all over Mr Malinauskas’s Victoria Square office for weeks for a reason.
They were advising on the multistage plan in a bid to make it legally watertight. The Premier spearheaded the political calculations, thus assuming the risk and any reward.
This revealed the Premier’s steely, ruthless and calculating side – rarely displayed publicly – but clinically deployed as a young union boss in 2011 when he helped knife the-then premier Mike Rann.
The first catalyst for the legal strike was Mr Gupta’s move last May to delay getting the steelworks’ new electric arc furnace online until at least 2027 – two years later than forecast.
It is understood Energy and Mining Minister Tom Koutsantonis found out only when he travelled that May to Buttrio, in Italy’s northeast, that May to eyeball Danelli, the firm developing the $500m furnace.
The state government had earmarked $50m to help fund the furnace, contingent on the plant being commissioned.
Following the electric arc furnace delay, Mr Malinauskas started to move. There were some public signs of the marathon planning operation being waged out of his office.
Late last September, Mr Malinauskas listed five steel firms he had personally held talks with as he declares Whyalla steelworks’ ownership “second” to his long-term green iron plan.
He named BlueScope, Nippon Steel Corporation, POSCO, Thyssenkrupp and Tata Steel.
As late as last Friday, Mr Malinauskas maintained the subterfuge by continuing to insist publicly that he wanted Mr Gupta to succeed, even while pointedly refusing to express trust in his firm’s ongoing ownership of the crucial national asset.
On Sunday at LIV Golf, Mr Malinauskas courted BlueScope Steel chief executive Mark Vassella, hours after meeting Mr Gupta, who had jetted in to Adelaide.
It was the most public sign of the next step in the plan – recruiting a new owner to take over the steelworks.
by Brodlach » Tue Mar 04, 2025 11:39 am
Brodlach wrote:Rory Laird might end up the best IMO, he is an absolute jet. He has been in great form at the Bloods
by Brodlach » Fri Mar 21, 2025 8:45 am
Brodlach wrote:Rory Laird might end up the best IMO, he is an absolute jet. He has been in great form at the Bloods
by Booney » Fri Mar 21, 2025 8:51 am
Brodlach wrote:Mali vs Tarzia is a debate today, oh boy.
Tarzia will be so far out of his depth he’ll need to watch out for sharks.
If an election was held today, who in their right mind would actually vote for Tarzia? I understand that rusted on Libs would but really you’d think not one swinging voter would.
by mighty_tiger_79 » Fri Mar 21, 2025 9:06 am
by Jim05 » Fri Mar 21, 2025 9:09 am
They are zero chance of winning no matter who they put forward. Best off just saying to Mali “Here are the keys for the next two terms, see you in 2034”mighty_tiger_79 wrote:Tarzia to have any remote hope of getting the message across needs to be a whole lot more articulate than he has thus far.
by mighty_tiger_79 » Fri Mar 21, 2025 9:18 am
Jim05 wrote:They are zero chance of winning no matter who they put forward. Best off just saying to Mali “Here are the keys for the next two terms, see you in 2034”mighty_tiger_79 wrote:Tarzia to have any remote hope of getting the message across needs to be a whole lot more articulate than he has thus far.
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