Australia politics live: Jane Hume attacks ‘hypocrisy’ of property tax reform as auction clearance rates fall below 50%
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Auction clearance rates continue to fall
Auction clearance rates continue to fall and now sit at just 47.4% across the combined capitals, according to the latest data from Cotality.
The figures come just a few days after the RBA decided to keep rates on hold at 4.35% after three consecutive rate hikes earlier in the year.
In Sydney, the clearance rate was 47.4%, in Melbourne 50.6%, but in Brisbane the rate was just 33.3%. Sydney also saw 166 homes withdrawn from auction.
The price of homes is sure to play centre stage in parliament this week as the government debates its changes to the capital gains tax discount and negative gearing, which almost immediately banished property investors from auctions nationwide.
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Ryan has ‘no intention’ of joining any ‘teal party’
Independent MP Monique Ryan has ruled herself out (again) of joining any party, with chatter of a new “teal party” recommencing in parliament this week.
The Australian Financial Review is reporting a new group of teal independents could launch as early as this week as a “community” party, countering donation laws that favour the major parties and push back against One Nation – a plan the paper says is being pushed by Zali Steggall.
The idea was first publicly floated last month, with Steggall confirming at the time that discussions between teal independents were taking place – but nothing could yet be announced. Several MPs quickly distanced themselves from the move.
Ryan told the Today show this morning that Australians were fed up with political parties, but she wouldn’t be joining one.
I don’t have any intention of joining a party. I’m very, very happy as an independent.
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Women’s groups come out in opposition to bill to add ‘biological and binary’ definitions to Sex Discrimination Act
A coalition of women’s organisations, feminists and community groups have voiced opposition to a push by the Coalition to change the Sex Discrimination Act, in part to create legal definitions around women and men.
Nationals MP Alison Penfold has introduced a private member’s bill to parliament which seeks to restore sex-based language to the act and add definitions described as “biological and binary”.
Penfold’s plan has the support of senior Coalition figures including the Nationals leader, Matt Canavan, and Liberal leader, Angus Taylor.
But on Sunday, a group of 20 organisations, including the National Foundation for Australian Women, the Women’s Electoral Lobby, Women’s Legal Services Australia and Working with Women Alliance issued a statement opposing the plan.
“For generations, feminists have been fighting for recognition of the complexity of our lives,” Sally Moyle, chair of the National Foundation for Australian Women, said.
This bill strikes at the core of gender equality by narrowly defining women. It risks taking us back to a time when an idealised definition of ‘the woman’ only allowed us to be caregivers defined by our reproductive function, who should not own property and were not suited to leadership, capable of rational thought or physically strong.
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Hume says extension to fuel excise tax cut ‘makes sense’, pushes back on Hanson’s claims about languages spoken at home
Hume said a temporary extension to the cut to the fuel excise tax “makes sense”, especially around the uncertainty over the strait of Hormuz and its effect on fuel prices. But she said Labor needed to find offsets in the budget to ensure the changes are not “inflationary”. She told RN Breakfast:
We think that a reduced temporary extension is a practical step and that makes sense, particularly with renewed uncertainty around the reopening of the strait of Hormuz.
The budget is already in tatters just one month after it was delivered, and Australians can’t afford a budget that keeps borrowing from the future to pay for today’s politics.
Hume was also asked about her fellow senator Pauline Hanson’s address to the National Press Club last week. Hume was asked about Hanson’s claim that too many people in Australia speak a language other than English at home.
She had this to say:
Look, my partner is Greek. My partner’s mother speaks Greek at home. His family spoke Greek at home. I don’t think it’s affected their social cohesion one little bit. That said, English is our national language and we expect people to be able to speak it proficiently for them to enable to fully participate economically as well as socially.
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Hume has no problem with more debate on NDIS changes, but criticises ‘horse trading’ between Labor and the Greens
Jane Hume is speaking to RN Breakfast now, saying the Coalition has no problem with increased scrutiny over changes to the NDIS should the Greens negotiate a longer inquiry into the scheme the week.
Hume said:
I suppose one of our concerns is that perhaps the changes don’t go far enough in addressing the rorts and the criminal behaviour that we’ve seen embedded in the NDIS system now. We want to make sure that they are appropriately addressed.
And we also want to make sure that Australia’s most vulnerable are well cared for. And there does seem to be some oversights in there. So I have no problems with scrutiny of legislation.
But she’s critical over the “horse trading” by the Greens and Coalition – with the Greens more likely to make a deal over the tax changes.
