Central West residents encouraged to shape future of $40m Housing Program

The NSW Government will embark on a program of community engagement sessions in the Central West to ensure residents impacted by the 2022 floods have their say on the design and delivery of the $40 million Central West Housing Program.

The Program aims to build stronger, safer communities with measures that help households most at risk from future floods by increasing the resilience of their home or removing themselves from harm’s way.

Following the NSW school holidays, from Tuesday 23 July, the NSW Reconstruction Authority will hold 12 information sessions across three weeks in Cabonne, Forbes, Lachlan and Parkes Local Government Areas to gather feedback on participation requirements, proposed Program measures and their suitability.

At each session, residents can view flood risk information, talk directly with flood experts about how the prioritisation maps were developed and share their feedback on the proposed approach for the Program.

Proposed measures include grants for a range of resilience measures, such as raising and retrofitting, home rebuilds and home relocations and a voluntary scheme to buy back properties in the highest flood risk zones.

For residents impacted by the 2022 floods, free in-home assessments will also be offered.

Feedback from the community information sessions will be used to finalise the guidelines for the Program.

The Resilient Homes Program is jointly funded by the Commonwealth and State Governments under the $100 million Central West Recovery and Resilience Package.

For more information about the Community Information Sessions, click here

Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Paul Scully:

“We want to make sure the Program is informed by the knowledge and experience of flood-affected communities in the Central West.

“What people want most is to get back into their homes as quickly and safely and get on with their lives, and we are committed to helping them do just that.

“There are no simple fixes, but we are committed to supporting and working with communities as they recover. We are in this for the long haul.”

Minister for Emergency Services Jihad Dib said:

“We know how important community-led recovery is and that’s why we’re asking for feedback to help finalise the design of this Program which has been shaped through engagement with community leaders.

“This Program has the potential to change the future of the region and we look forward to local input in supporting communities across the Central West now and into the future.”

Member for Orange Phil Donato said:

“Communities across the Central West are known for their strength and grit in the face of hardship.

“We want to keep these communities together and the best way to do that is to ask them for their help.

“I’m pleased to say that from 23 July, we’ll be asking residents for their feedback, so we can design a program that meets the needs of our region.”

Surge in participation has renewed Local Land Services boards to support, protect and develop regional land use

Following a significant rise in participation, thirty-four people across the state have been elected as members to the 11 local boards that work with the NSW Local Land Services to determine local delivery priorities for important services including pest control, land protection and assistance for productive land use.

Eligible landholder voters elected the group of 34 to the positions, with a 23% increase in the number of voters compared to the 2020 election.

16 women have been elected to the boards which is a 100% increase over 2020, demonstrating that the plan by the NSW Government to diversify participation has been successful. In total, 116 candidates contested the 11 local board elections.

The elected members join appointed members on the boards and play a crucial role identifying priorities and working within their communities to help shape plans, programs and services.

The local boards will prioritise and monitor services including:

  • providing best practice advice to manage pest animals and pest control activities
  • managing and improving natural resources on-farm for a healthy environment
  • a network of district veterinarians who offer advice and services on biosecurity, livestock disease surveillance, and animal emergency management
  • offering the latest information and guidance to improve agricultural productivity and support landholders through times of drought.

The board elections were run in accordance with the Local Land Services Act 2013 and Local Land Services Regulation 2014.

Minister for Agriculture Tara Moriarty said:

“The NSW Government was elected to renew services for regional and rural communities and to ensure local voices were listened to. The surge in voting for local land services boards and the significant increase in woman nominating are wins for local communities.

“The 11 Local Land Services boards play an important role on the frontline of agriculture across NSW and it’s important that we have attracted a broad spectrum of the community to nominate, vote and participate in that work.

“Board members provide valuable connection points between farmers and government by promoting services, fostering partnerships, and creating productive and positive relationships with landholders.

