logo
Parliament is back. Here's what the parties have on their agenda

Parliament is back. Here's what the parties have on their agenda

SBS Australia21-07-2025
Labor's honeymoon period continues this week as a large cohort of new politicians joins the 48th parliament, ready to implement the mandate Australians voted for. Tuesday will largely be ceremonial before parliament resumes on Wednesday, and with it, a marathon of first speeches across several days, with 40 new senators and MPs to be sworn in.
With an increased majority, holding 94 of 150 lower house seats, Labor will have 24 new MPs deliver their opening addresses.
Newly elected federal MPs will be sworn in this week after a training session learning about their new roles. Source: AAP / Lukas Coch First up will be "leader slayers" Ali France and Sarah Witty, who ousted former Liberal leader Peter Dutton and former Greens leader Adam Bandt, respectively. Amid the formalities, the re-elected government now faces pressure to deliver the priorities it set out during the election. All eyes will also be on Question Time as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese adjusts to a new opponent in the House of Representatives chamber, with Liberal leader Sussan Ley taking her place across from him.
So what can we expect from the major parties?
LABOR The Albanese government has made its first sitting fortnight agenda clear: wiping student debt, increasing safety measures for children in childcare and protecting penalty rates. Labor will introduce a bill cutting student debt by 20 per cent retrospectively from 1 June, slashing roughly $16 billion from balances, amid wider reforms to the repayment system. The legislation should be passed quickly, breezing through the lower house where Labor holds a majority, and the upper house, where the Greens are expected to vote for the changes. Speaking to Labor Party caucus on Monday, Albanese said he hopes to "restore confidence in a system in which we should be confident caring for our vulnerable little ones". The Albanese government has vowed to strengthen protections, increase fines for poor quality operators and establish an independent regulator as part of the childcare centre reforms. THE COALITION After a short-lived split in May, the Liberal and National parties are adamant that they are back together, united and ready to hold Labor accountable with a strong opposition. New Liberal leader Sussan Ley sought to boost morale on Monday after May's election loss, firing up the Opposition caucus with vows not to "get out" of Labor's way.
"Mr Albanese is giving interviews and suggesting we should just get out of the way. We will not," Ley said.
Liberal leader Sussan Ley says the Coalition is ready to work hard for the millions of Australians that voted for them. Source: AAP / Mick Tsikas She singled out cost-of-living relief as a key issue to prosecute, as well as fighting against raising taxes , after ABC reported leaked documents show Treasury advised the government to raise taxes and cut spending after the election. "I have not met a single Australian who wants to pay more tax, who thinks they are paying not enough tax," she said. "What I do know is that every single Australian expects this government to minimise their tax bill, to work hard for them and to make sure that they run a responsible budget with responsible economic management across the country." While the Opposition's policies are still under review following the election, education spokesperson Jonathan Duniam conceded the pitch to cut international student numbers by 80,000 "wasn't as constructive as it could have otherwise been".
"I think we need to have a proper and open discussion with both the university sector and the community more broadly about how we can approach this," he told ABC's Insiders program on Sunday.
THE GREENS With the balance of power in the Senate, the Greens will be crucial to Labor passing its agenda.
Senator Jordon Steele John has indicated the party may use the power to pressure Labor to review policies, like adding dental to Medicare.
While points of contention remain unclear, Senator Sarah Hanson-Young stressed the party will be "constructive" as it scrutinises the bills introduced to parliament. "They don't have the numbers in the Senate, and that is because the Australian people want to make sure the Senate is a backstop for them, an insurance for them," she told reporters on Monday.
"And the Greens take that responsibility very, very seriously."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hollowed out of thinkers, Sussan Ley's party dreams of nothing other than opposition
Hollowed out of thinkers, Sussan Ley's party dreams of nothing other than opposition

Sydney Morning Herald

time17 minutes ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Hollowed out of thinkers, Sussan Ley's party dreams of nothing other than opposition