It’s no surprise that the Greens have got into horse trading with Labor over this. We know exactly what it is that they do. This is their modus operandi.
Hume went on to say there was an irony in that scrutiny for changes to the NDIS, which affect “hundreds of thousands”, would be longer than that for the tax changes, that affect millions.
I think that speaks volumes of this Labor government’s priorities.
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‘Obligation’ on the states to implement firearms reform, Rowland says
Michelle Rowland says the states should get on board and prioritise firearms reforms, which were promised by the federal government in the wake of the Bondi terror attack.
The government is facing resistance from some states over the buyback, including Queensland which last month rejected key recommendations from the Bondi royal commission’s interim report.
Rowland tells RN Breakfast says Australians would be “stunned” to know there are more guns in the country today than there were 30 years ago, before the Port Arthur massacre.
We’ve had the interim report of the royal commission. Two recommendations out of 14 went to the states and territories on the issue of prioritising firearms reform and the buyback scheme … So the obligation there is on the states to work with the commonwealth to deliver these vital reforms.
My message is twofold. First, firearms reform has the overwhelming majority of Australian citizens. And secondly, as we saw with the horrific events in Bondi, that occurred because the perpetrators had hate in their hearts but also guns in their hands.
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Search for new Nacc commissioners an opportunity to ‘reset’, says attorney general
Michelle Rowland says she understands the importance of transparency in looking for a new commissioner of the National Anti-Corruption Commission.
As my colleague Tom McIlroy brought you earlier, the search is beginning for a new commissioner after the inaugural head, Paul Brereton, resigned.
Speaking to the ABC’s RN Breakfast, Rowland says
This is an opportunity for a reset and a refresh … we recognise the importance of transparency in this process. It’s why we have consulted with the parliamentary committee that has oversight for the Nacc. We’ve also consulted with key integrity bodies about how this should look.
Asked whether the body should hold public hearings or publish more findings, Rowland says the it has the ability to hold public hearings if its in the public interest, but she “would never interfere in its independence.”
I think people are sometimes surprised … about the sheer amount of work that the Nacc does. It’s had some 7,500 referrals, it’s finalised the vast majority of them. There have been 34 investigations completed and about the same number that are on foot and 11 convictions arising from its work. So whilst I don’t seek to direct the Nacc in any way, I do point out that there are some of the pieces of work that have been done that many people might not know about and indeed the opportunity for a refresh and a reset with new commissioners I think is opportune.
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Jane Hume says effort to roll back negative gearing incentives ‘hypocrisy’ from politicians who probably benefited from it themselves
Jane Hume, the deputy Liberal leader, had sharp criticism for the government over the proposed tax changes, calling them “entirely unfair” and accusing lawmakers of pulling the ladder up behind them after “plenty of politicians” had used negative gearing to create wealth.
The Coalition has said it won’t support the government’s negative gearing and capital gains tax changes, which it’s called an “assault on aspiration”.
The treasurer, Jim Chalmers, announced “generous” exemptions for small businesses last week amid backlash to the budget, saying approximately 2.7m entities would benefit from the carve-out. Labor will be appealing to the Greens to get those changes across the line in parliament this week.
Hume told Sky News:
Negative gearing has been a way for people to create wealth for generations, and that includes plenty of politicians, particularly from Labor and from the Greens. And I think people should be asking … politicians whether they have ever used negative gearing to build wealth and to get ahead, because I’ll lay you odds that they have.
What extraordinary hypocrisy that they are now trying to deny that ability from the next generation.
Hume went on to say the Senate had a job to scrutinise legislation, but only had a few days to do so for a change that would affect “millions” of Australians.
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Allowing existing properties to remain negatively geared a ‘missed opportunity’, say Greens
Larissa Waters says the Greens are pleased the government has tackled some of its concerns with the tax changes – including winding back ministerial discretion powers.
But, she says, the party is unhappy that existing property owners can keep negatively gearing their properties. (The treasurer, Jim Chalmers, has argued that most property owners negatively gear their properties for between five and 10 years at the maximum, so the tax incentive will phase itself out).
Waters tells AM:
Grandfathering in those negative gearing and capital gains tax perks that have seen homes become so ridiculously unaffordable in this country is just condemning whole generations of people to never being able to afford their own home.
Asked if it’s a deal breaker, and if the Greens are prepared to walk away if the government keeps the incentives for existing owners, Waters says, “We will have a look at the final shape of the package. They’re still making changes as late as last week.”
