University of Newcastle using tired tactics to avoid giving staff fair pay rise

The National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) has condemned the University of Newcastle’s decision to apply for Fair Work Commission intervention in enterprise bargaining.

The move comes as 140 job cuts loom over staff already experiencing severe stress and anxiety about their futures.

University management has applied for the Fair Work Commission to deal with a bargaining dispute, despite negotiations commencing just six months ago.

NTEU members are pushing for a fair pay rise, workload regulation and flexible work provisions.

NTEU members will strike for half a day on Thursday October 23.

The University of Newcastle attempted to sideline staff and their union from the bargaining process a little over two years ago.

UoN Vice-Chancellor Alex Zelinsky serves as Vice-President of the Australian Higher Education Industrial Association (AHEIA), the aggressive employer association known for advising universities on strategies to circumvent union negotiations.

NTEU General Secretary Damien Cahill said:

“The University of Newcastle has shown it would rather blow up negotiations and push disputes to the commission than engage constructively with staff seeking fair pay and conditions.

“Management is running to the Fair Work Commission rather than staying at the bargaining table and addressing the reasonable demands of staff for a fair pay rise, workload regulation and job security.

“This is a cynical tactic from a university whose vice-chancellor is the vice-president of the bosses’ association that is notorious for using aggressive industrial tactics.

“Staff are already under enormous pressure with 140 job cuts hanging over their heads. Now they must endure management’s aggressive industrial tactics designed to avoid genuine negotiation.

“The University of Newcastle appears to have lost faith in its own executives’ ability to negotiate a fair agreement. Instead of working with staff and the NTEU, they’re deploying the same failed playbook as they did last time.

“Universities that find common ground with the NTEU reach agreements that benefit everyone. But the University of Newcastle seems determined to pursue confrontation.

“The NTEU will continue to fight for fair pay, secure jobs and reasonable working conditions for all university staff.”

New $46.1 Million Military Range Boosts Northern Defence Capability

Australia and the United States have taken a major step forward in strengthening joint military capability with the completion of the country’s largest and most advanced Marksmanship Training Range at Kangaroo Flats Training Area near Darwin.

Delivered under the $747 million United States Force Posture Initiatives Northern Territory Training Areas and Ranges Project, the new $46.1 million facility will enable marksmanship training for both nations, supporting a wide range of operational scenarios. 

The state-of-the-art range features 24 firing lanes with cutting-edge fixed and moving targets extending to 600 metres, and eight sniper lanes capable of reaching 1100 metres. It also supports vehicle-mounted firing and night-vision training, significantly expanding tactical readiness. 

The new Marksmanship Training Range is part of a broader upgrade initiative across four Defence training areas in the Northern Territory, with the full project scheduled for completion by mid-2026.

The upgrades reinforce networked and resilient base infrastructure in northern Australia, boosting the Australian Defence Force’s ability to deter potential adversaries and deepen international defence cooperation.

Assistant Minister for Defence, Peter Khalil:

The new range supports a variety of weapons platforms and activities, delivering enhanced training outcomes for the Australian Defence Force and its partners, particularly the United States.

These upgrades are a critical step in strengthening Defence’s capabilities in northern Australia and advancing the Government’s ambitious agenda outlined in the Government’s 2024 National Defence Strategy.

This investment reinforces our enduring alliance with the United States, creating new opportunities for joint training and collaboration that enhance capability and interoperability.

Special Envoy for Defence, Veterans’ Affairs & Northern Australia, Luke Gosling:

Marksmanship is a core soldier skill and this new range will enable its mastery by both Australian and United States’ soldiers. 

This new training facility will provide world-class marksmanship training and increase both interoperability with our partners and military preparedness.

The completion of this state-of-the-art range shows that the Government continues to successfully deliver key investments in Defence capability, including in Northern Australia.

Federal Member for Lingiari, Marion Scrymgour:

I welcome this investment in the electorate of Lingiari and the impact this investment will have on national security.

“Building our defensive capabilities in the Northern Territory has a benefit to local communities, but also works to safeguard our strategic interests.”

Dead Koalas raise animal cruelty allegations against Government

The deaths of eight Koalas as part of a NSW Government translocation program have been slammed as too risky and referred to the RSPCA for animal cruelty investigations after an expert panel raised serious concerns with the program. Documents released after a call for papers passed the NSW Parliament last month reveal the Government rejected expert advice and pushed ahead with moving the animals despite concerns that it was not safe to do so.

