Media


The Turnbull Government Doesn't Want to Do the Hard Work - Radio Interview

E&OE TRANSCRIPT

RADIO INTERVIEW

2UE MORNINGS WITH LUKE BONA

TUESDAY, 9 AUGUST 2016

SUBJECT/S: 2016 Census.

LUKE BONA: Dr Andrew Leigh, Shadow Minister for Competition and Productivity, is on the line here on 2UE. Good morning to you.

ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: Good morning Luke, how are you?

BONA: Good. Before we jump into this and the Census, did you watch it?

LEIGH: No I didn't, unfortunately. One of the downsides of running around doing regular political duties, but sounds like an extraordinary game.

BONA: The tournament was extraordinary, it was just fantastic. Anyway, as John Stanley said: 'Bleatherslow shmetherslow'.

Read more
Add your reaction Share

Tonight's the Night: Don't Spoil the Census - Opinion Editorial

Unlike a number of Australian politicians tonight, I will be putting my name and address on my Census forms.

I will be doing this because the Census is an important national information gathering exercise and the integrity of its data flows through to many things that government does. It also affects the way in which non-government organisations try to work out how to deploy their resources.

Read more
Add your reaction Share

The Need for Ministerial Responsibility - Radio Interview

E&OE TRANSCRIPT

RADIO INTERVIEW

ABC AM

TUESDAY, 9 AUGUST 2016

SUBJECT/S: 2016 Census; Superannuation.

MICHAEL BRISSENDEN: For more on the Census, I am joined live in our Parliament House studio by shadow assistant treasurer Andrew Leigh.

Andrew Leigh, good morning.

ANDREW LEIGH: Good morning, Michael.

MICHAEL BRISSENDEN: So a number of politicians are not putting their names on the Census forms – are you?

ANDREW LEIGH: Yes I will be. I believe that the Census is an important national information gathering exercise.

But Michael I have been disappointed with the way in which the Government has explained their changes to the Census. They've more than doubled the period for which names and addresses will be retained. They've known for months they were making this change and yet successive ministers – Kelly O'Dwyer, Alex Hawke, Michael McCormack – have failed to make the case for that policy change to the Australian people.

Read more
Add your reaction Share

It's not too much too ask the Minister to do his job - Press Conference

E&OE TRANSCRIPT

PRESS CONFERENCE

SYDNEY

MONDAY, 8 AUGUST 2016

SUBJECT/S: 2016 census.

ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: Thanks very much everyone for coming along today. My name is Andrew Leigh, the Shadow Assistant Treasurer. We've today heard from Michael McCormack, the Minister responsible for the Census, who one day before the Australian Census has told Australians that their concerns are “much ado about nothing”. 

Frankly, the process we're facing has been a comedy of errors from the start. The Government decided some months ago that it would extend the period in which names and addresses were retained in the Census from 18 months to 4 years. A policy decision which, under the doctrine of ministerial accountability, should have been explained by the responsible ministers. 

But the responsible ministers have been nowhere to be seen. When it was Kelly O'Dwyer, Alex Hawke, and now Michael McCormack, we've barely heard a peep from the Government as to why they've made this policy change that sees names and addresses held for more than double the length of time than they had been in previous Censuses.  

Read more
Add your reaction Share

Could the Minister responsible for the Census please take responsibility? - Media Release

COULD THE MINISTER RESPONSIBLE FOR THE CENSUS PLEASE TAKE RESPONSIBILITY?

 With Australia’s five-yearly Census happening tomorrow, Minister Michael McCormack must do more to directly address community concerns about the Turnbull Government’s decision to increase the period for which names and addresses are retained.

The Coalition has let the situation deteriorate to such an embarrassing state that ABC Riverina, in Mr McCormack’s own electorate, invited an Associate Professor from the Charles Sturt University on air this morning to discuss the changes.

It seems that Mr McCormack is unable to explain the Census changes to his own constituents, let alone the nation.

Read more
Add your reaction Share

Here's what some economic modelling has in common with the tobacco industry - Op Ed, Business Insider

Here's what some economic modelling has in common with the tobacco industry

It’s the sort of scenario Mad Men would slyly mock – advertising with handsome doctors extolling the health benefits of smoking. Today, the battleground isn’t lung cancer, its economics. Just as past generations had to battle those who spread confusion about cigarettes, today’s voters have to fight a manufactured smokescreen about economic reform.

