Greens: Labor’s refusal to sign international statement condemning Israel for demolishing UNRWA headquarters in East Jerusalem is a new low for the Albanese government

On 20 January, Israel demolished the East Jerusalem headquarters of UNRWA, and 11 countries including UK, Canada and France have signed a joint statement condemning Israel for this action. The Albanese government has declined to sign up to this international statement.

Senator Mehreen Faruqi, Deputy Leader of the Greens and spokesperson for International Aid and Global Justice: 

“Labor’s refusal to join even Canada, the UK and France to condemn Israel for demolishing UNRWA headquarters in East Jerusalem shows Minister Wong has completely given up the pretense of caring about aid to Palestinians.

“Silence on Israel’s bulldozing of UNRWA headquarters was bad enough, but not even having the moral fortitude to join like-minded nations to condemn them is yet another low for the Albanese Labor government. Though, what else can you expect from a divisive government who is laying out a welcome mat for the president of a state committing genocide and who still hasn’t torn up Trump’s invitation to join the farcical and imperial so-called ‘board of peace’?

“At a time where UNWRA and aid is needed the most, this is just going to further fast-track Israel’s genocide and erasure of Palestinians who are already facing starvation, bombing and murder even during a ceasefi

Labor must not leave inflation fight to RBA

Australians are bracing for another interest rate rise because Labor has turbo-charged the housing crisis and refused to tackle corporate price gouging, the Greens say.

With the RBA likely to raise rates this week, the Greens argue that millions of people will face an interest rate rise because the government has not tackled two major causes of inflation, spiraling housing costs and corporate profiteering.

Sen. Larissa Waters, Leader of the Australian Greens said:

“If you’re a mortgage holder or a renter, you face being hit by the RBA to “fix” the government’s “inflation problem”.

“Anyone with a mortgage will be giving more per month to the big banks. Renters are going to cop it as it will trickle down into unfair rent rises. That leaves you with less money to spend on food, or the things you enjoy.

“It’s hard enough right now to get ahead, you shouldn’t be doing it harder. It shouldn’t be on you.

“This is about choices. The government’s priorities mean that you are copping the pain while banks, energy companies and property investors keep winning.

“If they’d taken them on, you wouldn’t be getting a rate rise.”

Sen. Nick McKim, Greens Economic Justice spokesperson said:

“Labor has chosen to leave inflation to the Reserve Bank instead of tackling some of the causes of rising prices – skyrocketing housing costs and corporate price gouging.

“If the Reserve Bank increases interest rates the Treasurer will wring his hands and pretend he shares peoples’ pain when in reality he is responsible for increasing pressure on the RBA to raise.

“If you have a mortgage you are going to feel the pain, while the big banks keep winning. If you’re renting, higher interest rates will flow straight into rent increases.

“Labor pretends this is out of their control. It isn’t. This is about political choices, and Labor has chosen to protect corporate profits while ordinary people wear the pain.

“Big corporations are driving up prices and making massive profits, and Labor refuses to make price gouging illegal across the economy.

“At the same time, Labor is handing out around $180 billion in investor tax breaks that push up house prices and rents.

“The big winners from rising interest rates are the big banks, which already make around $200,000 in profit on the average mortgage.

“Energy giants like AGL and Origin are also cashing in, with around a third of people’s power bills going straight to profit.

“We need to make corporate price gouging illegal, and we need to end tax breaks that help wealthy investors hoard housing.

“People deserve a government that fights for them, not one that leaves inflation to the RBA while protecting big banks and corporations.”

Sen. Barbara Pocock, Greens Finance, Housing and Homelessness spokesperson said:

“In the midst of a housing crisis, families across Australia are holding their breath in anticipation of another interest rate rise. Millions of people are already in mortgage stress, already hurting in a cost of living crisis.

“Australia’s inflation problem is being driven largely by rising house prices, caused by Labor’s failed housing policies.

“$181 billion worth of investor tax handouts are driving up the cost of housing. Investor lending is running hot and now economy wide inflation is in resurgence.

“Labor’s 5% deposit scheme, combined with their massive subsidies for property investors are spiking housing costs, which is the biggest driver of inflation.

“It’s clear that Labor cares more about investors with dozens of properties than it does about renters, first home buyers and homeless people.

‘The Albanese government must urgently slow housing inflation. Labor needs to stop treating housing like a game of monopoly. It needs to scrap the tax breaks for wealthy property investors and directly build social and affordable houses.”

