ZERO SUPPORT FOR LABOR’S ATTACK ON PEOPLE SEEKING ASYLUM AND DIASPORA COMMUNITIES

In a historic failure, the Albanese government has been unable to get a single stakeholder to support their shambolic Migration Amendment (Removals and Other Measures) Bill 2024.

The committee report on the Bill released today demonstrates just how isolated Labor is in this attack on Australia’s diaspora communities.

The Greens dissenting report summarises the unanimous calls from the stakeholders and the broader public to scrap this anti-refugee and travel ban push.

With over 120 public submissions to the Senate inquiry into the Bill, only one supported it, and that was from the Department of Home Affairs itself.

Throughout the inquiry, this Bill was shown to be racist, in breach of international law, a threat to social cohesion, cruel, ineffective and unworkable. Despite this the Labor majority Senate Standing Committees on Legal and Constitutional Affairs’s report supports the Bill. That is a recommendation with no friends.

The Bill is not only cruel but also unnecessary, with the proposed powers unlikely to achieve anything more than whipping up fear and racism. There is also a deep lack of substance to this Bill, with the government providing conflicting information on who will be affected and blatantly refusing to tell the public key facts about its impact.

The debate now moves to the Senate where the government has no certain path for this Bill to proceed, with the Greens and progressive crossbenchers opposed, and the Coalition far from a certain partner.

Senator Shoebridge’s dissenting report can be found here on page 97 [link]

Greens Immigration Spokesperson Senator David Shoebridge said: “Every single witness and submission to this inquiry, apart from those paid by the Commonwealth, demanded this Bill be rejected.

“I cannot recall another occasion when the government of the day has been so monumentally out of touch with the public. This is an unprecedented level of rejection.

”Given how many fundamental issues have been demonstrated with this Bill it is extraordinary that the Albanese government tried to ram it through Parliament’s last session in less than two days. We now know that had Parliament agreed to that reckless proposal from the Albanese government it certainly would have made a terrible mistake.

“Instead of taking the opposition on board the Albanese Government has instead doubled down and are refusing to tell either this committee or the public who they want to target with this Bill or the countries they intend to blacklist.

“Not since the White Australia policy has a proposal by the Federal Government been so fundamentally against the spirit of multiculturalism in Australia or been such a direct threat to diaspora communities in the country.

“The Albanese Government has chosen to try to outflank Dutton to the right on immigration. This is a contest they can never win.

“This Bill can’t be fixed by amendment, it is so fundamentally flawed it must not be allowed to become law.

“The Greens have heard the message loud and clear during this inquiry and we will vote accordingly to reject the Bill in full,” Senator Shoebridge said.

LABOR OFFERS NICE WORDS FOR ACTIVE TRANSPORT, BUT NO REAL FUNDING

This morning Labor has announced a $100 million Active Transport Fund with a commencement date of 1 July 2025. 

This falls far short of the 20% of federal transport funding for active transport called for by the Climate Council in its 2023 Shifting Gear Report in order to achieve Australia’s obligations under the Paris Agreement, and to combat traffic congestion in our cities.

The Greens have long called for a dedicated Active Transport Fund, and at the last federal election announced a Fund of $500 million per year – twenty times Labor’s recent announcement.

Attributale to Elizabeth Watson-Brown MP, Greens spokesperson for Transport, Infrastructure and Sustainable Cities:

While our cities groan with traffic and transport emissions grow, Labor is offering only one twentieth of what would be needed in terms of active transport investment to give people the freedom to leave their car at home. 

Labor’s new fund will not see a meaningful decrease in cars on the road. This is evident from the fact that, while they budget $25 million a year for active transport, they’re still tipping over $10 billion a year into road projects that will see more people drive.

As with so many announcements from this Labor government, the wording sounds nice, but the reality is a penny pinching mentality, while big corporations make record profits and dodge tax.

If Labor’s new active transport commitment were spread between Australia’s 86 cities and regional centres, it would equate to just over $290,000 a year each for active transport infrastructure. That’s hardly much more than a few painted lines. We need an Active Transport Fund that can deliver the infrastructure our growing cities need.