As Minister for Energy and Emissions Reduction, Angus Taylor attacked Labor's renewables policy as 'socialist planning' and ignored expert advice to invest in cost-effective fast batteries, instead committing $600 million of public money to a gas power plant in the Hunter Valley already rejected by the market. Costs are now reported to exceed $1 billion. Menzies led the Liberals to power for the first time in 1949 with an anti-socialist platform that attacked the Curtin Labor government's bank nationalisation plans. Now, 75 years on, the party's policy brain appears to have atrophied sometime between the Russian Revolution and the fall of the Berlin Wall. When Labor introduced legislation to bring its 'Future Made in Australia' industrial policy to fruition in April 2024, Ley referred to the government as 'radical' while Taylor dismissed the policy as a slush fund for the PM to 'pick winners'. But industrial policy is one area where government intervention makes sense. Australia sits below Botswana at 105 out of 133 on the Economic Complexity Index, reflecting overreliance on commodities and underinvestment in innovation and manufacturing compared to other advanced economies. A policy to build sovereign manufacturing capacity and high‑skill jobs in strategically important sectors reflects a 21st-century economic consensus that markets are a means to a societal goal, not an end in themselves. Socialist smears may resonate with rusted-on conservatives, but risk alienating voters the party desperately needs. A 2024 YouGov poll found 53 per cent of Australians aged 18-24 favour a more socialist direction, compared to 22 per cent preferring more capitalism. According to a June Redbridge Group poll, voters aged 65+ were the only cohort in which the Coalition won more votes than Labor at the May election. A paltry 19 per cent of 18-34 year-olds voted Coalition, less than half of those who voted for Labor – a result dubbed a 'youthquake' by Redbridge director and former Liberal Party official Tony Barry. Loading Where to now for a party that defines itself in opposition to a Labor Party that's colonised the political centre? How does the party of 'lower taxes' resonate in a social democracy where overall taxation is already well below the OECD average? Unfortunately for Ley, she has inherited a party lacking the policy hardheads to write the necessary software update. In the wake of the election result, Institute of Public Affairs Senior Fellow John Roskam bemoaned the loss of the 'serious thinkers' at the heart of the party in the 1970s and 1980s. Roskam says the party is verging on 'anti-intellectual' and is lacking the personnel to think critically about how Liberal principles can be adapted to 21st-century realities. Meanwhile, the pews of a once broad church have been gradually purged of moderates since Ian McPhee lost preselection for opposing John Howard's hard-line rhetoric on Asian immigration in the late 1980s. Others followed, among them Julia Banks, John Hewson, Fred Chaney, and former PMs Fraser and Turnbull. Loading What remains is a party with an uninspiring message about small government that airbrushes over Menzies' nation‑building legacy of universities, the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, and delivering the publicly funded Snowy Mountains Scheme – the largest engineering project in our nation's history. Ley deserves some patience as she tries to rehabilitate the Liberals. She's saying all the right things about 'listening' and addressing issues that concern young people, but uncertain times call for a leader, not populist vessel. We must judge her on whether she can reignite a contest of ideas anchored in sound values and serious policy work. The outcome from her working group on energy and emissions reduction will be a test she cannot afford to fail.

Hollowed out of thinkers, Sussan Ley's party dreams of nothing other than opposition
Hollowed out of thinkers, Sussan Ley's party dreams of nothing other than opposition

The Age

time17 minutes ago

  • The Age

Hollowed out of thinkers, Sussan Ley's party dreams of nothing other than opposition