Latest AEC donations data shows Labor and Liberals still pocketing handouts from their favourite corporations

The latest update to the Australian Electoral Commission’s transparency register confirms that the major parties continue to take handouts from the same big corporations and dirty industries in exchange for access and influence.

Fossil fuel companies, gambling interests, pharmaceutical companies and the major banks and supermarkets continue to write cheques to Labor and the Liberals – while Australians pay the price with weak climate laws, stalled gambling reform, and rising cost of living pressures.

With analysis ongoing, some of the largest sources of funds for Labor from the 2024/25 data includes donations of $100,000 each from the Australian Hotels Association and the Pharmacy Guild, $82,000 from the Minerals Council of Australia, one of the country’s largest fossil fuel lobbies, $130,000 combined from gambling companies Sportsbet and Tabcorp, and hundreds of thousands from major fossil fuel companies like Santos, Chevron, Inpex and Woodside, and the peaks that represent them.  

Many of these payments are classified as “other receipts,” a vague category that can allow corporations to buy access to events and forums where they can directly influence politicians.

This week, the Greens intend to reintroduce legislation to ban donations from industries that profit at the expense of the public good.

Greens Democracy Spokesperson, Senator Steph Hodgins-May:

“Once again, we see Labor getting cosy with the big corporations that are ripping off everyday Australians.

“While households struggle with groceries and rent, Labor continues to take hundreds of thousands of dollars in dirty donations from the very companies causing the cost of living crisis. 

“Fossil fuel giants have bought their way into the heart of our government. It’s why Labor’s new nature laws ignore climate change — they’re protecting the billions they hand out to big polluters instead of protecting our planet.

“There’s massive public support for real gambling reform but instead of listening to the families being ripped apart by gambling harm, it spends its time banking cheques from multinationals like Sportsbet and Tabcorp.

“If there was any doubt that Labor answers to big corporations, this is the latest receipt. It shows they prioritise the interests of Woolworths, Woodside and Westpac over the needs of everyday families.

“We welcome better donation disclosure, but sunlight alone won’t stop these dirty deals. If we want a democracy that works for the people, we have to ban dirty donations altogether.

Liberals Unveil Plan to Cut Red Tape and Get Australia’s Economy Moving Again

The Liberal Party today announced a comprehensive deregulation agenda to get Australia’s economy moving again, lift productivity, and reverse the decline in living standards under Labor.

At the heart of this agenda we will cut red tape so tradies, farmers and businesses can spend less time dealing with government and more time doing their job, saving time and saving money.

This will help small business and large businesses reduce compliance, and get government out of the way of enterprise by:

  • Establishing a clear target to reduce the overall red tape burden
  • Conducting the first comprehensive regulatory stocktake since 2014
  • Cutting the existing stock of unnecessary and duplicative regulation
  • Stopping the flow of new red tape through stronger regulatory discipline
  • Introducing a national red tape tracker to improve transparency and accountability
  • Using technology and AI to simplify compliance and reduce regulatory burden

After nearly four years of the Albanese Government, Australians are working harder but getting ahead less. 

Australia has experienced the largest decline in living standards in the developed world, while economic growth and productivity have stalled.

Since Labor came to office, GDP per capita has been flat or falling in 10 of the past 13 quarters, including no growth at all in the most recent quarter.

Productivity has gone backwards, falling by 0.8 per cent over the last year, undermining wages growth, business investment and long-term prosperity.

The Leader of the Opposition Sussan Ley said Australia is being weighed down by a growing web of red and green tape that is choking enterprise, investment and innovation.

“Australia cannot grow its way to higher wages and better living standards if productivity continues to fall,” the Leader of the Opposition said.

“Right now, our economy is being smothered by regulation with businesses spending more time filling out forms than investing, employing and growing.

“Labor’s answer to every problem is another rule, another process, another layer of bureaucracy and that approach is failing.”

Research shows the cost of complying with federal regulation has risen to around $160 billion, equivalent to 5.8 per cent of GDP, up sharply over the past decade. 

Since coming to office, Labor has introduced thousands of new regulations and hundreds of new laws, adding billions of dollars in compliance costs to the economy 

Under Labor, Australia’s global competitiveness has slipped, productivity growth has declined, and living standards have gone backwards. 

Small businesses, farmers, tradies and manufacturers are on the front line of this failure.

The Liberal Party’s deregulation agenda is focused on one clear goal: getting the economy moving again by lifting productivity and restoring confidence to invest and grow.

