Labor’s housing crisis gets worse

The latest Australian Bureau of Statistics building activity data has confirmed there is no end in sight to Labor’s housing crisis.

2023-24 saw the lowest home building commencements in over a decade, dropping 8.8 per cent to just 158,690 new starts.

Australians know Labor’s promise to build 1.2 million homes over five years has ground to a halt, with industry leaders confirming the Coalition’s predictions of a shortfall by more than 400,000 homes.

This is far less than what was built under the former Coalition government, where the number of dwellings commenced during the last full five calendar years from 2017 to 2021 was 1,028,703.

Additionally, trade apprenticeship numbers have also declined, with completions down 8.6 per cent and commencements down 11.8 per cent, further impacting the construction sector.

To put Labor’s housing crisis into more perspective:

  • The number of loans provided for the purchase or construction of new homes is at a 15-year low.
  • Net permanent and long-term arrivals in the 12 months to July 2024 was 463,150, almost 60 per cent greater than the 293,860 net arrivals in the equivalent year before the pandemic.
  • Since the election, national median rents have increased by 23 per cent to $632 per week from $512 in May 2022.
  • The National Housing Accord envisages 240,000 new homes each year, however, the past 12 months have seen only 166,200 new home building approvals across Australia.
  • One new home needs to be built every 2.2 minutes to keep up with Labor’s promise to build 1.2 million homes.
  • The twelve-interest rate rises since the election has added at least an extra $20,000 per year to a family with a $750,000 mortgage.

Under Labor, housing will never be a priority, maintaining mortgage and rental repayments has never been more difficult, and home ownership has never been further out of reach.

Visit to Laos for ASEAN-Australia and East Asia summits

Prime Minister, Anthony Albanese, will travel to Vientiane, Laos from 9-11 October for the 4th Annual ASEAN-Australia Summit and 19th East Asia Summit.

This visit is vital to advocating for Australia’s interests for a more prosperous and stable region, and will build on the success of the 2024 ASEAN-Australia Special Summit held in Melbourne in March, where leaders reaffirmed their commitment to securing peace and a sustainable future for the region.

Deepening engagement with Southeast Asia is a priority of the Australian Government. Stability in the region is crucial for Australia’s future.

ASEAN is Australia’s second largest two-way trading partner. Trade supports one in four Australian jobs, with half a million jobs in Australia already linked to trade with Southeast Asia. More than one million Australians have Southeast Asian heritage, reflecting our personal ties in the region.

In Vientiane, Prime Minister Albanese will meet with leaders and business representatives to discuss work underway to boost two-way trade and investment through Invested: Australia’s Southeast Asia Strategy to 2040.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese:

“I look forward to building on the success of the ASEAN-Australia Special Summit earlier this year and thank Prime Minister Sonexay for hosting these vital meetings.

“We are committed to working with our partners to pursue a peaceful, stable and prosperous region with ASEAN at the centre.

“We are also acting to grasp economic opportunities in a region of incredible vitality and promise. Trade creates jobs for our nation and helps build our Future Made in Australia agenda.

“My Government will continue to work closely with our partners to maximise opportunities for Australian businesses and workers within the region.”

Albanese Government keeping the National Broadband Network in public hands

The Albanese Government is introducing legislation today to keep the National Broadband Network (NBN) owned by the Australian people – ensuring fast, reliable and affordable internet now and into the future for all Australians.

Our Government committed at the election to deliver accessible internet for all, and today we continue to take that forward.

High speed broadband is essential to modern life – it allows Australians to work remotely, run their businesses more productively, video-conference with clients and colleagues, supply and receive telehealth services – while enjoying leisure with their families through streaming.

The Coalition rushed to declare the NBN ‘complete’ so they could put it on the block for sale – selling out Australian consumers and regional communities.

The Albanese Government won’t let that happen. This legislation will ensure the NBN is owned by who it belongs to – the Australian people.

This is in addition to what we have already done:

  1. Invested $2.4 billion to expand full fibre NBN access to an additional 1.5 million premises – including 660,000 rural and regional communities;
  2. From September next year, boosting download speeds by up to 5 times current speeds – at no extra wholesale cost.  A household or small business with a 100 Mbps plan in 2024 will benefit from 500 Mbps connectivity in 2025;
  3. Rolling out more fibre in the fixed line network, upgrading the fixed-wireless network and planning for future needs.