Recently elected Local Land Services regional board members:

  • Benjamin Watts (Central Tablelands)
  • Anna Shaw (Central Tablelands)
  • James Dellow (Central Tablelands)
  • Rae Craft (Central West)
  • Nina Hooper (Central West)
  • Elise Stokes (Central West)
  • Richard De Abreu Lourenco (Greater Sydney)
  • Linda Smith (Greater Sydney)
  • Sean Hooper (Greater Sydney)
  • William Stacy (Hunter)
  • Patrick Ryan (Hunter)
  • Fred Paton (Hunter)
  • Amanda Barlow (Murray)
  • Andrew Hermiston (Murray)
  • Melinda McCrohon (Murray)
  • David Dawson (North Coast)
  • Bruce Lyle (North Coast)       
  • Gordon Mack (North Coast)
  • Vera Reardon (North West)
  • Rebecca Collins (North West)
  • Christopher Chaplain (North West)
  • James Jackson (Northern Tablelands)
  • Peter Parnell (Northern Tablelands)
  • Alana Marcus (Northern Tablelands)
  • Elizabeth Stott (Riverina)
  • Robert Matthews (Riverina)
  • Alison Hamilton (Riverina)
  • Nicola Burton Taylor (South East)
  • Steven Hogan (South East)
  • Pam Kensit (South East)
  • Anita O’Connor (Western)
  • Garry Hannigan (Western)
  • Michael Davis (Western)
  • Jessica Murray (Western)

Find out more about Local Land Services boards

Gold medal investment in our elite athletes

The Albanese Government has delivered the largest ever investment in Olympic and Paralympic sports to help our brilliant athletes achieve glory on world stages.

A record $283 million in new money will flow to our elite athletes, coaches and support staff over the next two years in a historic show of support on the path to Brisbane 2032.

This investment represents a 50 per cent increase on the previous Government’s 2021- 2022 high performance funding.

It also represents a doubling of the investment the previous Government made for Paralympic athletes.

This new funding is in addition to our $102.8 million annual grant funding and brings the Government’s total high-performance investment to $489m over two years.

The funding package for Paralympians is the biggest ever, as the Albanese Government addresses systemic and structural barriers to performance for para athletes that had been ignored for too long.

The investment will be a major boost for Aussie spirits ahead of Paris next month, and will strengthen Australia’s hopes for gold at LA in 2028, Brisbane in 2032, Winter and Commonwealth Games events.

The funding will create more opportunities and better development pathways for high performance athletes to thrive while inspiring the next generation of Australians to be more active.

The historic investment includes:

  • An increase of $17.6 million to the Direct Athlete Investment Support Grants (dAIS) program to address cost of living pressures for athletes.
  • A major uplift in direct sport funding.
  • Access to more domestic and international competitions to regularly compete against the world’s best in preparation for major sporting events.
  • Extra training, well-being and preparation support, including access to world-leading coaches and performance support staff.

Investment in our Paralympic athletes and sports will more than double, with $54.9 million in additional funding – the biggest ever Paralympic spend by an Australian Government.

The funding increase will deliver better classification opportunities, access to fit-for-purpose training environments and specialised coaching and performance support.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

“We’re cheering on all our athletes heading to Paris. We are so proud of them and my Government is backing Aussie athletes with record funding.”

Minister for Sport Anika Wells

“This is the biggest investment any government has made in our Olympic and Paralympic sports and will help athletes achieve glory on world stages.

“Today’s commitment brings the Albanese Government’s sport announcements in this Budget to $753.1m, including the $249.7 million investment to revitalise the Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) campus in Canberra.

“We have also committed $200m to the Play Our Way fund, the biggest infrastructure program ever for women and girls sport, and invested more than $20m in the Netball World Cup and Women’s Asian Cup.

“We’re giving our future Olympic and Paralympic teams what they need to succeed with upgraded training facilities, the best coaching and support staff and cost-of-living assistance.

“We’ll all be cheering on the Green and Gold in a few weeks when Paris 24 begins and this funding again proves the Albanese Government is committed to sport – from playground to podium.”

Australian Olympic Committee President Ian Chesterman

“We have said many times that a successful home Games needs a successful home team, so this injection of funds at this time is fundamentally important to that outcome.

“The additional money direct to the sports is very good news while the lift in dAIS funding to cover more athletes is critical to giving them the confidence that they can focus on putting in the huge amount of work that is necessary to represent Australia on the international stage.

“It further builds on the investment in the AIS announced recently by Sports Minister Wells to again make that facility a hub of sporting excellence.

“The Prime Minister clearly gets what the Olympic sports do for this country so we thank him his commitment to helping our sports and our athletes.