Today, the Liberal Party is releasing a discussion paper outlining a practical plan to cut red tape and reboot Australian enterprise.

Shadow Minister for Productivity and Deregulation Senator Andrew Bragg said deregulation is not about lowering standards, but about ensuring rules are fit for purpose and work for Australians.

“Good regulation protects the public interest while bad regulation crushes initiative and holds the country back,” Senator Bragg said.

“Australia’s economic recovery will not come from Canberra writing more rules. 

“It will come from backing Australians to take risks, start businesses, build homes and create jobs.

“We cannot lift wages, restore living standards or strengthen the budget unless we fix productivity and we cannot fix productivity unless we cut red tape.”

The Liberal Party is inviting businesses, industry groups and the broader community to make submissions on where red tape is doing the most damage and how it can be cut, streamlined or modernised 

The Liberal Party’s door is open to businesses, industry groups and the broader community to contribute practical ideas and real-world examples from those who deal with regulation every day and understand where the system is broken.

This agenda is about restoring economic momentum, rebuilding confidence and getting Australia moving again.

More doctors join rural generalist program in 2026

The NSW Government’s Rural Generalist Single Employer Pathway is continuing to boost the regional health workforce, with another 24 doctors joining the program this week as part of the 2026 intake.

These doctors will work across smaller regional hospitals, regional and rural GP practices and Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations, and some regional centres.

Seventy-four rural generalist trainees, including this year’s intake, have been employed across eight regional Local Health Districts since the program began in 2024.

Rural generalists are General Practitioners who have an extended skill in a specialty area such as anaesthetics, obstetrics, paediatrics, emergency medicine, mental health or palliative care.

The program is an employment pathway for doctors seeking a career as a rural generalist who work across both primary care and hospital settings.

The program offers a length-of-training contract with a Local Health District in regional NSW, allowing trainees to retain and use their NSW Health Award entitlements during GP training.

Rural generalist trainees also receive the same pay and conditions as their hospital-trained counterparts.

The Minns Labor Government is building an engaged, capable and supported workforce, by:

  • Abolishing the wages cap and delivering the largest wage increase to healthcare workers in a decade;
  • Implementing ratios in our emergency departments;
  • Saving 1,112 nurses which the Liberal Government planned to sack;
  • Supporting our future health workforce through providing them with study subsidies; and
  • Investing $274 million to deliver an additional 250 healthcare workers at upgraded hospitals left with inadequate staff by the previous government.

Regional Health Minister Ryan Park:

“I’m excited to welcome our 24 new trainees to the program, all with a commitment and passion for regional healthcare and communities.

“This program is a game-changer. It supports rural generalist trainees throughout their training, helping to prepare them for a career providing our regional, rural and remote communities with the essential care they need.

“The Minns Labor Government is improving the access, quality and sustainability of health care in our rural and remote communities through a dedicated medical workforce.

“NSW Health is supporting these doctors through their training and it is great to see them setting down roots in our regional communities and experiencing firsthand how rewarding a career in rural medicine can be.”

Rural Generalist Trainee Dr Jack Grentell:

“Living and working in a regional area gives me the perfect balance, a 10-minute commute, space to enjoy the outdoors, and a strong sense of community. It’s the kind of life I want to build for the future, and I can’t imagine doing anything else.

“This rural generalist pathway has been the perfect fit. It offers security, flexibility, and the ability to plan ahead. Being able to train and work where I want has allowed us to buy a house and settle down, which is rare in medical training.

“With a supportive team behind you and the ability to tailor placements to your interests, you can focus on becoming the kind of doctor you want to be. Every step of the way, I’ve met inspiring people who’ve reaffirmed my decision to stay in regional medicine.

“Being a rural generalist means doing it all, and that diversity is both challenging and incredibly rewarding. You feel truly integrated into the community, and the gratitude from patients reminds you why this work matters.

“Programs like this are essential to ensuring people can get the care they need, close to home. If you’re from a rural background and thinking about entering the program, just give it a crack. We need more people like you out here.”

$70 billion OneFund performs for NSW

The Government’s OneFund strategy is delivering strong results, with a balance of $70.4 billion at the end of calendar 2025 and having returned $8.8 billion from its inception at the end of August 2024.

Following the implementation of Phase 2 in 2025, OneFund is now expected to deliver around $2.2 billion more than the previous government’s approach would have delivered by 2028-29.

This will be achieved while also taking on $16.3 billion less debt than the previous government’s approach.