These upgrades are already making a real difference in the lives of Australians through faster more reliable internet access.

Keeping the NBN in public hands will lock in affordable and accessible high speed internet for all Australians for generations to come.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

“All Australians deserve high quality and affordable services no matter their postcode. That includes access to the NBN.

“Keeping the NBN in public hands means high speed broadband remains affordable for Australian families and businesses around the country.

“Upgrades to the NBN are also a key part of our plan for a Future Made in Australia, but achieving this vision won’t happen without a reliable, high-speed National Broadband Network.

“The Coalition made a mess of the NBN – my Government is getting on with the job of fixing it and making sure it stays in public hands, where it belongs.”

Minister for Finance Katy Gallagher

“The NBN is critical national infrastructure, and we know that having a faster, higher quality NBN network has a huge impact on Australia’s economy – delivering a $400 billion uplift in GDP by 2030.

“Economic analysis commissioned by NBN Co shows that for every one megabit per second increase in average broadband speed, Australia’s productivity-driven GDP increased on average by 0.04 per cent.

“The Albanese Government is delivering a better NBN for Australians, investing $2.4 billion in the October 2022-23 Budget to expand fibre access to 1.5 million premises by 2025.”

Minister for Communications Michelle Rowland

“It is only a Labor Government that will ensure the NBN remains in public hands.

“Communities across Australia have told us that the job of upgrading the NBN is not complete, which is why we’re investing in more fibre and fixed wireless upgrades.

“Australians don’t trust the Coalition not to flog off the NBN just like they did with Telstra, resulting in higher prices and poorer services, especially in the regions.

“This Bill will ensure the NBN continues to deliver for all Australians – improving digital inclusion and price certainty for industry and consumers.

“The Government is delivering on our election commitments to provide fast, reliable and affordable broadband to all Australians, and only by keeping the NBN in the ownership of the Australian people will that vision continue to be delivered.”

Shredders rejoice: Greens to invest $1.2 million in mountain biking

The ACT Greens will support volunteer trail builders and deliver new trails at Stromlo Forest Park, to maintain Canberra’s appeal as a mountain biking destination for locals and tourists.

“Mountain biking is one of Canberra’s fastest growing sports, and more trails means more fun,” said Laura Nuttall MLA, Greens spokesperson on sport and recreation, recontesting her Tuggeranong seat of Brindabella.

“Mountain biking has already brought $30 million a year in domestic tourism to the ACT, and an international event happening on the South Coast next year is a huge opportunity for Canberra – if we can maintain our status as a mountain biking destination for tourists.

“We need to get on and deliver the Master Plan for Stromlo Forest Park and keep Canberra’s other trail networks in great shape.

“That’s why the ACT Greens will invest $1.2 million in our trails and the people who look after them,” Miss Nuttall said.

The ACT Greens will:

  • Invest $800,000 in new trails at Stromlo Forest Park, as a start to delivering the Master Plan
  • Provide $400,000 to community groups building and maintaining trails across the ACT
  • Make the most of the opportunity offered by Sea Otter 2025 coming to Mogo Trails next October.

“Mountain biking is good for our health, it’s great fun, and it’s a wonderful way to appreciate Canberra’s environment,” said Jo Clay MLA, recontesting Greens Member for Ginninderra.

“We have excellent trails across the city for locals and visitors. But our volunteers need support to keep them that way.

“The Greens plan will build on the improved maintenance we’ve secured at Stromlo, to support local groups to maintain trail networks across the ACT, from Majura Pines and Cotter Pines to Bruce Ridge, Kowen Forest and more.

“This investment will get the gears moving again on making Canberra Australia’s mountain biking capital – where locals, tourists and competitive riders can shred the day away.”

More detail about the Greens’ plans for mountain biking and community sport is on the ACT Greens website.

Nature Negative, Global Summit an embarrassment

The NSW and Australian Labor Governments have kicked off the first Global Nature Positive Summit in Sydney this morning despite the recent approval of 3 massive coal mine expansions and the ongoing logging of the public native forest estate, including the promised Great Koala National Park in NSW. Community members gathered at the International Convention Centre in Sydney to protest the Summit under guard by heavily armed police.

