logo
Minister's brutal sledge to ‘virile' Nats

Minister's brutal sledge to ‘virile' Nats

Perth Now23-07-2025
Energy Minister Chris Bowen has jumped on a home goal kicked by 'virile' Nationals MPs Barnaby Joyce and Michael McCormack, as the Coalition faces a standoff against net zero targets.
With the opposition stalled on a recommitment to Australia reaching net zero carbon emissions by 2050 until a policy review, Mr McCormack has issued a warning shot to party leaders, saying he would unite with his unlikely ally Mr Joyce on opposing the goal.
Two pair had tussled for the regional party's top job, taking turns at the Nationals leadership before current leader David Littleproud ascended in 2022.
The pair's position on net zero has raised questions over Mr Littleproud's leadership.
Speaking to Sky News moments before the first question time of the 48th parliament, Mr McCormack hit back at comments put forward by the Coalition's energy spokesman.
'Dan Tehan this morning calling me a steer and Barnaby a steer – we're not gelded, we're not emasculated,' he said.
'We're very much virile and out there.' Chris Bowen took aim at Michael McCormack's comments that he and Barnaby Joyce were 'very much virile and out there'. NewsWire/ Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia
A mere few hours later, Mr Bowen took aim from the dispatch box during question time.
'The member for Riverina said on the Kieran Gilbert show, 'We're virile and we're out there,' the member for New England and member for Riverina,' Mr Bowen said.
'That this is not his Tinder profile, this is his dream ticket. He's not looking to swipe right, he's looking to swipe out the member for Maranoa, is what he's trying to do.
'But they're … really betraying people in rural and regional Australia, they are the ones who pay the price of drought and flood which will be more common and severe under climate change.'
Mr Bowen's comments was one of the more noteworthy moments from the hour-long display of political theatre, formally known as question time.
It was also Sussan Ley first as Opposition Leader, with the Coalition attempting to lob knives poised for Labor's ailing 1.2 million housing target and controversial superannuation tax.
Dressed in a powder pink pants suit, Ms Ley stared down the Prime Minister and his army of 94 Labor MPs who spilt onto chamber benches normally reserved for the crossbench. Sussan Ley led the Coalition during Question Time for the first time as Opposition Leader on Wednesday. NewsWire / Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia
The National Housing Accords were in her sights, with the promise to build 1.2 million homes by mid-2029 already lagging by about 55,000 following its first year.
'The Liberal Party I lead will always champion policies to help more Australians into a home of their own but under Labor the homeownership dream has never been further out of reach,' she said, asking the first question.
'With leaked Treasury advice confirming this is a broken promise, will the Prime Minister abandon his failing policies and work constructively with the Coalition to address Labor's housing crisis?'
Criticism of Labor's plan to hit superannuation balances of more than $3m with a 30 per cent tax was also prosecuted, with the Coalition attacking the government over the proposal to hit unrealised capital gains.
However, Mr Albanese, wearing a dark suit and dark blue tie, returned fire saying the tax would rebalance the superannuation system and only affect 0.5 per cent of accounts, while also quipping: 'The time to launch a scare campaign is before an election'. Anthony Albanese enters the chamber for the first question time of the 48th parliament. NewsWire/ Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia
Elsewhere, Labor's majority was on full display.
In an unsubtle but effective reminder to the Coalition and the Greens' sole lower house stalwart, Ryan MP Elizabeth Watson-Brown, Labor's Dorothy Dixers – the questions asked by government MPs to ministers – were all delivered by the MPs who turfed out a sitting Liberal or Greens MP.
In order of appearance, they included Dickson's Ali France, Melbourne's Sarah Witty, Griffith's Renee Coffey, Emma Comer of Petrie, Gabriel Ng in Menzies, Hughes MP David Moncrieff, Jess Teesdale from Bass, Sturt's Claire Clutterham, Banks MP Zhi Soon, Deakin's Matt Greg, and Braddon's Anne Urquhart.
And should Labor chose to continue its 'up yours' to the other side on Thursday, it still has another six newbie MPs in the line-up.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Aussies back climate action, new poll
Aussies back climate action, new poll

Perth Now

time2 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Aussies back climate action, new poll

