Pickering's latest, I'm posting his blog because as previously mentioned the media are ignoring the The Royal commission. TURC, is an acronym for the union Royal commission.
In the late 90s Gillard passed Bill Shorten the baton and he simply carried on with the AWU corruption that had been running rampant for 20 years that we know of. Media’s failure to address Julia Gillard and her boyfriend’s AWU fraud led Shorten to believe he would also be safe from investigation.
For the TURC under Dyson Heydon to ignore Gillard and attack Shorten destroys the Commission’s credibility.
Gillard made an art form of corrupt union protection rackets by redirecting the illicit funds for her and her boyfriend’s personal benefit using a dozen sham CBA accounts that were acquired by lying to the WA Corporate Affairs Commissioner.
Gillard took the protection racket to new heights with a thinly-veiled (and easily proved) money laundering process involving the renovation of properties purchased with the defrauded funds.
Like Kathy Jackson, Shorten also genuinely believes he did nothing wrong.
Gillard and Wilson were involved in far greater criminality than Shorten but, as Australia’s first female Prime Minister, Gillard’s continuous bleatings of misogyny kept an adoring and sympathetic Press at bay, despite documented evidence made available on blogs like this one. (See the Gillard Files on the home page of pickeringpost.com)
There is no evidence that Shorten used scammed funds for tangible personal benefit other than to assist his election to Parliament.
There is ample evidence to show he knew of, and was complicit in, Gillard’s criminality that led to her dismissal from Slater & Gordon.
Thiess and John Holland were, and still are, just two of the construction companies that gave millions to the AWU and CFMEU and others in return for industrial peace.
Unions have insisted enterprise bargaining agreements (EBA’s) are identical for each construction company, citing a needed “fair and level playing field”. But the reason is a far more sinister one that allows for a union’s demands to be the only cost difference between companies.
This in effect gives the union the control to decide who stays in business and who doesn’t and that depends on the extorted funds received.
This tactic was made evident to the TURC in relation to Canberra where much of the development is at the taxpayers’ cost.
Union corruption is out of control and Dyson Heydon needs to get fair dinkum and not just look where the light is brightest.
If he refuses to recall Julia Gillard then the Commission will have failed in its duty to Australian taxpayers. She and Wilson were at the very core of the corruption the Commission is now unearthing.
Shorten might deserve short shrift, but Gillard deserves the guillotine.