
The Greens senator produced the apparently headless, dead fish during question time in the Senate after directing a question at Labor’s Jenny McAllister. ‘On the eve of an election, have you sold out your environmental credentials for a rotten, stinking extinction salmon?’, Hanson-Young asked before the Senate president, Sue Lines, told Hanson-Young to remove the fish from the chamber. The Albanese government’s new bill to protect salmon farming has experts warning it could stop communities challenging other decisions, including coal and gas developments, and may not even be effective in its principal aimBill to protect Tasmanian salmon farming passes House despite fears of ‘alarming’ environmental protections rollback Continue reading…The Greens senator produced the apparently headless, dead fish during question time in the Senate after directing a question at Labor’s Jenny McAllister. ‘On the eve of an election, have you sold out your environmental credentials for a rotten, stinking extinction salmon?’, Hanson-Young asked before the Senate president, Sue Lines, told Hanson-Young to remove the fish from the chamber. The Albanese government’s new bill to protect salmon farming has experts warning it could stop communities challenging other decisions, including coal and gas developments, and may not even be effective in its principal aimBill to protect Tasmanian salmon farming passes House despite fears of ‘alarming’ environmental protections rollback Continue reading… Wrapped in plastic: Sarah Hanson-Young waves a dead salmon in Senate – video | Australian politics | The Guardian
Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
The Greens senator produced the apparently headless, dead fish during question time in the Senate after directing a question at Labor’s Jenny McAllister. ‘On the eve of an election, have you sold out your environmental credentials for a rotten, stinking extinction salmon?’, Hanson-Young asked before the Senate president, Sue Lines, told Hanson-Young to remove the fish from the chamber. The Albanese government’s new bill to protect salmon farming has experts warning it could stop communities challenging other decisions, including coal and gas developments, and may not even be effective in its principal aim
Most viewed
Most viewed
Discover more from World Byte News
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.