Greens MP and spokesperson for the environment Sue Higginson:

“I am so shocked by what has been found in these documents, and the Government and Department should be independently investigated for an avoidable failure where they sidelined experts and pushed ahead with meeting their internal objectives with no care for the animals they were supposed to be protecting. This is why I have referred the Department to the RSPCA for animal cruelty crimes,”

“These documents show a coordinated determination to meet politically motivated departmental relocation targets that led to a reckless indifference to the welfare and fate of the individual animals. Independent expert advice warning of the risks of failure was sidelined, licences were granted in the face of the identified risk of failure and death, animals were left to die after the first koalas were found starved to death, and then what took place can only be described as a coordinated cover up of the truth,”

“The details of these deaths are terrible and show that despite the first discovery that some Koalas had died, the others were left where they were to die as well. One of the koala victims was a perfectly healthy female with an unfurred joey in her pouch when she was taken from her home. She was taken hundreds of kilometres away from her home and released into the wild. There was no soft release for close monitoring and when she was recaptured for checking her joey had died and instead of being taken into care she was left in situ and found dead a few weeks later,”

“Experts have been raising alarm for years about the Department’s lack of expertise to be conducting these types of experiments on Koalas, and these deaths are the tragic outcome of the Government ignoring those concerns. The Department’s determination to meet their targets for political reasons has made them blind to the experts and the evidence and these dead Koalas are the result,”

“Koala translocation is fraught with risk and failure, yet the Department pushed ahead despite expert advice to meet their own internal target. Increasing genetic diversity of koala populations due to habitat destruction is necessary, but we can not engage in such reckless un-scientific experiments in the name of conservation,”

“This was not a koala conservation project, it was a politically motivated animal experimentation. These koalas were treated as lab rats instead of as part of critical conservation work.”

Greens hopeful of winning 24/7 free travel for students, seniors, and all concession-card holders

The ACT Greens will bring on a vote this week to expand fare-free travel, to make life more affordable for families and individuals impacted most by the cost of living.

“For most people it’s just a couple of dollars, but someone really struggling with the cost of living shouldn’t have to choose between a third meal in the day or getting where they need to go,” said ACT Greens Transport Spokesperson, Andrew Braddock MLA. “This would give parents a cost-free way to get their kids to school, and it would expand free travel to part-time uni students who are juggling work to make ends meet.

“The Greens took this policy to the election because we want Canberra to be an easy and affordable place to get around. We’re hopeful it could get unanimous support across the Assembly this week.”

The Canberra Liberals promised at the 2024 election that they would deliver, “Free public transport for students, seniors and concession card holders. All day. Every day.”

In post-election negotiations with the Greens, Labor said they would look at further fare exemptions after they had brought in Fare Free Friday.

“Thursday’s vote will be a chance for both the big parties to make good on their word and help us make life a little easier for thousands of Canberrans,” Mr Braddock said.

“In the context of transport creating the largest – and growing – share of the ACT’s climate emissions, it’s also critical that we make public transport a more attractive option for more people.

“In a cost of living crisis, which is an inequality crisis, the government must be there to support those who are hardest hit.

“Free fares for those who need it most is a simple measure, so let’s get in there and get it done,” Mr Braddock said.

Trump meets Albanese, and leaves with his wallet, his keys and his bank details

Prime Minister Albanese’s meeting with US President Donald Trump masks the hard truth of Australia’s defence and trade surrender to Trump.

President Trump has publicly backed AUKUS because it has Australian taxpayers building the US a $8 billion nuclear submarine base of Perth while pumping billions more directly into the US nuclear submarine industry.

Today’s meeting was sweetened by Australia offering Trump reduced environmental protections for critical minerals extraction and a potential US veto on who Australia sells to, and invests with, in this essential industry. 

While Trump talked up the US industrial capacity to build nuclear submarines for Australia under AUKUS, his rhetoric is in stark contrast to reality. Whatever Trump says, the US is not producing any spare nuclear submarines for Australia and, as Trump clearly knows, AUKUS doesn’t even require them to deliver any. 

At a time Australia should be looking to the region to find ways to promote peace and independence, Albanese has aligned Australia closer and closer to Trump with all the instability and divisive hard right politics that he brings. 

Senator David Shoebridge, Greens Spokesperson on Foreign Affairs and Defence, said: “Trump made no secret of the reason he liked Albanese, he is building Trump a $8 billion nuclear submarine base off Perth and has committed hundreds of billions more for US weapons.

“Trump’s statement that there are plenty of submarines is what the Prime Minister wants to hear, but like a lot of what Trump says, it has no connection to reality. 

“The US is building barely one Virginia nuclear submarine a year and they need to more than double that rate to make AUKUS work. Whatever Trump may say, there remains no credible plan to do this.

“For the US, keeping AUKUS on life support means the US gets new and expanded US bases across Australia, billions of dollars for US industry and US weapons and control over Australia’s critical minerals.

“This is all upside for Trump because he knows that, even after all this, AUKUS doesn’t require him to hand over a single submarine. It’s no wonder Trump was smiling.

“Critical minerals are key to a green future, but Albanese has put Australia in lockstep with an administration that thinks climate change is a hoax.

“The Albanese Government seems to routinely engage in these rituals to appease Trump, praising him and showering him with gifts and all to bind us to an increasingly erratic US administration.”

Resources Spokesperson Senator Steph Hodgins-May: “This deal doesn’t back in Australia’s renewables transition – it shackles it. We’re signing up to fuel America’s military – one of the world’s largest polluters – for the sake of submarines and a photo-op.  

“Australia should be fueling global green technologies with strong environmental protections and community benefits, not more handouts to mining corporations and Labor’s billionaire donors whilst being locked to the US’s climate-denialist agenda.

“If we’re serious about the energy transition, we need strong ambition that ensures a just and fair transition for critical minerals doesn’t come at the cost of our ecosystems and First Nations heritage.”