The futility of pro-Palestine protests by ‘useful idiots’

‘Useful idiots’ is one of the kinder terms to describe the gullible morons now camping out in Australian university campuses and spewing hatred ‘in solidarity with Palestine’.

You’ve got to hand it to the propagandists working for the terrorist group Hamas. They’ve tapped in to the essential anti-Semitism of the West’s political left and have successfully manipulated many thousands of really, REALLY stupid university students to do their bidding. 

The terrorists are laughing at how easily these adherents to neo-Marxist identity and victimhood politics have been led by the nose like so many draft animals into supporting a terrorist group that would happily murder all of them. They’re laughing at the weakness of virtue-signalling governments – like those under Anthony Albanese or Joe Biden – who allow the excesses of these hypocritical protesters to go unchecked and unchallenged. 

It’s no laughing matter for Jewish Australians, however. They’ve been abused, assaulted and attacked not for any support they might have for Israel’s defence against terrorism, but only and solely because they’re Jews. Australia in 2024 is starting to resemble Nazi Germany in 1934 thanks to the hateful ideology of fundamentalist Islam, the fools manipulated into supporting it, and the moral leadership vacuum left by the worst Prime Minister since Whitlam. 

Preachers of this ideology publicly advocate the genocide of Jews – which is a crime in Australia – but are never held to account let alone brought before the authorities. The ideology has directly led to Australian teenagers committing horrific crimes in recent weeks, in both Sydney and Perth. Yet it is allowed to flourish among communities that have brought this hatred to our shores. 

Pauline Hanson has been sounding the alarm for years about allowing people with this ideology to come and live in Australia. They should never have been allowed to come here. The ideology is completely incompatible with Australian values of religious tolerance, secular government and freedom of speech. There is no place for such an ideology here. 

Australia’s universities could have ended these ridiculous protests quite easily: by saying an unequivocal ‘no’ – a word many of these privileged idiots have probably never been told – to the protesters’ demands and expelling students who did not disperse at the university’s direction. Sadly, the faculties of these universities have been thoroughly infiltrated by the same ideology poisoning the weak minds of the morons protesting. 

What’s worse is that these vile protests are taking attention away from the issues impacting every Australian – which is handy for Albanese but not the Australian people. These useful idiots are not creating a single job, building a single new home or providing a single cent of support for a family on the brink of homelessness. 

No, it’s all about them and a conflict taking place more than 12,000km away – a conflict over which Australia cannot possibly have any meaningful influence. That’s the real joke on these morons: all of these protests ‘in solidarity with Palestine’ will amount to precisely nothing as Israel continues to hunt down the sadistic killers of Hamas in defence of its people.

$519 million boost to help farmers mitigate impacts of drought

The Albanese Labor Government will invest a record $519.1 million in Future Drought Fund programs to help farmers and regional communities prepare for the next drought and build climate resilience.

The previous Fund under the Morrison Government did not acknowledge climate change as a driver of longer and more severe droughts. Today we have fixed this.

Labor has restructured the Fund and its objectives to get better results for farming families and communities and will provide record funding for it in next week’s Budget.

Farmers are on the frontline of climate change and the Albanese Government has listened to what they need.

This Fund will provide:

  • Better tools for farmers to help mitigate the impact of drought on their farms.
  • Strategies for local communities to prepare for and manage risks through drought.
  • Increased investment in the existing network of drought hubs.

The programs will start to become available from 1 July 2024.

Communities can find out more by reaching out to the Department of Agriculture online or by phone.

Today’s announcement is in response to the recent Productivity Commission review, last year’s National Drought Forum, and extensive consultation with stakeholders.

Improving the sustainability of the agricultural sector is a key priority for the sector and the Albanese Government and this investment today responds to the increasing risk climate change is posing to rural and regional communities.