“This funding increase is a very important start to help our athletes be their best, inspire the generations to come and to build a strong sports system to support them all.

“The AOC also welcomes the lift in Paralympic funding which will benefit the sports which run both Olympic and Paralympic programs.”

Paralympics Australia President Alison Creagh

“This new investment from the Federal Government will bring about monumental generational change for Para-sport in Australia.

“Paralympics Australia commends the Federal Government, in particular the Prime Minister and Federal Sports Minister, for their visionary leadership and for recognising the immense impact that this investment can deliver.

“Since 2000, Australia’s investment in Para-sport has fallen well behind many of our rivals, allowing them to catch up. This funding marks a much-needed reset, positioning Australia to regain its competitive edge in time for the Paralympic Games in 2028 and our Games at home in 2032.”

New funding to deliver more homes for Australia

The Albanese Labor Government’s Homes for Australia plan is delivering an additional $1 billion across the country to get homes built sooner.

States and territories will today be paid $1 billion collectively through the Priority Works Stream of the Housing Support Program to turbocharge construction of new homes.

This investment adds to the $500 million already under the Housing Support Program to boost housing supply.

The additional $1 billion investment can be used by states and territories to build enabling infrastructure and amenities essential for new homes, such as roads, sewers, energy, water and community infrastructure, and for new social housing.

This is one of a range of measures designed to help achieve the ambitious national target of building 1.2 million new, well-located homes over the next 5 years.

It also forms part of the $32 billion in new housing initiatives we are delivering through our Homes for Australiaplan.

States and territories will be required to provide implementation plans for the Priority Work Stream by September 2024 that will outline the specific projects this funding will deliver.

The Government’s Budget last month also included:

  • Training more tradies to build the homes Australia needs with 20,000 fee-free TAFE and pre-apprenticeship places for the construction industry.
  • Working with the higher education sector on new regulation to require universities to increase student accommodation, taking pressure off the rental market.
  • Increasing the Government’s line of credit to Housing Australia by $3 billion.
  • Providing concessional finance for community housing providers and other charities, to support delivery of 40,000 social and affordable homes under the Housing Australia Future Fund and National Housing Accord.

The Albanese Labor Government has already delivered $2 billion to states and territories through the Social Housing Accelerator to deliver around 4,000 new social homes.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

“This funding for every state and territory will help build more homes, more quickly, in more parts of our country.

“It will build the roads, energy and water we need for new homes.

“Because building more homes will make housing more affordable whether you’re building, renting or buying.”

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

“Right now, our cities and towns need more homes, and we need the infrastructure that turns those homes into communities – and that’s what our government is funding.

“We are focused on constructing new homes, and supporting them with the infrastructure that delivers thriving communities, bringing down the cost of owning and renting a home and easing the cost of living.”

Minister for Housing and Homelessness Julie Collins

“Our Government is working with states and territories to help build more homes because this is the best way to address Australia’s housing challenges.

“We know we need the right infrastructure to get homes on the ground more quickly, which is exactly what this new funding will help deliver.

“This funding is just one part of our $32 billion Homes for Australia plan to help build 1.2 million homes across the country by the end of the decade.”

Funding paid by state and territory

State and territory$1 billion Housing Support Program
New South Wales$304.3 million
Victoria$248.8 million
Queensland$199.2 million
Western Australia$105.3 million
South Australia$67.4 million
Tasmania$25 million
Northern Territory$25 million
Australian Capital Territory$25 million

Woman charged following unauthorised protest – Hunter Valley

A woman has been charged following an unauthorised protest in the Hunter Valley this morning.

About 5.30am (Friday 28 June 2024), police were called to the rail corridor at Branxton following reports a number of people had allegedly entered the rail corridor and were causing obstruction to trains.

Officers attached to Hunter Valley Police District, with assistance from Police Rescue, attended the site and arrested a 28-year-old woman.

The Victorian woman was taken to Singleton Police Station where she was charged with enter inclosed lands serious safety risk, cause obstruction to railway locomotive, and enter inclosed land without lawful excuse.

She was granted conditional bail to appear before Singleton Local Court on Thursday 11th July 2024.

The inaugural LGBTQIA+ Consultative Committee meeting held

NSW Government and senior NSW Police gathered with LGBTQIA+ community stakeholders and members in Sydney this week for the first LGBTQIA+ Consultative Committee.