Cuts to foster care support ‘deeply concerning’, Greens say Labor must get its priorities straight

The Victorian Greens have called reports Labor has heavily cut support allowances for foster carers ‘deeply concerning’, and a clear indication the government has its priorities wrong.

Overnight, The Age reported some carers had had their allowances cut by as much as three-quarters without explanation, despite living with children at the highest need level.

With Victoria already having the lowest base rate of home care allowances in the country, the Greens say the cuts will place immense strain on an already under-resourced sector.

And they add that vulnerable children will bear the brunt of it, with the decision disproportionately impacting children with disabilities and First Nations children.

Victorian Greens early childhood spokesperson, Anasina Gray-Barberio MLC:

“Our foster carers are unsung heroes. They volunteer to support and look after vulnerable kids who, for a range of reasons, aren’t safe at home. 

“Yet they’re stretched thin – they’re chronically under-resourced, and often have to dig into their own pockets to make sure the kids they’re caring for have the best chance at a good life.

“Any move to further reduce support allowances for carers is a bad one, and shows how backwards Labor’s priorities are. 

“Cuts to health, cuts to education, and now cuts to foster care – that’s not what looking after our kids looks like.

“Labor needs to properly fund foster carers so that they can continue to support the thousands of Victorian kids in need of out-of-home care.”

Senator Hodgins-May Response to Sussan Ley’s Rejection of Universal Childcare

Greens spokesperson for Early Childhood Education and Care, Senator Steph Hodgins-May, has called Liberal Leader Sussan Ley’s comments rejecting universal childcare “out of touch” with the reality facing families and women across Australia.

Senator Hodgins-May is also urging Labor to treat high-quality, universal early childhood education and care as a priority, instead of more piecemeal policy changes that leave children, parents and educators to face the same problems.

Greens Senator for Victoria, Steph Hodgins-May:

“The comments by the Leader of the Opposition yesterday show just how out of touch the Liberals are from the daily struggles of working families. Saying no to universal childcare is saying no to parents and kids who desperately need relief.

“Labor and the Liberals choose to cling onto the failing Morrison-era Child Care Subsidy that only fattens the pockets of corporate investors while locking families and children out of early learning.

“Both major parties have had decades to fix this. Instead, the Liberals are slamming the door on our children’s future while Labor continues to allow for-profit operators to price-gouge families and cut corners.

“A shift to a universal, low-cost, high-quality early learning system would be monumental for families, children and the economy.

“Universal childcare would free young parents, especially women, to go back into the workforce and allow them to contribute their full skills to our economy. It pays for itself many times over – more economic participation, better outcomes for children, and long-term gains. 

“Ley’s comments should be a warning for Labor – stop using the Liberals as a moral litmus test and start acting towards bold, universal reform that families are desperate for.

Building a Stronger, More Prosperous Australia

CENTRE FOR INDEPENDENT STUDIES, SYDNEY, NSW

Thank you for the opportunity to be with you today, and can I acknowledge Michael Stutchbury and the team at the Centre for Independent Studies for the important work you do in shaping our national conversation.

To my colleagues from both the federal and state parliaments, thank you for being here today.

Our nation stands at a turning point.

For the first time in living memory, productivity and living standards are sliding backwards.

Over the past decade, productivity growth has fallen to its weakest rate in 60 years.

Now, productivity is not about working longer hours or pushing harder on the tools. Australians already do that.

I know this from my own life, working a second and sometimes third job to improve my flying qualifications, picking up 800 fleeces a day in the shearing sheds of western Queensland, and raising my three children during recession and drought in the 1990s.

Productivity is about making every effort count, about getting the most from every personal endeavour.

When productivity grows, wages lift, the cost of living eases, and governments can fund the services Australians rely on without higher taxes.

But when productivity stalls, or falls, the opposite takes hold.

Families keep working as hard as ever, yet their pay does not go as far.

Today, real household disposable income per capita is six per cent lower than when Labor came to government in 2022.

OECD data shows that Australia has had the biggest fall in living standards in the developed world.

It feels like Australians are running faster and faster only to stand still.

That is the reality people face, and it is not acceptable.

A Post-COVID Recovery Squandered

It wasn’t supposed to be this way.

The Coalition left office with unemployment at 3.9 per cent, the lowest in almost 50 years, and record revenues flowing into the Treasury thanks to a rebounding economy and strong commodity prices.

But that opportunity has been squandered by Labor.

Pandemic-level spending was treated as the new normal, with no serious effort to rein it in.

And the result?

Inflation that stayed higher for longer, leaving mortgage holders paying around $1,800 more every month.

As former Reserve Bank Governor Philip Lowe observed:

“After COVID, we haven’t really got back to a clearly articulated framework for decision-making with fiscal policy… It seems to be ‘where there is a need, we’ll spend’.”

A short-lived revenue surge delivered rare surpluses in 2022–23 and 2023–24, but now deficits loom for as far as the eye can see.

At the same time, Labor has piled on new regulatory burdens at the worst possible moment.

According to the Housing Industry Association, just getting environmental approval for a new housing project can take more than four years.

Businesses, especially small and family enterprises, are drowning in red tape.

Tens of thousands of businesses have gone bust since Anthony Albanese was elected in 2022.