Examples of programs included in the Fund:

  • $235 million to extend the Drought Resilience Adoption and Innovation Hubs, the Future Drought Fund Communities program and the next phase of the Regional Drought Resilience Planning Program.
  • $137.4 million to extend and improve the existing Farm Business Resilience and Climate Services for Agriculture programs, and the new Scaling Success Program. The Farm Business Resilience program has already helped thousands of farmers with business planning, coaching, and financial literacy training.
  • $120.3 million for programs that trial innovative solutions to build long-term resilience to drought and climate risks.
  • Expansion of the Long Term Trials Program, roll out of the revised Resilient Landscapes Program, and implementation of a new Innovation Challenges Pilot to drive the uptake of evidence-based, innovative practices, approaches and technologies.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

“It’s vital that we support Australian farmers and producers to be prepared for more severe weather impacts.

“That is why we’re investing hundreds of millions more in the agricultural sector and regional communities to plan and prepare for drought through the Future Drought Fund.

“By doing the work now our rural and regional communities are not just reacting to events as they unfold, but will have considered plans to make them more resilient to climate change.”

Agriculture Minister Murray Watt

“Every morning when farmers around the country wake up, put their boots on and go to work, they are one day closer to the next drought.

“We are already seeing very dry conditions in Western Australia and some parts of Tasmania.

“Time is of the essence when it comes to planning for drought, that’s why we’re investing heavily now in a new and improved Future Drought Fund.

“We’re helping farmers across the country develop business plans to manage diversification in a changing climate, we’re helping regional communities manage drought and other climate risks, and helping individuals get leadership training and mentoring.

“I’ve seen firsthand the great work under the FDF, like trialling new, drought-resistant livestock feed and connecting farmers with the latest scientific advice on reducing drought impacts.

“Our commitment of nearly $520 million from the FDF supports farmers and farming communities to take steps ahead of time.

“This not only empowers farmers and communities but makes them more self-reliant when drought hits.”

Investing in a better future for Western Sydney

The Albanese Government is making critical investments in Western Sydney which will cement its future as a hub for growth and a place of opportunity.

We are committing $1.9 billion towards 14 new projects and providing additional funding for two existing projects.

These projects will help underpin the fundamental shift of jobs and growth to Sydney’s west.

Our new investments include construction projects, as well as planning projects, to ensure we lay the ground work for a pipeline of future road investments, which are properly scoped, designed and costed.

Our investment will help deliver 14 new projects, including:

  • Mamre Road Stage 2 Upgrade
  • Elizabeth Drive – Priority Sections Upgrade
  • Garfield Road East Upgrade
  • Memorial Avenue Upgrade
  • Appin Road – St Johns Road Intersection Upgrade

We will invest $147.5 million for planning for roads across greater Western Sydney to ensure that road infrastructure can keep pace with a growing population.

We are also investing $20 million to partner with the NSW Government to expand the scope of the South West Sydney Rail Planning – Business Case to include consideration of extending the line to the Macarthur region.

Where the previous Morrison Government had a deluge of press releases with a drought of delivery, we are ensuring that projects can be completed and the benefits flow to communities
We are already investing over $14 billion in Western Sydney, more than the previous Liberals and Nationals government.

The new investment takes that total to $17.3 billion.

There will be more to say at Budget time about further investments for NSW.

Prime Minister of Australia Anthony Albanese

“My Government is proud to support the people of Western Sydney and deliver the roads and rail lines they need and deserve.

“This is in addition to the new Western Sydney airport and the recently opened Moorebank Intermodal Precinct which will drive jobs and economic activity for Western Sydney.
“We are getting on with delivering a better future for all Australians, one made in Australia that builds economic opportunity and thriving communities.”

Minister for Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Local Government Catherine King

“We are working for all Australians to deliver significant infrastructure that increases opportunities and connections, builds communities and improves safety.

“The hard work we undertook to clean up the mess in the infrastructure pipeline means there is room to ensure current projects can be delivered and plan for future projects.”

“I thank the NSW Government for working closely with us to ensure the delivery of these projects.”