Following the Special Commission of Inquiry (SCOI) into LGBTIQ hate crimes final report, NSW Police Force Commissioner, Karen Webb APM, directed the establishment of Task Force Atlas, an internal working group to review the recommendations and comments of the inquiry and take action to consider them and respond as appropriate.

The establishment of the LGBTQIA+ Consultative Committee has been initiated to provide a forum for community consultation in the development of the police response to recommendations (8, 15b, 19a & b) of the SCOI.

On Tuesday 25 June 2024, the committee held its inaugural meeting at Qtopia Sydney, located at the old Darlinghurst Police station, on Forbes Street, Darlinghurst.

NSW Government and NSW Police Force attendees included the Minister for Police and Counter-terrorism, The Honourable Yasmin Catley MP and the NSW Police Force Commissioner, Karen Webb APM, along with Deputy Commissioner Peter Thurtell APM, Acting Assistant Commissioner Despa Fitzgerald APM, Officer of General Counsel Natalie Marsic and Detective Chief Superintendent Grant Taylor APM, Director Serious Crime Directorate, State Crime Command.

Membership included significant community stakeholders. In attendance was Alex Greenwich MP for Sydney, QTOPIA board member and Independent, Garry Wotherspoon; Sydney Gay Lesbian Mardi Gras Chief Executive Officer, Gil Beckwith; ACON Chief Executive Officer, Nicholas Parkhill; People with Disability Australia Chief Executive Officer, Sebastian Zagarella; First Mardi Gras Inc member, Barry Charles, and Family Representative, Steve Johnson.

NSW Minister for Police and Counter-terrorism Yasmin Catley would like to acknowledge the enduring pain and suffering experienced by victims of these crimes, their families and loved ones and their many years of fighting for justice.

“The LGBTQIA+ Consultative Committee will enable community voices and experiences to help shape the NSW Police Force’s response to the Special Commission of Inquiry.

“I know that the NSW Police Force, under the leadership of Commissioner Karen Webb, is deeply committed to learning from the past and continuing to strengthen its relationship with the LGBTIQA+ community into the future. I know this work is and will continue to be taken seriously.”

NSWPF Commissioner Karen Webb APM supports the establishment of the LGBTQIA+ Consultative Committee to ensure community members are consulted as the NSWPF addresses the relevant recommendations laid out by the inquiry.

“While some recommendations align closely with initiatives already underway, Taskforce ATLAS will thoroughly assess the recommendations as part of ongoing efforts to enhance the service and accountability of the NSWPF.

“We continue to be committed to improve the ways in which the organisation responds to LGBTIQ+ concerns and the involvement of community members in those discussions is vital.”

Discussions during the meeting included an overview of the workstreams of Task Force ATLAS, of which the LGBTQIA+ consultative committee is one, the Term of Reference of the LGBTQIA+ Consultative Committee, membership of the LGBTQIA+ Consultative Committee including the selection process and the Co-Chair of the committee. The committee is looking forward to achieving the recommendations of the SCOI and continuing to build relationships between the NSWPF and the LGBTQIA+ community.

The LGBTQIA+ Consultative Committee meetings will be held quarterly, with the next meeting scheduled for Wednesday 9 October 2024.

GREENS SAY STAGGERING UNI WAGE THEFT FIGURES MUST SPARK IMMEDIATE GOVERNMENT ACTION

Australian Greens Deputy Leader and Spokesperson for Higher Education, Senator Mehreen Faruqi has responded to new analysis by the National Tertiary Education Union’s (NTEU) which reveals wage theft is on track to exceed $380 million. 

Senator Mehreen Faruqi: 

“Sadly, the NTEU’s findings are no shock to any of us. Wage theft in universities is a systemic scourge that is harming staff across the country. 

“The fact that we have a university system where vice chancellor’s earn salaries exceeding $1 million a year while casual staff are robbed of hundreds of millions of dollars is obscene.

“Enough is enough. It is time for the government to fix the broken business model of the neoliberal university that only works off the back of casual and underpaid staff. This must end.

“The  government must take immediate and decisive action by requiring universities to set publicly available targets for increasing permanent employment. There should also be clearer reporting requirements with respect to employment statistics and improved rights of entry for trade unions.