And just starting a typical small business, like a café, can involve up to 30 separate regulatory steps.

Instead of stopping this madness, Labor is making things worse.

Their workplace relations changes reward unions with restrictive laws and industry-wide pay settings that wind the clock back to the 1970s.

The Business Council warns these changes “drive down productivity” and threaten investment and innovation.

Yet the government presses ahead with even more industrial regulation, making it harder and harder for businesses to expand, which makes it harder and harder for them to hire new workers.

Anthony Albanese doesn’t understand that a healthy economy must have private sector businesses driving growth and job creation. How could he possibly understand this when under Labor, eight out of every ten new jobs have been created by government, not business.

The Scale of the Challenge – What the Experts Say

You only need to listen to our top economic authorities to understand the scale of the challenge.

In 2023, the Productivity Commission’s landmark five-year inquiry warned that Australia’s productivity growth had “flatlined” — and that without action, the consequences would be severe.

It cautioned that “in the absence of productivity growth, the ‘cost disease’ will worsen and spread,” and noted with government services consuming an ever larger share of the economy and “requiring ever faster productivity growth elsewhere to ‘fund’ it.”

The message from the Productivity Commission was clear: our economy “isn’t working for Australians like it used to,” and unless we change course, future generations will pay the price.

Those warnings have now come true. Labor’s poor policy choices and lack of reform appetite have left Australia exactly where the Commission feared – slower growth, rising costs, and a shrinking capacity to fund the services Australians rely on.

Business leaders share the same concern.

In their 2025 joint submission, 27 major business groups warned that productivity growth over the past decade was the weakest in six decades, and that if we do not fix it, the next generation will miss out on the quality of life we enjoy today.

These are not academic figures.

These are employers and investors watching costs spiral, the investment pipeline dry up, and risk – which is the price of progress – in retreat. The dynamism of our economy is slipping away.

With virtually zero productivity growth so far this decade, we are already well behind the pace needed to meet the Intergenerational Report’s long-term assumption of 1.2 per cent a year.

To course-correct, we would now need more than 2 per cent a year for the rest of the decade – something not achieved in generations.

Even the Reserve Bank has cut its medium-term assumption for productivity growth to just 0.7 per cent, barely half of Treasury’s forecast.

That means slower improvements in living standards than Australians have historically enjoyed.

The Intergenerational Report also highlights rising fiscal pressures from an ageing population, higher health and care costs, and interest payments on debt.

Why does all this matter?

Because, without a productivity boost, Australians will be consigned to a future of lower incomes, higher taxes and harder choices.

That is the very definition of intergenerational unfairness.

The evidence from every quarter reaches the same conclusion.

Labor isn’t working and because of them, neither are a staggering number of Australians – 130,000 – who have entered unemployment since Anthony Albanese was elected.

Australia must act decisively to lift productivity.

Coalition Principles for Prosperity and Reform

Under my leadership, the Liberal and National parties will be guided by enduring principles that have always defined us.

These principles reflect our belief in freedom, choice, aspiration and enterprise; anchored by reward for effort. Government must enable Australians to thrive, not stand in their way.

First, as I outlined in my speech to the Committee for Economic Development of Australia in Melbourne last month, we will restore fiscal discipline.

Every dollar wasted is borrowed against our children’s future.

Government must live within its means, just as families and businesses do.

That means responsible spending, a sustainable safety net for those who truly need it, and keeping taxes lower so the economy can grow.

Second, we will reward effort and encourage enterprise.

Australia must always be a place where hard work and risk-taking are rewarded, not punished.

That belief is not abstract for me.

It comes from the values instilled in me by the sacrifices of my parents who migrated to Australia, for a new and unknown life. It comes from my own journey, where I took risks to build a future in the country I came to love.

Changing jobs when I had to or when the money ran out; from air traffic controller, to pilot, to shearers cook. Living in a caravan and saving every dollar for a start on the family farm. Embarking on university study with young children, a mountain of debt and all the challenges of life on the land.

Those experiences taught me the dignity of work, the meaning of aspiration, and the conviction that government must reward effort, not punish it. Get out of the way, not stand in the way.

That is why I have always believed that if you work hard and play by the rules, you should be able to keep more of what you earn.

Yet today, Australians are working harder than ever, while tax receipts have climbed to a 19-year high as a share of the economy.

Last year alone, the Albanese Government collected more than $650 billion in taxes.

That’s almost $2 billion every single day, drawn from the hard-work and enterprise of Australian workers, and businesses.

And instead of paying down debt, Labor piles on more taxes, more spending and more waste.

Today I announce that at the next election, the Coalition will take to the people a plan for personal income tax cuts.

We’ll start where the pressure is greatest — low and middle income earners who are feeling the squeeze from higher prices and rising living costs.

This is not a passing policy preference.

It is more than just a commitment to lower taxes.

I have never been more convinced, more determined and more passionate about anything I have ever done in public life than I am today in making this pledge to the Australian people.

Every instinct in my being tells me that Australians should keep more of what they earn.

It is a principle I carry from my life as a farmer, a mother, a tax officer, and now as Leader of the Opposition.

That is why the work of the Shadow Ministry will be anchored in two primary goals: lower personal income taxes and budget repair.