Greens MP and spokesperson for nature Sue Higginson said “Today’s summit in Sydney is a scam against NSW, Australia and the global community. The Labor Governments in NSW and Canberra are trashing the climate and nature, while trying to sell this nature positive lie to the world,”

“The greatest threat to nature, the environment, and humans, is the rapidly changing climate and we are turbo charging this crisis by mining, exporting and burning coal from NSW. Just two weeks ago, the Federal Labor Government signed off on 3 coal mining projects in NSW in one day, extending the mining of coal for another 30 years. This summit today is a sick and twisted charade from a Labor Party that has been captured by the fossil fuel industry,”

“It is galling that as this summit is underway extinction logging across our precious public forest estate continues, including in the Great Koala National Park. Communities from Taree to Tweed are in the forests right now, putting their lives on hold and their bodies on the line to stop the industrial scale logging that is driving the extinction of our most threatened species while Tanya Plibersek pats herself on the back in Sydney. Labor’s cognitive dissonance on nature right now is intellectually dishonest.”

“Labor is trying to hide their failures by blaming weak environmental laws. As a planning and environmental lawyer, I know that the laws we have need fixing – but they could be used to stop coal and gas projects and logging, Labor is just refusing to do it,”

“The heavily armed police at the community rally today was unnecessary and an act of intimidation against peaceful people. If the Police are wondering who the real threats to security are, they’ll find them working in the boardrooms of fossil fuel giants,”

“We have had enough. In Parliament, Members from across the political divide are ready to stop the Minns Labor Government in its tracks. If the Government won’t listen to their own Labor backbenchers, as well as the science, then we will take a stand to make them,” Ms Higginson said.

Premier Chris Minns’ latest attempt to stifle right to protest masquerades as “User-pays”

Following the huge crowds that attended peaceful anti-war protests over the weekend, the NSW Premier Chris Minns has spoken out about the possibility of categorising ongoing assemblies as user-pays events. In NSW, the Police Force provides most policing services free of charge, but are entitled under the “user-pays” agreement to charge the organisers of primarily music festivals excessive fees to police crowds and ensure community safety. There has been sustained criticism in recent years that the NSWPF have been using user-pays to price-gouge organisers and shut-down events they deem inappropriate.

Greens MP and spokesperson for justice Sue Higginson said, “The right to protest, including as part of a sustained protest effort, is the foundation of a healthy, functioning and mature democracy. Threatening to interfere with the right to protest creates a dangerous environment where important voices of democracy are strangled out of existence,”

“The police presence at the civil assemblies in support of the Palestinian and Lebanese people has been extreme, excessive and unnecessary. We now have 52 weeks of evidence that demonstrates these protests are non-violent and peaceful. In 365 days there have been no incidents of violence, except from the police themselves. People are gathering to express their collective grief and they’re calling for an end to the violence. There is simply no justification for such an excessive show of heavily armed and mounted police at these events,”

“If the Premier is concerned about the cost to the public of excessive police presence at protest events, the rational solution is to stop the excessive police presence and allocate those resources elsewhere. It is wrong for him to cry poor on police resourcing and allocation when he has been drumming up the need for the heavy police presence and when there is simply no credible reason for such a show of police to attend these events,”

“The extreme reliance on the Police in this state has been well documented, and under this Labor Government is being ratcheted up to an extreme level. It is not protestors or sustained peaceful non-violence that is a drain on our public funds, but the intense over-reliance on heavily armed and over-empowered police officers. It is time for the police state being swiftly cultivated under Minns’ watch to be called to account,”

“We know that the user-pays price tag is just a thinly-veiled attempt to shut down these important historic anti-war assemblies. The Premier knows well that a grass-roots coalition sustained by volunteers committed to speaking out against injustice have no possible means to pay the hefty price tag associated with a user-pays event. This is a state-sanctioned chokehold on the right to protest and assembly, and a transparent attempt to disband the tens-of-thousands of people critiquing NSW Labor,”

“There is simply no need for such a heavy handed approach and over policing. The Premier is once again responding to shock-jocks who would rather stoke social unrest than listen to the voices of the people. The Premier is now so influenced by 2GB it is hard to tell where one begins and the other ends. Perhaps it is time for Chris Minns to cut out the middleman and hand over the Premiership to 2GBs Ray Hadly,” Ms Higginson said.