Australian Government funding for new construction projects$ million
Mamre Road Stage 2 Upgrade500
Elizabeth Drive – Priority Sections Upgrade400
Richmond Road Upgrade – M7 Motorway to Townson Road260
Garfield Road East220
Memorial Avenue Upgrade123.3
Mulgoa Road Stage 2 Upgrade115
Western Sydney Rapid Bus Infrastructure Upgrade100
Appin Road – St Johns Road Intersection Upgrade22.5
Total1,888.3
Australian Government funding for new planning projects$ million
Cambridge Avenue Upgrade – Planning 
Western Sydney Freight Line Stage 1 – Final Business Case 
Western Sydney Roads Future Planning 
Eastern Ring Road and Badgerys Creek Road South – Planning 
Spring Farm Parkway Stage 2 – Planning 
Total147.5
Additional Australian Government funding for existing projects$ million
Appin Road – Appin Road Corridor (Appin – Gilead Works)50
South West Sydney Rail Planning – Business Case20
Total 70

$519 million boost to help farmers mitigate impacts of drought

The Albanese Labor Government will invest a record $519.1 million in Future Drought Fund programs to help farmers and regional communities prepare for the next drought and build climate resilience.

The previous Fund under the Morrison Government did not acknowledge climate change as a driver of longer and more severe droughts. Today we have fixed this.

Labor has restructured the Fund and its objectives to get better results for farming families and communities and will provide record funding for it in next week’s Budget.

Farmers are on the frontline of climate change and the Albanese Government has listened to what they need.

This Fund will provide:

  • Better tools for farmers to help mitigate the impact of drought on their farms.
  • Strategies for local communities to prepare for and manage risks through drought.
  • Increased investment in the existing network of drought hubs.

The programs will start to become available from 1 July 2024.

Communities can find out more by reaching out to the Department of Agriculture online or by phone.

Today’s announcement is in response to the recent Productivity Commission review, last year’s National Drought Forum, and extensive consultation with stakeholders.

Improving the sustainability of the agricultural sector is a key priority for the sector and the Albanese Government and this investment today responds to the increasing risk climate change is posing to rural and regional communities.

Examples of programs included in the Fund:

  • $235 million to extend the Drought Resilience Adoption and Innovation Hubs, the Future Drought Fund Communities program and the next phase of the Regional Drought Resilience Planning Program.
  • $137.4 million to extend and improve the existing Farm Business Resilience and Climate Services for Agriculture programs, and the new Scaling Success Program. The Farm Business Resilience program has already helped thousands of farmers with business planning, coaching, and financial literacy training.
  • $120.3 million for programs that trial innovative solutions to build long-term resilience to drought and climate risks.
  • Expansion of the Long Term Trials Program, roll out of the revised Resilient Landscapes Program, and implementation of a new Innovation Challenges Pilot to drive the uptake of evidence-based, innovative practices, approaches and technologies.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

“It’s vital that we support Australian farmers and producers to be prepared for more severe weather impacts.

“That is why we’re investing hundreds of millions more in the agricultural sector and regional communities to plan and prepare for drought through the Future Drought Fund.

“By doing the work now our rural and regional communities are not just reacting to events as they unfold, but will have considered plans to make them more resilient to climate change.”

Agriculture Minister Murray Watt

“Every morning when farmers around the country wake up, put their boots on and go to work, they are one day closer to the next drought.

“We are already seeing very dry conditions in Western Australia and some parts of Tasmania.

“Time is of the essence when it comes to planning for drought, that’s why we’re investing heavily now in a new and improved Future Drought Fund.

“We’re helping farmers across the country develop business plans to manage diversification in a changing climate, we’re helping regional communities manage drought and other climate risks, and helping individuals get leadership training and mentoring.

“I’ve seen firsthand the great work under the FDF, like trialling new, drought-resistant livestock feed and connecting farmers with the latest scientific advice on reducing drought impacts.

“Our commitment of nearly $520 million from the FDF supports farmers and farming communities to take steps ahead of time.

“This not only empowers farmers and communities but makes them more self-reliant when drought hits.”