Every time we say no to Labor’s waste, we will look first to return those savings to taxpayers or to strengthen the nation’s finances.

Because every dollar Labor spends is a dollar you have to pay, and so every dollar we save is one we will try to put back in your pocket.

Whilst early work on our tax cuts plan has already begun, we will determine the scale and scope of our eventual package as the final budget position becomes clearer over the next two and a half years.

But during this term, when Labor wastes a dollar and people hear me and my team say we oppose that spending, I want Australians to have this pledge front of mind.

Australia cannot afford to keep drifting away from rewarding effort towards punishing it.

When our greatest prime minister, John Howard, left office, the average worker paid 22.3 per cent of their income in tax.

Today it is 24.3 per cent, and the Parliamentary Budget Office projects it will climb to 27.7 per cent by 2035–36.

That means families working longer hours will see less in their pay packets, small business owners will be pushed into higher brackets sooner, and ambition itself will be taxed away.

We cannot build prosperity, whether it be economic, social, institutional or personal, by taxing its very foundations out of existence.

The answer is living within our means, and recognising and rewarding the effort made by hardworking Australians by enabling them to keep more of what they earn.

Tax relief doesn’t just help everyday Australians struggling with rising living costs.

It is good for our economy, and it’s the right thing to do.

It means that when Australians work hard to get ahead, they’re incentivised rather than penalised.

It means if you work extra hours, take an extra shift, earn a promotion or get a second job, you keep more of what you’ve earned.

Because the money you earn is your money, not the government’s – and you should decide how it’s spent.

Whether that’s getting ahead on your mortgage, spending money on children’s sport, saving for a holiday, setting up a home business on the side, or just paying the bills.

Tax relief is also about backing small businesses, because when there is more money in people’s pockets we know it gets spent in local businesses.

Third, we will keep government focused and targeted.

The Commonwealth should do fewer things and do them better.

People want a Parliament that understands what their life is like and a Government that gets out of their way.

Canberra should never try to be all things to all people.

It must direct help to where it is most needed, instead of wasting money where it’s not.

Programs like Labor’s electric vehicle tax break are not about fairness.

Every dollar wasted convincing someone, who can already afford to buy a car, to buy a specific type of car, is a dollar denied to someone who truly needs our help.

Governments need to ditch the gimmicks and offer practical support for Australians doing it tough.

Fourth, we will act to deliver intergenerational fairness.

Millennials and Gen Z are Australia’s new forgotten generation.

Our duty is to safeguard their opportunities, not saddle them with debt.

At the moment, Australians are paying $50,000 in interest every single minute.

That is money that could have been invested in schools, hospitals, roads – or perhaps most crucially of all for Australia’s new forgotten generation, initiatives to restore the home ownership dream in this country.

We will make decisions with the future in mind, so our next generations inherit opportunity, not a ballooning debt burden.

I don’t want my six grandchildren – all six or under – facing a future of working harder and longer, all to pay for a mountain of debt that they had no role in accruing.

But that’s what they face, because Labor can’t get spending under control today.

Finally, we will back a smaller, enabling government.

Government’s job is to focus on the essentials: secure borders, safe communities, a fair safety net, and a pro-market environment that supports business and jobs.

That means clearing away unnecessary regulation, backing hard work and good ideas and allowing them the freedom to grow.

Above all, relieving Australians from bureaucracy and trusting them to get on with their lives.

These are not slogans.

They are the moral compass that will guide our economic reform agenda.

Because a strong economy is the foundation of a fair society, and you cannot have one without the other.

An Agenda for Productivity and Growth: Initial Policy Directions

Having outlined the principles, let me sketch the initial suite of policy directions the Coalition will pursue to kick-start Australia’s productivity revival.

This is not an exhaustive list or a full election platform.

It’s a set of priority areas where we see both urgent need and realistic opportunity for reform.

Each of these aligns not only with our values but with what independent experts and businesspeople are telling us needs to be done:

Cutting Red Tape

One of the fastest ways to boost investment and productivity is to clear the clogged arteries of regulation that are strangling projects and entrepreneurship.

Whether it’s building critical infrastructure, opening a mine, or starting a new business venture – no project that meets environmental and safety standards should be stuck in limbo for years on end waiting for bureaucratic sign-offs.

Overlapping federal and state assessments must be streamlined.

Regulators must make decisions within a reasonable, clear time frame, bringing Australia into line with best practices overseas.

Our goal is simple: bring down the absurd delays and give investors and communities the certainty they need, crave and deserve.

A broad coalition of industries has identified faster planning and project approvals as one of the top reform priorities for lifting productivity.

As Environment Minister, I was on track to secure the support of state and territory leaders – both Liberal and Labor – from around the country. But Anthony Albanese blocked it at every turn. He never understood the win-win – that you can have projects that build jobs and communities and also protect the environment.

Under a Government I lead, decisions would be delivered with certainty and speed.

Because time is money, and we will save both for the Australian economy by getting things built without unnecessary bureaucratic hold-ups.

But under Labor the story has been the opposite, with regulation piled on at a record pace.

Since Labor came to office they have introduced more than 5,000 new regulations and 400 new laws, adding at least $4.4 billion in extra compliance costs.