Food is not a luxury: Greens commit to further food relief

A healthy, happy, productive society needs access to nutritious and affordable food. As cost of living pressures continue to increase for Canberrans, the ACT Greens are committing to further food relief for households and public schools students.

“Food is not a luxury, it’s essential to our wellbeing. But the market is failing us – price-gouging, and forcing people into impossible choices between food and medicine, or food and rent,” said Emma Davidson MLA, recontesting her south Canberra seat of Murrumbidgee.

“In a period of just six months this year, 51 per cent more people started visiting the YWCA’s food hub in Lanyon. In just one month, St. John’s Care started helping out 100 more Canberra families.

“For many people, this is their first time having to ask for help with the basics, and it’s essential we work together as a community to respond.”

The ACT Greens will:

  • Increase funding for community-run food relief programs, with $330,000 per year on top of the funding already committed in the most recent ACT Budget
  • Expand the provision of free breakfast and lunch to 20 ACT public schools by 2028, and provide free fruit twice a week to every public school student
  • Support food and emergency relief agencies with improved logistics and storage
  • Fully fund the Social Recovery Framework to strengthen community recovery after a disaster.

ACT Greens spokesperson on education, Laura Nuttall MLA, said food is fundamental to a good education.

“Kids have hungry minds, but they also need full bellies to be able to learn properly at school. 

“Food is a basic need. It’s essential. But right now, there are students in the ACT starting their days running on empty. 

“Providing food at school will improve learning and attendance, and help families struggling to afford enough good food.

“The Greens will provide free breakfast and lunch three days each week at 20 of the most in-need schools in the ACT, and give free fruit to every public school student at least twice a week.”

ACT Greens Leader Shane Rattenbury said the food affordability crisis is significant in the overall cost pressures facing Canberrans.

“Make no mistake, this is a cost of living election, but only the Greens have got plans to transform the circumstances we face.

“While we work to fix the price-gouging supermarket duopoly, the ACT Greens will make sure Canberrans don’t go hungry at home or at school.

“While we work to fix the broken housing market, the ACT Greens will build thousands more public homes so Canberrans can rent from the government at a price they can afford, knowing the rent they pay is invested back into this community.

“While people are juggling so many cost pressures, the Greens will deliver 160,000 free GP appointments each year, so you don’t have to choose between seeing a doctor or putting food on the table.

“All this is possible, if you vote for it.”

The ACT Greens’ plans for food relief and to address the cost of living are detailed on the ACT Greens website.

October 7 attacks

On the first anniversary of the October 7 attacks, we pause to reflect on the horrific terrorist atrocity that reverberated around the globe.

October 7 is a day that carries terrible pain. Over 1,200 innocent Israelis died: the largest loss of Jewish life on any single day since the Holocaust.

We unequivocally condemn Hamas’ actions on that day.

Innocent lives taken at a music festival. Women, men and children killed in their homes. Brutality that was inflicted with cold calculation.

Today, we also think of the hostages whose lives remain suspended in the fear and isolation of captivity. For their loved ones, this past year must have felt like an eternity – the agony of waiting and not knowing, or of having the terrible truth confirmed.

Since the atrocities of October 7, Jewish Australians have felt the cold shadows of antisemitism reaching into the present day – and as a nation we say never again.

We unequivocally condemn all prejudice and hatred. There is no place in Australia for discrimination against people of any faith.

As we mourn and reflect, we also re-affirm a fundamental principle of our shared humanity: every innocent life matters.

We recognise the distress the conflict has caused here in Australia.

Sorrow knows no boundaries and recognises no differences.

The number of civilians who have lost their lives is a devastating tragedy.

Today, we reflect on the truth of our shared humanity, of the hope that peace is possible, and the belief that it belongs to all people.

Applications open to deliver historic pay rise for early childhood workers

From today, early learning providers can apply for Commonwealth Government funding to deliver early childhood education and care workers a historic 15 per cent pay rise.

To be eligible to receive the Albanese Government’s funding for the wage increase, early childhood education and care services must agree not to increase their fees by more than 4.4 per cent between 8 August 2024 and 7 August 2025.

This is good for early childhood educators and good for families.