“Critically, the Government must significantly increase funding for universities, and overhaul university governance to shift the balance of power from university management back to staff and students.”

GREENS SPLIT BUY-TO-RENT FROM CONSUMER PROTECTION CHANGES

The Greens have split a Government bill to ensure greater scrutiny of Labor’s plan for Build to Rent tax breaks and regulation of Buy Now, Pay Later schemes.

A Greens motion in the Senate today means the Treasury Laws Amendment (Responsible Buy Now Pay Later and Other Measures) Bill 2024 will be divided into two separate bills which will both be considered by the Economics Committee.

There is little evidence that Build to Rent will do anything to increase rental affordability. This is because property developers aim to maximise profits and in Build to Rent properties that means ensuring rents continue to rise. Mirvac has boasted about charging rents 15 -20% above market rent on their build to rent projects. This form of gentrification drives up rents for everyone in the area. In Melbourne, a Build to Rent development saw tenants evicted and then the apartments relisted with a rent hike of $185 per week. 

The current ‘build to rent’ plan will see developers able to access tax concessions from the government if they build private rental apartments where 90% can be completely unaffordable, while the other 10% have to meet a weak definition of affordability. The bill stipulates that the lease period for the private rentals must be 3 years, but includes no provisions to cap rent increases or provide protections against unfair evictions.  

The bill currently stipulates only 50 of the apartments must be available to rent, which means a developer could sit on hundreds of vacant apartments while collecting the government tax handouts. 

The legislation currently has a requirement that 10% of the apartments are “affordable”. However, “affordable” is defined in the legislation as 74.9% of market rent, with income thresholds to follow in regulation. With the price of rents so high, for many even the 10% of “affordable” apartments will be unaffordable. 

Noting these concerns and the Senate inquiry process underway, the Greens have split the Bill and will seek to negotiate with the government in return for support in the Senate. With the Greens key negotiating asks to be announced in due course. 

Greens Economic Justice Spokesperson Senator Nick McKim:

“By splitting the bill, we can give each part the attention it needs, especially the controversial Build to Rent tax breaks.”

“It will also mean we can make sure the regulation of BNPL is as robust as it needs to be.”

Greens Housing Spokesperson Max Chandler-Mather MP:

“The Greens will be announcing our demands on this bill in due course, but right now Labor’s plan boils down to giving tax handouts to property developers to build apartments almost no one will be able to afford, with no protections against unlimited rent increases. 

“What this bill proves is if Labor wanted it could impose rent caps on any developer receiving the tax handouts, but instead has chosen to allow developers to jack up the rent by as much as they want.

“Once again Labor is tinkering around the edges and announcing a policy that makes it look like they are doing something for renters, when in reality it is just a plan to give property developers more tax handouts. 

“Under this plan a developer could pocket government tax handouts, then jack up the rent by hundreds of dollars, evict tenants, and sit on hundreds of vacant apartments in an effort to further drive up market rent. 

“Tax handouts for property investors and developers helped create the housing crisis in the first place, so it is genuinely extraordinary that Labor is now proposing to give more tax handouts to property developers. 

“If Labor wanted to help renters they would coordinate a nationwide freeze and cap on rent increases, phase out the tax handouts for property investors denying millions of renters the chance to buy a home, and have the government start building rent capped apartments available to any renter that needs one.

“The Greens have a fully costed policy for a public property developer that would build 610,000 good quality homes for rent and purchase at prices people can actually afford. This would be a far better use of public money than more tax handouts for private property developers.”

Labor’s failure to prioritise small businesses kills confidence and short circuits electrification

With just days to go in the 2023-24 Financial Year, Labor has caved to Coalition pressure and the outcries of the small business community by passing measures that could have, and should have, been law last winter. This comes as the small business community and accountants have made clear that these delays will result in many businesses missing out on benefiting entirely come tax time.

Because of Labor’s legislative stuff up, Australian small businesses have had to contend with uncertainty around small business tax supports as insolvencies skyrocket. Labor failed to prioritise the passage of the Instant Asset Write Off and Small Business Smart Energy Incentive through the Parliament and blocked amendments for a bigger tax cut to small businesses.

In its handling of this Bill, Labor has delayed the passage of the Instant Asset Write Off legislation by months, and voted eight times against more generous tax cuts to small businesses. If elected, the Coalition will make the Instant Asset Write Off permanent to end the uncertainty and ensure small businesses pay lower, simpler, fairer taxes.

