'Challenging for some': Labor warned to ignore disability activists in NDIS overhaul to ensure costs reined in
Obtained by The Australian under Freedom of Information, the brief warns NDIS Minister Mark Butler the government will miss its goal of reducing the annual growth of the scheme down to eight per cent from July 2026 should the pace of reforms slow.
"The disability community… does not support the government's timeline for NDIS reforms; however, it is critical the Agency remain on the timeline if we are to achieve national cabinet's annual 8 per cent growth target," the brief said.
"The scale of change also has the potential to be challenging for some cohorts."
Catch up with all of the day's breaking news and live interviews from politicians and experts with a SkyNews.com.au Streaming Subscription.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sky News AU
6 minutes ago
- Sky News AU
‘Hallucinating': Opposition slams Labor over ‘inventing' US beef ban talks
Opposition Leader Sussan Ley has called out Trade Minister Don Farrell for suggesting Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and US President Donald Trump had discussed Australia's ban on US beef imports. 'Australians rely on the government to confidently and competently advocate for our national interest,' Ms Ley said during Question Time on Monday. 'Yesterday, the trade minister seemed to be hallucinating on national TV when he invented a conversation between the US President and the prime minister about beef. 'How can Labor be trusted to secure tariff exemptions when the trade minister confuses a public statement from the president with a leader-to-leader phone call that never happened?'

Sky News AU
36 minutes ago
- Sky News AU
Calls for immediate recognition of Palestine by Australia
Labor MP Ed Husic expressed strong views on the need for the Australian government to recognise Palestine, emphasising the urgency of the situation. 'We've seen since March the way in which aid has been throttled going into Gaza, that has been a deliberate decision by the Netanyahu government," Mr Husic told Sky News Australia. 'Labor Party members have supported the establishment of the state of Palestine, and we've reaffirmed that most recently in two national conferences. 'That image of that one year old who weighs the same as a three month old baby as a result of starvation… those images have driven that type of reaction.'


Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
PM stares down internal push for Palestine recognition
The prime minister is staring down internal pressure to recognise a Palestinian state as Labor figures decry the "unspeakable cruelty" being thrust on civilians in Gaza. Anthony Albanese has been urged to follow in the footsteps of his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron, but on Sunday said he would not "imminently" recognise Palestinian statehood. Both major parties in Australia support a two-state solution for Palestinians and Israelis, however Mr Albanese said any resolution would need to guarantee Hamas, the de-facto ruling authority in Gaza, played no part in the future nation. There would also need to be agreements on the rebuilding of Gaza and the West Bank, and a resolution of issues over the expansion of Israeli settlements. But former Labor frontbencher Ed Husic pointed out that recognition of a Palestinian state had been part of Labor's national platform since at least 2018. "We've already green-lighted it through our party, we've taken it to elections - the circumstances demand it," the MP told reporters in Canberra on Monday. "The announcement by the (Israeli) government to partition or reshape the way in which borders exist in Gaza means that we need to send a strong signal that we are opposed to that." Former Labor Foreign Minister Bob Carr echoed the call. There were ways to address the various obstacles to the new nation being established, he said, adding those considerations were outweighed by a "bigger fact and bigger truth". "Deaths are coming fast, unspeakable cruelty is being visited against babies and children in the enforcement of something not seen in the modern world - that is, an advanced state using mass starvation as a weapon of war and giving effect to a genocide," he said. "We will insist that the Palestinian state that comes into being will be one that opts to be a non-militarised state ... that is a serious security guarantee that can be delivered in negotiations, and which the Palestinians have already offered." More than 140 out of the 193 members of the United Nations already recognise the state of Palestine, including EU members Spain and Ireland. The international push to recognise Palestine has been fuelled by the escalating crisis in Gaza, where more than two million people are facing starvation. Israel cut off aid to Gaza in March before re-opening channels under tight restrictions in May, measures it says are necessary to stop the supplies being diverted to fund Hamas operations. Its officials say enough food has been let into Gaza during the war and Hamas is responsible for the suffering of civilians. Israel's military offensive has already killed more than 58,000 Palestinians, according to health authorities in Gaza. The campaign began after Hamas, a designated terrorist organisation in Australia, attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, killing 1200 people and took 251 hostages. Opposition frontbencher Dan Tehan said Hamas was responsible for continuing to "politicise and weaponise the use of aid in Gaza". Multiple aid organisations, including Amnesty and Medecins Sans Frontieres, have condemned the Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation for the trickle of aid being supplied in recent months.