To put that in perspective, Australia now has more than 1,200 Acts of Parliament in force.

New Zealand gets by with just over 1,000, and Canada with fewer than 900.

Canada has 14 million more people living in their country than ours, yet we have a third more laws.

That tells you everything about the regulatory culture we are dealing with.

And when Labor claims to be reducing red tape, the results are almost comical.

Their flagship “Regulatory Reform Omnibus Bill” promised common-sense relief.

Yet, when you drill into it, the type of burden being lifted was allowing marriage celebrants to use a digital identity to verify paperwork instead of sighting a physical copy.

A small win for 10,000 celebrants, but cold comfort for hundreds of thousands of small businesses drowning in forms, fees and approvals.

Reducing Duplication and Overreach in Regulation

That is why we need a different approach.

One that actually clears the clutter instead of adding to it.

To do this we will be taking a close look at duplicative and excessive regulations that serve no purpose except to cost jobs, innovation and time.

We need to look at federal regulations to identify outdated or overlapping rules, especially where states also regulate.

Every new regulation should be subject to a strict cost–benefit test focused on growth and competitiveness.

Labor should be introducing sunset clauses and automatic reviews so that regulations expire after a set period unless they are expressly renewed.

But in this Parliament alone, they have introduced 51 bills and only 7 have contained an Impact Assessment.

That means 6 out of every 7 bills are tabled with no serious regard for what they mean for Australians and Australian businesses.

We need an approach that stops new rules from becoming permanent barnacles on the economy.

And we are backed by the Productivity Commission, which in its draft recommendations on creating a dynamic and resilient economy, urged government to adopt new principles that support dynamism and hold regulators accountable for delivering growth and innovation.

Further, we’ll make sure that regulators tasked with safeguarding the public interest, from ASIC to the ACCC to the public service departments, actually have a mandate to facilitate business activity.

Regulation should be smart, lean, and routinely pruned – but right now it resembles a dense jungle that Labor just keeps adding to.

Fair, Flexible Workplaces and Modern Industrial Relations

A productive economy in the 2020s and beyond needs modern, flexible workplace arrangements – arrangements that allow employers and employees to adapt, innovate, and find win-win gains in productivity.

Unfortunately, the current government’s approach has been to double down on a 20th-century, centralised industrial relations mindset dictated by a few unaccountable union leaders.

Labor’s restrictive industrial relations changes are acting as a handbrake on productivity.

Multi-employer bargaining laws are threatening small businesses with conditions they cannot afford.

Labor’s push to legislate one-size-fits-all approaches across whole sectors ignores the needs of many employers and workers.

We will chart a different course.

We believe in enterprise-level bargaining – where businesses and their staff can strike agreements that reward higher performance and suit their circumstances – rather than industry-wide decrees.

We believe in options like flexible hours, remote work arrangements, and modern award structures that reflect today’s digital economy.

Let me be very clear: we support ‘work-from-home’.

This is something that we got wrong in the lead up to the 2025 election. And we have listened.

We know employers and employees will take a common-sense approach.

Different arrangements suit different industries, sectors, businesses and workers.

I want to give Australian workers this assurance: flexibility does not mean stripping away worker protections; it means giving workers more choice in how they balance work and life, and giving businesses the ability to test new ideas, attract talent, and reward merit.

As the Productivity Commission highlighted: a “thriving, adaptable workforce” is key to innovation and higher wages.

A fair and balanced industrial relations system would create more jobs and more productivity gains. These gains, shared between workers and businesses, provide the foundations for higher living standards and economic growth.

Smarter Skills and a Digital-Ready Workforce

Human capital, the skills and ingenuity of our people, is the most important resource for productivity.

To build a more skilled and adaptable workforce, we need to revisit Australia’s approach to tertiary education and training.

This means working closely with industry to ensure vocational training and higher education are more closely aligned and actually equip people with the skills and knowledge for the modern economy, whether in advanced manufacturing, IT, healthcare, or the trades.

It also means incentivising upskilling, so that workers can adapt as technology evolves – particularly with the rise of AI, which presents so much opportunity.

We will look at reforms recommended by experts in the field: for instance, implementing a Skills Passport, making it easier for Australians to access short courses to acquire new skills quickly, and better integrating our university and vocational systems with employers’ needs.

Just as business shouldn’t wait for lengthy environmental and regulatory approvals, tertiary providers shouldn’t be waiting months or years for approvals, especially for new scope or new courses to meet changing workforce needs.

We must also dramatically improve our performance in foundational areas like STEM education which underpin so many high-productivity industries.

At the same time, Australia needs to become a leader in harnessing the data and digital economy for growth.

We will support measures that encourage businesses of all sizes to adopt new technologies, from AI to cloud computing, by removing barriers and providing targeted incentives for digital innovation.

The Productivity Commission’s inquiry into Australia’s data and digital future spoke of capturing the “digital dividend” of new ideas – we intend to capture it.

Because a smarter skills agenda is not just social policy; it’s core economic policy.

Revitalising Competition and Incentivising Investment

Finally, a high-productivity economy is one where competition thrives and investment is rewarded.

We need to revitalise competition policy in this country.