OneFund pools the State’s investment funds together, with all funds sharing a common risk appetite and investment strategy. This structure means that funds can be invested more efficiently and flexibly, with a focus on the longer term.

OneFund has an investment return objective of CPI + 4.5 per cent per annum over rolling 10-year periods, similar to the Australian Government’s Future Fund.

In the 16 months since inception OneFund has returned 11.3 per cent p.a.

TCorp manages OneFund, which initially incorporated $47 billion in investments.  In April 2025, three additional state investment funds worth $11 billion were added.

The State continues to manage market volatility by investing in a diverse portfolio including a number of defensive tools – meaning OneFund is less susceptible to equity market volatility than if it were invested in equities alone.

The Minns Labor Government announced the creation of OneFund in its second Budget as part of an ongoing commitment to budget repair, including turning around a record level of inherited debt.

Treasurer Daniel Mookhey said:

“The OneFund strategy continues to deliver returns to the NSW taxpayer demonstrating value, not just for today – but decades to come.”

“OneFund has allowed the State to grow its assets base without signing future generations up to the mountain of debt the former government wanted us to take on.”

“Our OneFund strategy allows us to generate strong investment returns over time while reducing the amount of debt the State expects to hold.”

New legislation to crackdown on ‘factories of hate’

The NSW Government will today introduce legislation into Parliament to strengthen councils’ enforcement powers to shut down unlawful places of worship.

The legislation is a crackdown on ‘factories of hate’ which are unlawfully promoting hate, intimidation and dividing our community.

It will seek to bolster existing powers by increasing fines for illegal places of public worship and give councils the power to cut off their water and power if they breach planning laws and ignore orders to cease.

The Local Government and Other Legislation Amendment (Places of Public Worship) Bill 2026 will support the implementation of measures announced last month in response to the antisemitic terror attack in Bondi on 14 December by amending the Local Government Act 1993 and Environmental Planning and Assessment Regulation 2021.

The proposed legislation will:

  • Allow councils to issue development control orders to stop activities on premises that breach planning laws or pose a risk to public health and safety.
  • Double existing penalty notice fines from $3,000 to $6,000 for individuals and from $6,000 to $12,000 for corporations.
  • Enable councils to apply to the Land and Environment Court for orders directing utility providers of water, electricity and gas to cut off services to hate preaching venues if they fail to comply with an order.
  • Increase the maximum existing failure to comply penalties from $11,000 to $110,000 for individuals and from $22,000 to $220,000 for corporations.

The changes will also be complemented by amendments to the Planning System SEPP that introduce a new requirement for local councils to consult with NSW Police on community safety matters before approving a development application for a new place of public worship, including approving changes to the use of an existing place of public worship.

These measures build on previous legislation to combat hate including new offences for inciting racial hatred and displaying Nazi symbols at Jewish places and additional protections for people seeking to attend their place of worship.

Premier of New South Wales Chris Minns said:

“These reforms give councils another practical tool to stop unlawful premises being used to spread hate and intimidation.

“If a place of worship is operating outside the law and dividing the community, councils will now have real power to shut it down.”

Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Paul Scully said:

“There’s no place for factories of hate in NSW. These changes are a practical step the Minns Labor Government are taking to stop hate preachers in their tracks.

“By strengthening enforcement powers and giving NSW Police visibility of development applications for places of public worship we are taking additional steps to keep our communities safe.”

Minister for Local Government Ron Hoenig said:

“All sectors of the NSW government are working together to implement and enforce these changes which will safeguard and protect our communities.

“Freedom of religion is a fundamental right in NSW but that freedom does not extend to operating unlawfully or putting community safety at risk and this legislation will make sure councils have strong powers to shut down unlawful places of public worship manifesting hate.”

Stronger conduct rules for NSW schools, with explicit ban on hate speech

All NSW school staff, including principals and school leaders, will be subject to strengthened conduct requirements that explicitly prohibit hate speech, under reforms to be announced today by the Minns Labor Government.

The changes close a clear gap in existing guidance, which does not adequately address the incitement of hate speech, and make unequivocally clear that engaging in hate speech will not be tolerated by any NSW school.

The changes will come into effect immediately and will apply across more than 3,000 government, independent and Catholic schools and will tighten the rules governing the conduct of all school staff, including school leaders.

Hate speech will be explicitly prohibited in the Codes of Conduct set out by all school sectors and will now apply to all members of school staff.

These changes to the rules follow the new hate speech legislation passed by both the state and Commonwealth governments and build on the Minns Labor Government’s recent legislation to strengthen laws against hate speech and hate crimes, making clear that there is no place for extremism or vilification in our classrooms or our state.