There will also be a limit on fee growth in the second year of the wage subsidy. The percentage limit on fee growth that will apply from August 2025 will be determined by a new ECEC cost index being developed by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

This is an important condition that will keep downward pressure on out-of-pocket costs for families.

Services must also pass on funding in full to employees through increased wages.

The 15 per cent pay rise will be phased in over two years, starting with a 10 per cent increase from December 2024, with a further 5 per cent increase from December 2025.

This means a typical early childhood educator who is paid at the award rate will receive a pay rise of more than $100 per week this year, increasing to more than an additional $150 per week from December 2025.

This significant wage increase is an important next step in the Government’s reforms to the sector, building on the successful Cheaper Child Care policy.

Latest data shows that Cheaper Child Care has seen the average out-of-pocket costs for families decrease by more than 13 per cent from the June quarter 2023 to the June quarter 2024.

The Government’s Cheaper Child Care policy increased the base subsidy rates from July 2023 for all families earning up to $530,000, and set the maximum subsidy to 90 per cent for families earning $80,000 or less.

Thanks to the increased subsidy, a family earning $120,000, with one child in care three days a week, paid around $2,140 less last financial year than they otherwise would have.

The Government is currently considering the Productivity Commission’s report handed down earlier this month.

For further information on the 15 per cent wage increase, grant eligibility and how to apply visit How to apply for the worker retention payment.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese:

“Early educators shape lives and change lives. They deserve more than our thanks – they deserve to be paid fairly.

“Parents want their children to be safe, happy and to have the very best start in life. This funding is about fair pay for the people who make this possible.

“Importantly, we’re making sure that our early educators are getting fair wages without putting cost of living pressure on families.

“This is part of our Government’s agenda to make sure that Australians are making more and keeping more of what they earn, while providing that vital cost of living relief.”

Minister for Education Jason Clare:

“The child care debate is over. It’s not babysitting. It’s early education and it’s critical to preparing children for school.

“They lift our kids up and now we are lifting their pay.

“This means wages up for workers and keeping prices down for families.

“A pay rise for every early childhood educator is good for our workforce, good for families and good our economy.”

Minister for Early Childhood Education and Minister for Youth Anne Aly:

“We’re boosting the wages of early childhood education workers, while relieving cost of living pressures on Australian families.

“Properly valuing the early childhood education and care workforce is crucial to attracting and retaining workers and vital to achieving the quality universal early learning sector Australian families deserve.

“A quality early childhood education sector is necessary to support children’s learning and development as well as workforce participation in the broader economy – particularly for women.

“I urge all eligible early learning services to sign up to this important initiative, so their hardworking staff get the full benefit of this wage increase.”

Pro-Palestine and Peaceful Protest wins the day

The NSW Police application in the Supreme Court to prohibit pro Palestine assemblies in Sydney on 6 and 7 October has failed. After a day of hearing and negotiations between the Police and representatives of the Palestine Action Group (PAG), agreement was reached that the assemblies will go ahead and the police will withdraw their applications to prohibit the assemblies.

The parties asked the Court to make orders that the proceeding be dismissed. Each party pays their own costs and the prohibition order applications are not pressed.

Greens MP and spokesperson for justice Sue Higginson said, “It was such poor judgement and use of public resources that the NSW Police Force would take the organisers of the longest running peaceful anti-war protests in two decades to court to prevent their planned assemblies. Once again a grassroots community justice movement has stood up for and defended our democracy and the fundamental right to protest in the courts against the strong-arm of an emboldened law-and-order state,”

“While democracy and the right to peacefully assemble and protest has ultimately won the day through, we must see this for what it is. The right to protest in NSW has been systematically attacked by successive Labor and Liberal Governments for decades. This sort of politics sends strong signals to Police that they don’t have to tolerate and assist with peaceful protest and non-violent civil disobedience,”

“The right of all individuals to exercise freedom of speech and the right to assemble peacefully has won the day, but the reality is, it should never have been on trial. If protest was enshrined into law in NSW as it is in other States and Territories, the NSW Police Force would not be so emboldened to attempt to remove these rights,”

“It was clear to every single person in the courtroom today that the Police applications were not well made and relied on arguments based on unknowns and assumptions laden with racist and intolerant undertones. The truth of the day is that the tinder-box is not the assemblies, but the inadequacy and poor judgement of the Police, the Premier and the Prime Minister,” Ms Higginson said.