It’s been nearly 30 years since the landmark National Competition Policy reforms of the 1990s, which turbocharged productivity by opening up closed shops and monopolies.

The modern Labor party would run a mile from the approach taken by their predecessors – who understood that the principles of competition policy link directly with improved living standards for all Australians.

It’s time to take a fresh look across our economy.

From energy to banking to transport we must ensure our markets are truly competitive and consumers have choice.

For example, opening retail electricity and gas markets to competition allowed households and small businesses in most states to shop around for the best deal — putting downward pressure on prices and improving service.

The Coalition will task the Productivity Commission and ACCC with identifying areas where competition is insufficient and recommending changes to unleash competitive forces.

Whether that’s cracking down on anti-competitive conduct, removing barriers to entry for new players, or reforming oligopolistic market structures.

These are just initial steps in our policy development.

We will continue to develop policies throughout the term as we consult with experts and the community.

We intend to go to the next election with a comprehensive, costed plan to get Australia out of this productivity rut and into a new era of shared prosperity.

What I’ve outlined today are the priorities, especially in taxation, deregulation and unleashing the forces of enterprise, which will guide our first actions.

They are priorities backed by credible analysis from the Productivity Commission’s findings to the business communities recommendations and, importantly, they are politically realistic.

These are ideas that a reform-oriented government can implement now, without needing decades of debate.

They don’t pit Australians against each other; rather, they offer win-win outcomes.

A stronger economy that works better for businesses and workers – especially and for Australia’s new forgotten generation.

A Call to Action: Securing the Next Generation’s Future

As I conclude, let me speak directly to the urgency of this mission.

Every delay in reform means lost opportunities, forgone jobs and wages, and a heavier debt burden for our children.

The government talks about productivity but fails to act.

I refuse to accept that Australia’s best days are behind us.

Australia is the best country in the world. But we can never take that for granted.

At the next election, Australians will face a choice: a weaker nation under Labor, or a stronger future built on hard work, fairness and lower taxes under the Coalition.

Our vision is of a confident, competitive Australia where productivity growth delivers rising incomes, families can afford homes, and future generations inherit opportunity not debt.

With the right leadership, we can write a new rule book that advances prosperity for all.

Productivity reform is not abstract.

It is about building a stronger, more prosperous nation and creating a better life for every Australian. For all of us.

The task is clear, and the time is now.

New facilities open and on the way for Bomaderry High School

Students in Bomaderry have started Term 4 in their new world-class public school facilities three months ahead of schedule, following a recently-completed stage of an upgrade for Bomaderry High School.

Member for Kiama Katelin McInerney officially opened the school’s new Technological and Applied Studies (TAS) building, with home economics and industrial arts lessons underway in new workshops for woodwork, metalwork, and food technology.

Bomaderry students will now be able to use the new facilities to learn contemporary skills on industry-standard equipment, providing a pathway for students to tertiary education and employment in the region.

Students and staff are already benefiting from major improvements, with a new administration office and refurbishment works to two buildings—including the installation of two new lifts to enhance accessibility—now complete and in use.

Further upgrades at Bomaderry High School are on the way, including the refurbishment of almost 50 existing classrooms and the installation of a new vocational education kitchen.

For over a decade, the former Liberal National government neglected public schools on the South Coast and failed to deliver the Bomaderry High School upgrades, despite promising to do so in 2021.

The upgrade to Bomaderry High School is among 12 new schools and major upgrades being delivered across the Illawarra and Shoalhaven region, including:

  • Calderwood – new public school and public preschool
  • Dapto High School – new covered outdoor learning area
  • Flinders – new high school
  • Milton Public School – upgrade
  • Minnamurra Public School – new nature playground
  • Nowra East Public School – upgrade
  • Ulladulla High School – upgrade
  • Ulladulla Public School – upgrade
  • Vincentia High School – upgrade
  • West Dapto – new public school and public preschool
  • Worrigee – new public school and public preschool

The Minns Labor Government is also building nine additional new public preschools in the region, offering more than 700 places per week for the area’s youngest learners.

The public preschools will be co-located with Barrack Heights, Berkeley West, Bomaderry, Cringila, Greenwell Point, Hayes Park, Lake Heights, Lake Illawarra South, and Sanctuary Point public schools.

These upgrades reflect the NSW Government’s commitment to delivering better schools for NSW students. The 2025–26 Budget includes a record $9 billion investment in school infrastructure, with $2.1 billion allocated to new and upgraded schools in regional NSW.

Alongside the Minns Labor Government’s investment in education infrastructure, we are making sure there are more teachers in front of students in NSW classrooms and have reduced teacher vacancies by 96 per cent in the electorate of Kiama.

Acting Minister for Education and Early Learning Courtney Houssos said:

“These upgrades represent our significant investment in the Bomaderry community and will deliver long-term benefits for local students and their families.

“For far too long, families on the South Coast were promised new schools and upgrades that never progressed past a media release by the Liberals.

“The Minns Labor Government, with the leadership of Deputy Premier Prue Car, is committed to building better public schools for our children.”

Member for Kiama Katelin McInerney said:

“It is crucial that our students have access to a world-class public education, and that is being delivered.

