logo
Treasurer invites opposition Ted O'Brien to economic reform talks in ‘show of good faith'

Treasurer invites opposition Ted O'Brien to economic reform talks in ‘show of good faith'

West Australian7 hours ago

Shadow treasurer Ted O'Brien will join Jim Chalmers' economic reform roundtable in August after a show of faith from the Government that the Coalition is genuine about wanting to be constructive.
The Treasurer said he extended the invitation to his new Opposition counterpart because he believed it would be a good thing for the country to have Mr O'Brien engaged.
'I think it would give us a better chance of making the kind of progress that we desperately need to see on reform and in our economy more broadly,' Dr Chalmers said.
The three-day roundtable is expected to involve about 25 people and is aimed at generating ideas and building consensus for economic reforms that boost Australia's productivity and resilience and help make the budget more sustainable.
That includes looking at broad tax reform.
Dr Chalmers said he had already had good discussions with businesses and unions on these three fronts.
'We want people to come with an eye to the national interest. We want people to understand and engage and propose trade-offs, and we want people to come with specific ideas, not just problem identification,' he said.
'I've been really heartened and encouraged by the amount of interest that people have shown already in the Economic Reform Roundtable, and I think that augers well for the next steps in the already very substantial program of economic progress and reform that we have undertaken.'
Mr O'Brien said he intended to be constructive where he could but critical where he must.
'The Coalition will hold the government to account every step of the way and won't be there to rubber stamp a talkfest,' he said.
'It's worth the Treasurer knowing from the outset that I believe rhetoric is no substitute for reform. I want to see honesty in how the government defines the economic problems our nation faces, and I will be looking to tangible outcomes as real measures of success.'
Dr Chalmers and his assistant minister for productivity Andrew Leigh want to make deregulation a priority in this term, with the Treasurer saying too much well-meaning red tape has led to progressives getting in the way of the things they wanted to achieve.
The Opposition has highlighted 5034 new regulations added in the previous term of Parliament.
Shadow productivity minister Andrew Bragg blasted them as 'an ugly catalogue of anti-business garbage.'
But Dr Leigh hit back with data showing the Morrison government added 5383 regulations to Australia's rule books between 2019 and 2022.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘We got smashed': Ley orders existential review of her own party
‘We got smashed': Ley orders existential review of her own party

Sydney Morning Herald

time4 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

‘We got smashed': Ley orders existential review of her own party

Opposition Leader Sussan Ley will order a second, sweeping review of the Liberals' core purpose and direction after acknowledging her party had been 'smashed' by Labor at the federal election. In her first major speech at the National Press Club as party leader on Wednesday, Ley will directly address the electoral drubbing the Liberals experienced at the May 3 poll in which the Coalition lost 15 lower-house MPs to drop to just 43 seats, as well as three senators. After the Liberals announced a review of their election campaign last week, Ley will announce a second, deeper review of the existential problems facing the party, including the rise of the teals, the party's ageing membership and perceptions that it is deaf to the concerns of modern women. The new opposition leader, who has already had to stare down a National Party revolt that temporarily split the Coalition, will promise to always be honest with Australians, according to speech notes seen by this masthead. 'So, let's be honest and up front about last month's election. We didn't just lose. We got smashed. We respect the election outcome with humility. We accept it with contrition. And we must learn from it with conviction,' she will say. Ley is the first female leader of an opposition to address the press club, but will play down the significance of her appearance at the venue. 'In recent weeks, a lot has been made of the fact that I am the first woman elected to lead the Liberal Party of Australia, and the first woman leader of the opposition,' Ley will say. 'Whilst this sends a strong signal that we are taking a fresh approach and doing things differently, I am not here today to speak about milestones or firsts.' 'As we seek to regain trust with all voters across our great country, the task before me – and my team – is to lead a Liberal Party that respects modern Australia, reflects modern Australia and represents modern Australia.' The party's regular election review is being led by party elders Nick Minchin, a former federal senator and finance minister, and Pru Goward, a former NSW government housing minister. It is due to report back by the end of the year.

‘We got smashed': Ley orders existential review of her own party
‘We got smashed': Ley orders existential review of her own party

The Age

time4 hours ago

  • The Age

‘We got smashed': Ley orders existential review of her own party

Opposition Leader Sussan Ley will order a second, sweeping review of the Liberals' core purpose and direction after acknowledging her party had been 'smashed' by Labor at the federal election. In her first major speech at the National Press Club as party leader on Wednesday, Ley will directly address the electoral drubbing the Liberals experienced at the May 3 poll in which the Coalition lost 15 lower-house MPs to drop to just 43 seats, as well as three senators. After the Liberals announced a review of their election campaign last week, Ley will announce a second, deeper review of the existential problems facing the party, including the rise of the teals, the party's ageing membership and perceptions that it is deaf to the concerns of modern women. The new opposition leader, who has already had to stare down a National Party revolt that temporarily split the Coalition, will promise to always be honest with Australians, according to speech notes seen by this masthead. 'So, let's be honest and up front about last month's election. We didn't just lose. We got smashed. We respect the election outcome with humility. We accept it with contrition. And we must learn from it with conviction,' she will say. Ley is the first female leader of an opposition to address the press club, but will play down the significance of her appearance at the venue. 'In recent weeks, a lot has been made of the fact that I am the first woman elected to lead the Liberal Party of Australia, and the first woman leader of the opposition,' Ley will say. 'Whilst this sends a strong signal that we are taking a fresh approach and doing things differently, I am not here today to speak about milestones or firsts.' 'As we seek to regain trust with all voters across our great country, the task before me – and my team – is to lead a Liberal Party that respects modern Australia, reflects modern Australia and represents modern Australia.' The party's regular election review is being led by party elders Nick Minchin, a former federal senator and finance minister, and Pru Goward, a former NSW government housing minister. It is due to report back by the end of the year.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store