Australia’s Asian Development Fund pledge delivers for the region

To help respond to the needs of the region and deliver transformative development projects across the Indo-Pacific, Australia has pledged AUD $492 million for the Asian Development Fund’s (ADF14) 2025-28 pledging round.

The Fund is administered by the Asian Development Bank and provides grants to lower-income developing countries for initiatives that reduce poverty and improve quality of life.

The pledge from Australia will help countries in our region meet their most pressing needs, including construction of climate resilient hospitals and education facilities as well as supporting the health and education systems to run those facilities.

Australia worked closely with Pacific Island representatives from Cook Islands and Kiribati to ensure that the Pacific will receive over AUD500 million more than the previous Asian Development Fund replenishment (ADF13).

We also sought further support for climate action and gender equality, in line with Australia’s International Development Policy.

Australia advocated for a new mechanism to ensure funding reaches the people of Afghanistan, Myanmar and displaced Rohingya populations in Bangladesh, with a strong focus on women and girls.

Australia is also working closely with the Asian Development Bank as it implements reforms to respond to global demands, including improving infrastructure quality for Pacific partners, and enhancing the capacity and economic benefits of projects through more local jobs and procurement.

the Minister for Foreign Affairs, Senator the Hon Penny Wong:

‘Australia’s contributions to the Asian Development Fund will assist countries in our region to meet their most pressing needs.

‘Australia has been working closely with the Fund and the Asian Development Bank to ensure it delivers for our region, and addresses Pacific priorities, including climate change.

the Minister for International Development and the Pacific, the Hon Pat Conroy MP:

‘We continue to work with the ADB on critical reforms to deliver on the interests of our region. Our ongoing investment reflects the ADB’s essential role in meeting the region’s sustainable development needs.

‘We welcome the ADB’s strong alignment with Australia’s International Development Policy and we support its efforts to position itself as the region’s ‘climate bank’, including its ambition to deliver USD100 billion to climate financing from 2019 to 2030.”

Visit to Australia by Germany’s Foreign Minister

Today I will welcome the Federal Foreign Minister of Germany, Annalena Baerbock, to Adelaide.

Australia and Germany are close friends and trusted partners. Our relationship is underpinned by shared values, including our commitment to the international rules-based order.

Australia welcomes Germany’s expanded engagement and interest in our region, and this visit is an opportunity to discuss greater cooperation in the Indo-Pacific, as well as broader geopolitical challenges, including in Europe and the Middle East.

Our two countries are working together to tackle cyber threats and climate change, to embrace the green energy transition, build supply chain resilience, and improve gender equality.

Today we will mark the return of four significant cultural heritage items to the Kaurna People from the collection of the Grassi Museum in Leipzig.

I look forward to our continued engagement with Germany as a key global partner and as a close friend of Australia.

PM MEALY-MOUTHED AND EVASIVE IN THE FACE OF A NATIONAL CRISIS

Senator Penny Allman-Payne, Greens social services spokesperson, has slammed the Prime Minister for his pathetic response this morning to calls to raise Jobseeker and Youth Allowance payments to 90% of the Age Pension for the millions of Australians living in poverty, including women fleeing violence.

Senator Allman-Payne said:

“The Prime Minister claims he understands the crisis and that financial insecurity is a major barrier for women escaping violence. But when his government is choosing to keep women in poverty, it’s all bluster and no substance.

“The PM can’t keep paying lip service to caring about women and the millions of Australians across the country trying to survive on Jobseeker poverty-payments and not provide adequate funding and policy measures to back it up.

“Despite calls from his own hand-picked Economic Inclusion Advisory Committee, leading economists, and clear evidence given to the Poverty Inquiry that the government must raise Jobseeker to a liveable wage, the Prime Minister still couldn’t give a straight answer on what his government would do for the most vulnerable Australians in the upcoming budget.

“He also ducked and weaved questions on the alarming data showing over 50% of applications to the payment for women escaping violence were rejected by his government last year. Having to escape violence and then be rejected for emergency financial relief is re-traumatising for abuse survivors, and the PM merely saying he ‘doesn’t like the idea’ of that happening is the weakest, most useless response imaginable. It’s not good enough.