“Our government is investing in ensuring students learn in the best quality learning environment possible, have access to modern, industry-standard equipment that sets them up for success in their learning and the workforce, and an education experience that builds their belief in themselves so they can go out and make our community an even better place.”

Bomaderry High School Principal Ian Morris said:

“These new upgrades are just brilliant. Importantly our students can see that the equipment and facilities they have are absolutely world class.

“Our students are excited by them and the new office at the front of the school is a game changer for our community.

“Our support staff feel more valued as their workplace has been completely modernised, and our students will leave school with experience using industry-standard hospitality, woodwork and metalwork equipment.

“This level of support for regional education is just fantastic and welcomed by our entire school community.”

Minns Labor Government unlocks millions for rare earths and copper exploration to meet surging global demand

The Minns Labor Government is positioning NSW to be a global leader and industry partner in the race for critical minerals, rare earths elements and high-tech metals by supporting millions of dollars of investment in exploration.

The NSW Government has announced grants that will facilitate around $5 million of funding for 29 exploration projects to undertake drilling, geophysics and geochemistry exploration and find the next major critical minerals project.

Under the Critical Minerals and High Tech Metals Exploration Program, the NSW Government will provide almost $2.5 million in co-investment funding to the 29 projects. Explorers must then match it to receive the funding.

By partnering with the mining industry to pursue exploration, we can help discover more deposits of the critical minerals needed to manufacture modern technologies, including electric vehicles, mobile phones and solar panels.

Global demand for copper is rising rapidly, with prices climbing more than 20% this year. NSW is stepping up to meet this demand. Copper production in the state has increased by a third over the past three years, to around 190,000 tonnes this financial year.

With 21 of the 29 projects focused on copper exploration, this investment builds on NSW’s position as an industry partner and leading global supplier, and helps unlock new deposits to support the electrification of the economy, as well as AI data centres, clean energy technologies and infrastructure.

As demand for rare earth elements – naturally occurring metallic elements with powerful magnetic properties – grows in strategic importance, NSW is also supporting its exploration and production.

New exploration being supported by this round of funding is targeting opportunities for rare earth elements and zirconium.

Other minerals being targeted for exploration include silver and cobalt, vital to renewable energy technologies, manufacturing, infrastructure, and advanced medical equipment and diagnostics tools.

Successful applicants in the Critical Minerals and High-Tech Metals Exploration Program include:

  • Waratah Minerals to undertake drilling activities to explore for copper at the Spur Porphyry Project in the renowned Macquarie Arc. Waratah Minerals previously discovered one of the most significant copper-gold deposits in NSW in the last decade.
  • Neo Double Eagle Resources will explore for rare earth elements crucial in the production of smartphones, electric vehicles, wind turbines and defence technologies, with drilling activities at Binge Grumble Mountain.
  • Alkane Resources will undertake drilling activities in the Central West using a new exploration model suggesting that hidden deep beneath the historic gold mines at Peak Hill may lie undiscovered copper resources. This project demonstrates that underexplored areas exist underneath known historic deposits.
  • Silverton Minerals will be employing an innovative, low-impact technology which passively measures the natural electromagnetic fields in an exploration area generated by distant lightning strikes to identify possible mineral-bearing structures beneath the ground northwest of Broken Hill.

Exploration is critical in the early stages of any mining project. Intense and highly scientific activities are required to confirm the strength of a mineral deposit and its viability before a company can consider going through the planning process.

Already, there are approximately 1500 exploration titles currently being explored for minerals across the state, and this funding will further aid the search for the next big critical minerals, high-tech metals or rare earth elements deposit.

There are currently 15 active major metals and critical minerals mines across NSW, employing more than 6,000 people, mostly across the Central West and Far West.

The announcement comes as NSW prepares to host the International Mining and Resources Conference (IMARC), the largest international mining event in the Southern Hemisphere, with more than 10,000 delegates from 120 countries set to participate in Sydney this week.

The NSW Government is also hosting the Critical Minerals Investment Showcase, promoting investment-ready projects across the state to global funders from Europe, the Middle East, India, Korea and Japan.

This funding round is a key pillar of the NSW Government’s Critical Minerals and High-Tech Metals Strategy which is driving new investment in critical minerals and high-tech metals exploration production, processing and manufacturing.

Successful projects will commence exploration in coming months, advancing the search for critical minerals and high-tech metals needed to support future industries and power our way to Net Zero. 

Further information about the successful projects and recipients is available at Critical Minerals and High-Tech Metals Exploration Program.

Minister for Natural Resources Courtney Houssos:

“NSW has the critical minerals and high-tech metals that the world needs to drive a clean energy future, create new jobs, and build resilient supply chains.

“Whether it’s the copper we need for data centres, antimony for batteries, or the rare earth elements for electric vehicles,  NSW has the opportunity be at the centre of the critical minerals boom.

“These co-investment grants highlight the Minns Labor Government’s partnering with industry, and for NSW to be a leading player in the global race for critical minerals.

“NSW has an abundance of critical minerals and high-tech metals waiting to be discovered. We’re supporting miners and explorers alike to boost supply of these strategically important resources. 

“This is the biggest round of exploration funding ever offered in NSW. From exploration to production, we are supporting targeted initiatives at each stage of the project pipeline.”