Victorian opposition leader Daniel Andrews has called on Premier Denis Napthine to hold a joint meeting with the Governor, in order to find a solution to the state’s constitutional crisis.
The turmoil began yesterday when balance-of-power MP Geoff Shaw announced his support for a no confidence motion against the Napthine government, after former speaker Ken Smith said he would cross the floor to pass a Labor motion to remove Shaw from the parliament.
Shaw was last week ordered by the privileges committee to repay $6838 for misusing his parliamentary car and fuel card, but was not found in contempt of the parliament.
A by-election will be held in the seat of Frankston if Shaw is removed from parliament, ahead of the full state election in November.
Australand the centre-point of a bidding war
Singapore-based Frasers Centrepoint has put in a cash counter-offer for property group Australand this morning, putting the previous offer from Stockland into question, reports Fairfax.
The company is offering $4.48 per share for the company, amounting to $2.6 billion, trumping the previous offer from Stockland of $4.35 a share, valued at $2.5 billion.
Australand says it has granted Frasers an exclusive four-week due diligence period.
Shares down on open
The S&P/ASX200 benchmark was down 18.1 points to 5461.6 at 12:00 AEST. Last night the Dow Jones closed down 0.13%, falling 21.29 points to 16,722.34.
CMC Markets chief market analyst Ric Spooner said the markets were firm but reasonable in early trading.
“While iron ore prices rallied marginally yesterday, a move back above $100 may be required to convince traders that this is more than just another minor blip against an ongoing downtrend,” said Spooner.