“Millions of people in this country are living on starvation payments, with no access to affordable housing, and no way to afford their most basic needs. And the stress of this is magnified a thousand fold for women escaping violence.

“Australia has the lowest unemployment benefits of all OECD countries. People are sick of hearing the same absurd lines from the Prime Minister, the Treasurer and Minister Rishworth time and again – that Labor would love to help struggling Australians, but it’s just too difficult to find room in the budget. It’s not.

“Budgets are about choices. Labor found room for hundreds of billions in Stage 3 tax cuts for the rich, they found room for $50 billion in defence spending, but draw the line at raising income support above the poverty line. It’s a disgrace.”

Meeting of National Cabinet on gender-based violence

National Cabinet met virtually today to discuss the national crisis of gender-based violence.

First Ministers are committed to stopping the homicides and achieving our shared goal of ending violence against women and children in a generation.

National Cabinet agreed to a number of priorities for all our governments, building on efforts under way under the National Plan to End Violence against Women and Children 2022-2032, including:

  • Strengthening accountability and consequences for perpetrators, including early intervention with high-risk perpetrators and serial offenders, and best practice justice responses that support people who have experienced violence.
  • Strengthening and building on prevention work through targeted, evidence-based approaches.
  • Maintaining a focus on missing and murdered First Nations women and children, and the impact of domestic and family violence in First Nations communities.

First Ministers heard from Commonwealth Domestic, Family and Sexual Violence Commissioner Micaela Cronin. Ms Cronin reflected on her work as Commissioner, including discussions with people with experience of violence, and key priorities for shared effort to address gaps in the current system.

Premier of Victoria, the Hon. Jacinta Allan also shared lessons from the Victorian Royal Commission into Family Violence.

National Cabinet noted the importance of housing reforms in supporting women and children escaping violence.

National Cabinet agreed to strengthen prevention efforts through targeted, evidence-based approaches and to be informed by an expert led rapid review of best practice approaches. This will allow further and effective action on preventing gender-based violence, building on the considerable work under way.

The Commonwealth will deliver the Leaving Violence Payment to help people experiencing intimate partner violence with the costs of leaving that relationship. This acknowledges financial insecurity is closely linked to violence, and can prevent women leaving a violent relationship.

The Leaving Violence Payment builds on existing measures being delivered to improve financial security of women, including expansion of the single Parenting Payment, 10 days paid domestic violence leave, and investment in crisis accommodation and affordable housing for women and children escaping violence.

The Commonwealth will also deliver a range of new measures to tackle factors that exacerabate violence against women, such as violent online pornography, and misogynistic content targeting children and young people.

New measures will include legislation to ban deepfake pornography and additional funding to pilot age assurance technologies.

First Ministers agreed that system responses need to be strengthened, with a focus on high-risk perpetrators and serial offenders to prevent homicides. This will involve work across governments and jurisdictions. First Ministers have agreed to undertake a range of work that will report back to National Cabinet later this year.

  • Police Ministers Council and the Standing Council of Attorneys-General will be tasked to develop options for improving police responses to high risk and serial perpetrators, including considering use of focused deterrence and fixated threat strategies.
  • First Ministers agreed to improve information sharing about perpetrators across systems and jurisdictions, led by the Commonwealth Minister for Women.
  • First Ministers agreed that States and Territories will explore opportunities to strengthen national consistency and drive best practice approaches across jurisdictions, including relating to risk assessment and responses to sexual assault, led by Victoria and South Australia.

We will continue to listen and learn from those with lived experience of violence. We recognise they have intimate first-hand knowledge of services, systems, and structures that are meant to support. They know from experience the weaknesses and strengths of interventions in practice.

First Ministers are listening to the experts, identifying where the gaps are, and acting with urgency. We want violence against women and children to stop.

This media statement has been agreed by First Ministers and serves as a record of meeting outcomes.