A review into the process to assess a fit and proper person – the legal test required for school leadership – is currently underway to investigate if it is fit for purpose and whether the current standards meet community expectations.

Under the new arrangements, expectations around acceptable conduct will be made clearer in the school registration manuals.

NESA is updating its rules in early Term 1, 2026, which will require all schools to prohibit hate speech in their Codes of Conduct for all people employed at the school.

Premier of New South Wales Chris Minns said:

“Until now, the rules haven’t been clear enough. Schools should be places where young people feel safe, respected and supported, not exposed to hate or extremism.

“These changes make it absolutely clear that hate speech has no place in any NSW classroom, from any staff member, in any school and it gives the regulator clear guidelines to act.”

Deputy Premier and Minister for Education and Early Learning Prue Car said:

“The vast majority of principals and teachers in NSW schools do an incredible job. They are committed to our students and their education.

“These common sense changes are about maintaining this high standard and giving parents peace of mind.

“When parents send their children to school in NSW, they can know they’re learning in a safe and supportive environment.”

Statement marking five years since the military coup in Myanmar

Today marks five years since the Myanmar military overthrew the democratically elected government. Since 1 February 2021, the people of Myanmar have endured escalating violence, widespread human rights violations and severe humanitarian suffering.

This crisis, caused by the coup, continues unabated. In 2026, an estimated 16.2 million people will require lifesaving humanitarian assistance, and over 3.6 million people are internally displaced due to ongoing conflict. The economy has contracted significantly, and transnational and serious organised crime has flourished, threatening regional stability.

Recent regime elections were held amid ongoing violence and repression, and without meaningful participation from opposition parties. They did not meet the conditions for free, fair and inclusive elections.

Australia has consistently condemned the regime’s brutal and ongoing atrocities against the people of Myanmar, and we will continue to judge the Myanmar military by its actions. We continue to support ASEAN’s Five-Point Consensus as the framework for addressing the situation in Myanmar and urge for its full implementation.

We look to the incoming Myanmar authorities to put in place measures that reflect the Five-Point Consensus, including the cessation of violence against civilians; safe and unhindered access to humanitarian support, without discrimination, for all those in need; and a commitment to genuine and inclusive dialogue amongst all stakeholders. We continue to call for the release of all those unjustly detained.

Australia is ready to support genuine efforts to alleviate humanitarian suffering, improve economic and social conditions and advance a sustainable resolution to the ongoing crisis.

We stand with the people of Myanmar, and share their ambitions for a better future.

Labor rewards property investors with billions while public housing waitlists grow

New data from ACOSS today shows the Federal Government spends more on housing investor tax breaks ($12.3bn in 2025) than on social housing, homelessness services and rent assistance combined ($9.6bn in 2025).

In the midst of a housing crisis, millions of Australian families are living in fear of a possible mortgage rate rise next Tuesday, driven largely by rising house prices resulting from Labor’s failed housing policies, including changes to the 5% deposit scheme which have poured fuel on the fire.

The Australian Greens say the housing and homelessness crisis cannot be solved unless the government winds back tax breaks, such as the capital gains tax discount and negative gearing, builds more public and affordable housing and stops pushing policies that fuel demand and make the crisis worse.

Greens spokesperson for finance, housing and homelessness Senator Barbara Pocock:

“Labor’s response to the housing crisis is making things worse. It is more concerned about rewarding property investors with tax breaks than about investing in social housing, homelessness services, and rent assistance altogether. 

“We are in a housing crisis and the government is adding fuel to the fire. Labor’s policies are driving up house prices, rents continue to skyrocket, and waits for social housing are getting longer.

“What’s clear is that Labor prioritises the wealth of property investors, many of whom have dozens of properties, instead of ensuring everybody has a roof over their head.

“For decades, successive Labor and Coalition Governments have put billions of dollars in the pockets of property investors, property developers and the banks. We won’t solve the housing crisis unless the government scraps its $181 billion tax breaks for wealthy investors.

“Labor needs to treat housing as a human right instead of a game of monopoly. What we need is real action and that means winding back tax breaks for wealthy property investors, as well as building affordable houses in the places where Australians need them.

“Labor needs to stop faffing around with the HAFF, which is too slow and too complex, and it needs to stop fuelling demand with policies like the 5% deposit changes which just make the crisis worse. The government must immediately fund social and affordable housing directly to drive down rental prices.”