Incredibly, the Albanese Government’s much vaunted Small Business Smart Energy Incentive will only be legislated in time for three full business days before the End of Financial Year. Leading accounting body, CPA Australia, has said:

“likely the only businesses who will ultimately benefit from the measure will be those who coincidentally happened to make upgrades this year, rather than those who were incentivised to do so because of the scheme”

The Small Business Smart Energy Incentive was designed to give a tax break worth up to $20,000 to support electrification and more efficient use of energy, helping businesses save money on energy bills by electrifying their heating and cooling systems, upgrading to more efficient fridges and induction cooktops, and installing batteries and heat pumps. Purchases need to be made and installed in the 2023-24 financial year and the measure will not be extended to 2024-25 and ends on 30 June.

Deputy Leader Sussan Ley condemned the Albanese Government for failing to deliver certainty for small businesses.

“Thousands of businesses that survived a once in a century pandemic under the Coalition are going to the wall because of the economic crisis created by the Albanese Government – and now we see that even the meagre support which Labor did put on the table ranked at the very bottom of their priorities.

“I think Australians who support stronger environmental policies, including the Crossbench, would be shocked to learn hundreds of thousands of small businesses will have missed out on using this electrification incentive because of Labor’s delays.”

Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor said the delay on this legislation is another example of the mess Labor’s made of the energy system.

“Small businesses are the engine room of our economy but they’re being smashed by Labor’s high prices, bad workplace laws, and high energy bills.

“Labor cut vital programs to support small businesses to bring down their bills when they came to office, and Labor’s delay on passing this Bill leaves struggling businesses in manufacturing, hospitality, and tourism without support to invest in bringing down their power bills.

“Affordable, reliable energy is the key to a low inflation, strong growth economy. There is no future made in Australia without affordable energy. Instead, struggling businesses are facing electricity and gas prices that have risen by 18 per cent and 25 per cent since Labor came to office.

“All Labor has delivered for small businesses is a homegrown cost of doing business crisis. Only a Peter Dutton Coalition government will deliver the strong back-to-basics economic leadership to get Australia back on track.”

The Instant Asset Write Off will be a clear contrast at the election. The Coalition has committed to raising it to $30,000 and making it permanent, whereas Small Business Minister Julie Collins has ruled out Labor raising it or ensuring it is an ongoing tax support for small businesses.

Labor is hurting Australian families and businesses

Today’s monthly inflation data shows Labor’s “carefully calibrated” economic plan is failing Australians.

With headline inflation rising to 4.0% and core inflation – the RBA’s preferred measure – rose to 4.4%, Australian families and small businesses will be bracing for even more economic pain than they have already endured.

No matter how the government tries to spin this, there is no doubt from today’s data that this is Labor’s homegrown inflation crisis with domestic inflation hitting 5.2%.

Australia is at the back of the pack due to this homegrown inflation. Under Labor, Australia’s core inflation is increasing, and higher than every country in the G10, including US, UK, Euro area and Canada who have seen inflation moderating.

This is the result of a government that has spent the last two years completely distracted, with the wrong priorities and absolutely no interest in the economic prosperity of our country.

Over the last two years of Labor the prices for everyday essentials have risen:

  • Food 11.4%
  • Housing 14.0%
  • Rents 14.2%
  • Electricity 21.5%
  • Gas 22.2%
  • Health 11.1%
  • Education 10.9%
  • Financial and insurance services 16.2%

Instead of showing true economic leadership, the Albanese Labor Government continues to fail Australian families and small businesses.

Australia is in an entrenched household, consumer confidence and productivity recession, with no plan from Labor to fix the situation.

Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor said today’s inflation data is shocking but not surprising.

“This is what happens when you have a big spending Labor government that’s completely out of touch with the economic reality.

“We’ve now had four months in a row of accelerating core inflation. This will no doubt be of concern to the independent Reserve Bank.

“Despite households and business owners doing everything they can to manage their budgets and make ends meet, they are constantly being let down by a weak Prime Minister and a weak Treasurer who have no idea when it comes to the economy.

“The Albanese Labor Government’s economic plan is failing.

“Australians can’t afford more of Labor.”