Let’s look at how we got here.

Read more
5 reactions Share

Government of the bankers, for the bankers and by the bankers - FiveAA

E&OE TRANSCRIPT

RADIO INTERVIEW

FIVEAA MORNINGS WITH LEON BYNER

FRIDAY, 5 AUGUST 2016

SUBJECT/S: Royal Commission into the banks; Competition policy.

LEON BYNER: Andrew Leigh, thanks for joining us today.

ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: It’s a pleasure, Leon.

BYNER: Has Labor worked out the terms of reference of its proposed Royal Commission into the banks?

LEIGH: It’s for the Government to set the terms of reference Leon, but we've been strongly urging them to do it. We believe there’s a range of issues which a Royal Commission could appropriately explore and that out of that could come a more ethical and a stronger banking sector than we have today. We need to take account of the fact that Australia has seen a whole range of problems in the financial sector. Timbercorp, Great Southern, Gunns, Storm, Trio, Westpoint, insider trading scandals within the NAB and the ANZ, bank bill-swap rates – there's just been too many of these incidents to write them off as ‘bad apples’.

Read more
Add your reaction Share

The 2016 Census is the Turnbull Government's responsibility

E&OE TRANSCRIPT

PRESS CONFERENCE

MURAL HALL, PARLIAMENT HOUSE

THURSDAY, 4 AUGUST 2016

SUBJECT/S: 2016 census

ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: We’re now five days out from the Census, and many Australians are concerned about the Government's decision to increase the period for which names and addresses are kept from eighteen months to four years. Labor's been asking the simple question: who's responsible for the Census?

Finally, late yesterday, we got an answer. Michael McCormack fronted a shambolic press conference at 5pm yesterday afternoon. And instead of offering Australians answers and reassurances, he gave them a litany of excuses.  

Read more
1 reaction Share

The Government shouldn't put all of their eggs into the company tax basket - ABC RN Drive

E&OE TRANSCRIPT

RADIO INTERVIEW

ABC RN DRIVE

TUESDAY, 2 AUGUST 2016

SUBJECT/S: Reserve Bank interest rates cut; Australia’s economic outlook; Medicare campaign; Royal commission into the banks; 2016 Census.

PATRICIA KARVELAS: Andrew Leigh is the Shadow Assistant Treasurer. Welcome back to RN Drive.

ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: Thanks Patricia, great to be with you.

KARVELAS: Is the Treasurer right? We need to drive investment in this country don't we? 

LEIGH: We certainly do, Patricia. But the question is, how best to achieve that? As you've noted, the RBA cash rate has today been cut to the lowest level ever. Well below what the then Treasurer Hockey once described as "emergency levels". And that's partly because Australia along with many other countries in the world is facing extremely low inflation.

We've got sluggish demand right across the economy which is really struggling to make this transition out of the mining boom. The question then is what do you do about that? Because I think increasingly people are starting to wonder whether monetary policy has lost some of its bite. Maybe with more people relying on saving, there has been less of an impact of an interest rates cut. So that means again you don't want to have a Government which is turning away from investments in infrastructure and education and putting all of their eggs into the company tax cut basket.

Read more
Add your reaction Share

Will the Minister responsible for the census please stand up - Media Release

WILL THE MINISTER RESPONSIBLE FOR THE CENSUS

PLEASE STAND UP?

With just six days left until the Census, it is time that the responsible minister stands up.

The Government must explain the changes it has made to increase the period for which names and addresses are retained, and whether it has provided adequate resources to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

This is now a first order issue for the Turnbull Government. Since 1911, the integrity of the Census has never been so threatened as it is now. Any flaws in the delivery or response to the Census will be the Turnbull Government’s responsibility.

Read more
Add your reaction Share

Stay in touch

Subscribe to our monthly newsletter

Search



Cnr Gungahlin Pl and Efkarpidis Street, Gungahlin ACT 2912 | 02 6247 4396 | [email protected] | Authorised by A. Leigh MP, Australian Labor Party (ACT Branch), Canberra.