A new poll has revealed a majority of Australians want the government to take stronger climate action and limit risks from extreme weather events such as bushfires. YouGov surveyed 1500 Australians, finding 77 per cent of respondents wanted stronger climate action, while 13 per cent thought the government should do less to prevent risks from extreme weather events. A report released by the Productivity Commission this week found the cost of ignoring climate risks would cost the economy an extra $26bn in the next two decades. The Commission found Australia was expected to experience more extremely hot days, longer fire seasons, heavy rainfall over short periods, rising sea levels, coastal flooding and intense tropical cyclones. It stated a harsher climate would increase costs for Australia from $9bn in 2023 to $35bn by 2050 if Australia did nothing to adapt. 'Disasters create lasting health effects for households, and negatively affect education outcomes and earnings,' the report stated. The government is expected to reveal its 2035 target by September with advice from the Climate Change Authority. Climate Council chief executive Amanda McKenzie said a strong 2035 climate target will help protect people and drive new jobs and economic growth. Supplied Credit: Supplied Climate Council chief executive officer Amanda McKenzie said setting a strong 2035 climate target will help protect Australians from climate harm while driving new jobs and economic opportunities. 'Climate action and renewable power have been vote winners at the last two federal elections,' she said. 'Voters' concerns about extreme weather are justifiably growing more urgent. 'Almost eight in 10 want Australia's climate plans to reduce risk from climate-fuelled extreme weather, while more than six in 10 think the government should do more overall on climate.' Dr Barry Traill said politicians could not afford to turn their back on Australians losing their lives, savings and homes. Supplied Credit: Supplied The Climate Action Network program director Barry Traill said support for credible climate action and strong, science-backed pollution reduction targets are solidly mainstream positions in Australia. 'MPs can't afford to turn their backs on people losing their lives, their savings and their homes,' he said. 'Climate denial has and will continue to be punished at the ballot box. Australians want real action to protect lives and livelihoods.'

Albanese shies away from reforms as Treasury says company taxes are hurting wages
Albanese shies away from reforms as Treasury says company taxes are hurting wages

The Age

time4 hours ago

  • The Age

Albanese shies away from reforms as Treasury says company taxes are hurting wages

The federal Treasury has conceded Australia's current company tax system is contributing to the nation's poor productivity performance and hurting workers' wages, while warning young people will increasingly shoulder the pain of propping up the budget. But hopes of a major overhaul of the tax system emerging from Labor's economic summit have been dampened by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. 'The only tax policy that we're implementing, is the one that we took to the election, and indeed the one that the Coalition voted against on the floor of the parliament, which is – we're reducing income taxes,' Albanese said on Thursday. The remarks undermine calls for major tax reform, such as business groups' push for company tax cuts, the Productivity Commission's suggestion of a groundbreaking cashflow tax to spur innovation and independent MP Kate Chaney's plan for a broader GST to be offset with cash handouts. In an issues paper to set the roundtable's tone, Treasury said there were growing problems with current tax arrangements, including inconsistent taxation of 'passive income' such as capital gains and superannuation investment. Loading It noted Australia's current top company tax rate of 30 per cent was 'relatively high' by international standards, backing complaints from business groups that the tax system was hurting all Australians. 'Company tax settings can also distort business decisions and disincentivise investment, which can result in lower productivity, fewer jobs and lower wages,' it found. The department, however, warned that the entire tax system was under pressure from 'demographic and economic shifts'.

‘Inescapable reality': Australia nearly ‘unsafe to live' as Labor does nothing over racism
‘Inescapable reality': Australia nearly ‘unsafe to live' as Labor does nothing over racism

Sky News AU

time4 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

‘Inescapable reality': Australia nearly ‘unsafe to live' as Labor does nothing over racism

Sky News host Sharri Markson slams the Albanese Labor government's inaction on the climbing racism in Australia. 'I want to speak about racism in Australia, the truth is the Albanese government is not serious or genuine about tackling racism, isn't it ironic, a left wing woke government that claims to care about minority groups has taken no action whatsoever on recommendations to address racism,' Ms Markson said. 'Racism has never been worse in modern Australia.'

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