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Greens mull offer on NDIS and property tax legislation from Labor
There are two very big pieces of legislation right now that the government wants to get through: its changes to negative gearing and capital gains tax, that it wants the Greens to pass, and reforms to the NDIS which it needs the Coalition’s support for.
Both bills have just gone through very short Senate inquiries – which neither the Greens nor Coalition were particularly happy with.
The Greens leader, Larissa Waters, is asked by the ABC’s AM program whether her party would pass the tax changes in exchange for a longer inquiry into the national disability insurance scheme.
Waters says:
We take these issues on their merits, Mel [Clarke], and we’ll have a chance to talk about how these tax reforms we don’t think are actually going to fix the housing crisis. They could have, they could have been designed to do so.
We are doing everything we can to try to stop this cruel NDIS bill that will see more than 340,000 people left without the ability to have a shower or even leave the house in some cases. So we are having those discussions, but we are using everything we’ve got to make sure that these cuts actually are stopped completely, but at the very least inquired into even further. We saw through the inquiry last week the scale of the depravity of these cuts and the real human impacts that they would have.
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Labor faces heat over cooling house prices
Labor MPs are facing a slate of questions over falling house prices in some capital cities – which means they’re walking a bit of a messaging tightrope between wanting younger people to get into housing, and ensuring that people who already own housing don’t go way backwards.
(Although a Resolve poll in the Nine papers this morning shows that of a poll of 1800 people, 54% supported lower house prices, while 11% said they were opposed).
Murray Watt says it’s a good thing if a bit of cooling in the auction market makes it easier for young Australians to buy a first home.
He also points out that Treasury modelling showed price growth would slow.
Allowing young Australians, in particular, to get into the housing market for the first time, was the central focus of our budget, and that’s why we put forward those changes around both negative gearing and capital gains tax.
We’re not surprised to see some level of cooling in auction markets. And if that makes it more possible for Australians to get into the housing market for the first time, that’s a good thing.
So our modelling from Treasury did suggest that there may well be a short-term impact in housing prices, but that they would continue to grow over time.
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Australia ‘as well prepared as we possibly could be’ for arrival of H5N1 bird flu, environment minister says
The environment minister, Murray Watt, says a widespread outbreak of bird flu in Australia could severely impact wildlife, but that Australia is well prepared.
So far, he says an outbreak in Western Australia is also nowhere near a poultry farm, but the government is working closely with the industry.
The government confirmed on Friday that a wild migratory bird had been found in WA and died from the H5N1 virus.
Watt tells ABC News Breakfast:
There’s no doubt, James [Glenday], that if we were to have a widespread outbreak of this deadly strain that would have a very significant impact on wildlife in Australia.
There’s no evidence at all, that this has affected poultry stocks in Australia. It’s a wildlife matter at this point in time. In terms of the species, As I say, we know that bird flu can not only impact on birds, but also mammals as well …
We are as well prepared as we possibly could be for this, but it is a risk that we need to take seriously.
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Search begins for new Nacc commissioners
The attorney general, Michelle Rowland, has opened applications for the new leaders of the National Anti-corruption commission, following the resignation of Paul Brereton.
Rowland said a new commissioner and deputy commissioner would be appointed through an open, competitive and merit-based selection process.
Applications will be assessed by an eminent panel, charged with preparing a shortlist of suitable candidates for the attorney-general’s consideration.
Rowland will then ask the Parliamentary Joint Committee on the National Anti‑Corruption Commission to approve her preferred candidates for each role, before recommending them to the governor general for appointment. Applications close on 13 July.
Rowland said:
The government is committed to strengthening the Nacc, including by continuing to make appointments through an open, competitive and merit-based selection process.
This is an opportunity for the Nacc to refresh and reset, and I look forward to working across the Parliament to appoint the best possible candidates for these roles.
Brereton quit in May, saying criticism of him was “drawing attention away” from the commission’s work.
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Welcome
Good morning, Krishani Dhanji here with you for the final sitting fortnight before the winter break.
With just days before the end of the financial year and some key legislation Labor is desperate to get through, expect some drama in the house and plenty of deal-making behind the scenes.
Last week the government announced significant concessions on its capital gains tax legislation, the question is, will it be enough to get the Greens over the line. Those talks will be happening over coming days – with the Coalition promising to repeal the legislation if it gets into power.
And this morning the prime minister is convening a national cabinet meeting on fuel security, days after promising to extend the fuel excise cut (albeit at a lower rate). Overseas, Iranian negotiators have suspended talks with the US in Switzerland.
I’m here with our news blogger Nick Visser, who’s making a cameo appearance in the national capital this week – so stick with us!
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