As Minister for Energy and Emissions Reduction, Angus Taylor attacked Labor's renewables policy as 'socialist planning' and ignored expert advice to invest in cost-effective fast batteries, instead committing $600 million of public money to a gas power plant in the Hunter Valley already rejected by the market. Costs are now reported to exceed $1 billion. Menzies led the Liberals to power for the first time in 1949 with an anti-socialist platform that attacked the Curtin Labor government's bank nationalisation plans. Now, 75 years on, the party's policy brain appears to have atrophied sometime between the Russian Revolution and the fall of the Berlin Wall. When Labor introduced legislation to bring its 'Future Made in Australia' industrial policy to fruition in April 2024, Ley referred to the government as 'radical' while Taylor dismissed the policy as a slush fund for the PM to 'pick winners'. But industrial policy is one area where government intervention makes sense. Australia sits below Botswana at 105 out of 133 on the Economic Complexity Index, reflecting overreliance on commodities and underinvestment in innovation and manufacturing compared to other advanced economies. A policy to build sovereign manufacturing capacity and high‑skill jobs in strategically important sectors reflects a 21st-century economic consensus that markets are a means to a societal goal, not an end in themselves. Socialist smears may resonate with rusted-on conservatives, but risk alienating voters the party desperately needs. A 2024 YouGov poll found 53 per cent of Australians aged 18-24 favour a more socialist direction, compared to 22 per cent preferring more capitalism. According to a June Redbridge Group poll, voters aged 65+ were the only cohort in which the Coalition won more votes than Labor at the May election. A paltry 19 per cent of 18-34 year-olds voted Coalition, less than half of those who voted for Labor – a result dubbed a 'youthquake' by Redbridge director and former Liberal Party official Tony Barry. Loading Where to now for a party that defines itself in opposition to a Labor Party that's colonised the political centre? How does the party of 'lower taxes' resonate in a social democracy where overall taxation is already well below the OECD average? Unfortunately for Ley, she has inherited a party lacking the policy hardheads to write the necessary software update. In the wake of the election result, Institute of Public Affairs Senior Fellow John Roskam bemoaned the loss of the 'serious thinkers' at the heart of the party in the 1970s and 1980s. Roskam says the party is verging on 'anti-intellectual' and is lacking the personnel to think critically about how Liberal principles can be adapted to 21st-century realities. Meanwhile, the pews of a once broad church have been gradually purged of moderates since Ian McPhee lost preselection for opposing John Howard's hard-line rhetoric on Asian immigration in the late 1980s. Others followed, among them Julia Banks, John Hewson, Fred Chaney, and former PMs Fraser and Turnbull. Loading What remains is a party with an uninspiring message about small government that airbrushes over Menzies' nation‑building legacy of universities, the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, and delivering the publicly funded Snowy Mountains Scheme – the largest engineering project in our nation's history. Ley deserves some patience as she tries to rehabilitate the Liberals. She's saying all the right things about 'listening' and addressing issues that concern young people, but uncertain times call for a leader, not populist vessel. We must judge her on whether she can reignite a contest of ideas anchored in sound values and serious policy work. The outcome from her working group on energy and emissions reduction will be a test she cannot afford to fail.

Inside the hidden Queensland suburb rated as the best spot for homeowners
Inside the hidden Queensland suburb rated as the best spot for homeowners

News.com.au

time25 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Inside the hidden Queensland suburb rated as the best spot for homeowners

Danny and Amy Neilsen arrived in Mudgeeraba only two months before it was named Queensland's best lifestyle suburb for homeowners. With a two-year-old and a four-week old baby, the couple searched up and down the Gold Coast to find the right home for their growing family. 'We were probably looking for a good 8 months,' Mr Neilsen said. 'Which was pretty difficult — going through those processes and the weekend open homes while juggling a toddler, because they usually coincide with naptime.' When the pair found a home they could afford, they didn't yet realise the benefits of the suburb. A new report form the MCG Quantity Surveyors found the Mudgeeraba-Bonogin area to be the best property market in Southeast Queensland for lifestyle and growth. Using info from SuburbTrends, the suburbs were ranked by a mix of beach access, natural environment, urban amenities and family-friendliness. Mudgeeraba-Bonogin was one of four Gold Coast suburbs in the top ten list, along with five Sunshine Coast suburbs and just one Brisbane suburb. 'We had no idea it was so beautiful and friendly out here, but now that we do know we kind of want to spread the word a bit,' Ms Neilsen said. 'The moment we moved in, all our neighbours knocked on our door and said 'anything you need, let us know' – which we've never really had before.' The couple bought a three-bedroom home in the area for a little over $1m, with homes typically selling for around $1.295 million. Ms Neilsen said many of the homes they had seen were heritage and helped give the area a modern village feel. 'People have been here for 45 years in our street,' she said. 'You feel like you're secluded from all the business of some of the more dense suburbs,' Mr Neilsen said. '[But] we have accessibility to the beach [and] work in 15 minutes.' Raine & Horne agent Jasmin Turpin, who grew up in the area, said the suburb was becoming 'highly desirable' for new families, as older residents moved out into smaller homes. 'I think it's picked up in most recent years as a hidden area,' she said. 'It's getting a bit older now so there are a lot of homes that need renovating, but it enables those first home buyers to get in there [and] do it up how they feel.' Ray White Broadbeach agent Lisa Bourne said the area's 'unique lifestyle blend' was why prices were beginning to quickly rise in the area as it was being discovered. 'As a local agent and Bonogin acreage owner, I have seen Bonogin and Mudgeeraba go from 'Where's that?' to 'I've got to live here!'', she said. Now, the Neilsens are just a short walk away from the town and its events, like the Mudgeeraba Show and the Gold Coast Car Show. 'We pack the pram and go into town on a Saturday morning and enjoy a good breakfast,' Mr Neilsen said. 'It was definitely a challenge, and it's taken us a few years to save up for what we needed to get in, but we did feel we locked out with this one.'

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