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LABOR'S POSITIVE PLAN FOR THE ACT - Media Release

SENATOR KATY GALLAGHER

SENATOR FOR THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY

 

DR ANDREW LEIGH MP

MEMBER FOR FRASER

LABOR CANDIDATE FOR FENNER

 

GAI BRODTMANN MP

MEMBER FOR CANBERRA

 

DAVID SMITH

LABOR CANDIDATE FOR THE SENATE IN THE ACT

 

LABOR DELIVERING FOR CANBERRA THIS ELECTION

Labor believes that a smart nation needs a smart capital. A Shorten Labor Government will deliver for the ACT.Labor’s plans for the ACT demonstrates our commitment to a growing, vibrant Australia.

In contrast, the Abbott-Turnbull Government’s commitment to a $50 billion tax cut for large companies will not deliver jobs or growth for Canberra. 

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Medicare privatisation will hurt low and middle income Australian households - Sky NewsDay

E&OE TRANSCRIPT

TELEVISION INTERVIEW

SKY NEWSDAY

WEDNESDAY, 29 JUNE 2016

SUBJECTS: Malcolm Turnbull’s promises; Labor’s positive plans for Medicare; Marriage equality.

PETER VAN ONSELEN: As promised, I am joined now by Shadow Assistant Treasurer, Dr Andrew Leigh live from the nation's capital, thanks for joining me. Do you reckon it's tricky to describe the biggest faux pas of the campaign in your National Press Club talk as Malcolm Turnbull is saying that politicians don't always do what they say when the next sentence that followed that was him talking about the Labor Party and not about himself?

ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: Peter as you know, Malcolm Turnbull was referring to parties, plural, and it did come from a political party which promised no cuts to health, no cuts to education and no cuts to ABC and SBS and basically then treated that as a to do list over the course of the last few years. We've seen a party that promised that the budget would be in surplus in their first year and every year after that.

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Reforming fine and penalty processes to make offenders pay - Labor Herald

Shadow Assistant Treasurer Andrew Leigh argues there is a better way for governments to manage the onerous, expensive and often self-defeating process of jailing people who fail to pay their fines.

Reforming fine and penalty processes to make offenders pay

Imagine if you owed the government money, and to teach you a lesson, the government decided to spend a few thousand dollars on you.

Wouldn’t make much sense, would it? Yet right now, that’s happening across Australia, with states and territories spending up to $770 per day per offender locking up people for unpaid fines.

Sentencing fine defaulters to time in prison puts unnecessary strains on government budgets and the community. Law-abiding taxpayers have to pony up to build and maintain prisons.

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Five minutes with Andrew Leigh - HerCanberra

As the Federal Election looms, each party will spend the next few days frony and centre in the media spotlight trying to win your vote.

But beneath all the noise, what exactly is being promised to Canberra and in particular, Canberra women? Ahead of the election, Laura Peppas caught up with Federal member for the seat of Fraser, Andrew Leigh, to find out which issues he will be focusing on if he is successful.

What do you think are the most pressing issues for women in this election? 

I think healthcare is number one for many Australians; making sure we’ve got a strong and accessible healthcare system, that you can see your GP when you need to and that you don’t have long wait times for elective surgery. As a father of three boys, I’ve spent my fair share of time sitting in emergency rooms worrying about seeing a doctor when you need to. I’m aware just talking to families in the electorate, of how important public accessible healthcare is for people.

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Australians need a Government that isn't hiding a corporate tax giveaway in 10 years time - ABC NewsRadio

E&OE TRANSCRIPT
RADIO INTERVIEW
ABC NEWSRADIO
WEDNESDAY, 29 JUNE 2016

SUBJECT/S: The Turnbull Government’s fantasy costings; Marriage equality.

MARIUS BENSON, HOST: Andrew Leigh, good morning.

ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: Good morning, Marius.

BENSON: A pretty healthy bottom line from Scott Morrison yesterday. A billion out, but more than $2 billion back. 

LEIGH: Over the first four years, Marius, the difference between the two parties is 0.2 per cent of GDP in terms of deficit. But if you are looking at the structural deficit, if you are looking over the medium term, that is when the real difference emerges. The Government's company tax cut costs $14 billion in the tenth year, and our changes to negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount make $8 billion to the budget. So while the Government has a stick of dynamite with a long fuse blowing out the budget in the tenth year, Labor has sensible savings that build over time. And that is why our budget plan isn't just better for the bottom line, it's also better for Australia.

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The political art of living together - Canberra Chronicle

Doing Democracy Decently

Scientist, historian and philosopher, the Greek thinker Aristotle had a rare ability to cut through complexity.

Politics, he said, is the art of working out how to live together. It’s as simple and as difficult as that.

In this final week of the campaign, it’s useful to remember that elections aren’t just about choosing a government. They’re also a chance to have a conversation about where we want to go as a nation.

The job of nation-building in Australia isn’t finished. It didn’t end with Chifley, Menzies or Whitlam. Australia is a work in progress. Each of us has the responsibility to build a better nation, for the brief time we have available to us. 

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Unlocking the Australian dream of owning a home - Op Ed, SBS

Unlocking the Australian dream of owning a home

One of the great things about an election campaign is the chance to chat with people all over the nation; from far north Queensland to Tasmania, from Perth to Melbourne. It’s a true privilege to be able to listen to the lived experiences of so many Australians.

One story that lodged in my mind was told at a town hall meeting in Maleny, in Queensland. It came from Tony, a burly tradesman, who stood up and told the room about his fear that none of his four children, now in their 20s, will ever be able to afford a home. Tony is worried that they won’t have a chance to share that part of the Australian dream.

Our nation faces significant challenges. Since the last election, living standards – as measured by real net national disposable income per person – have fallen by 4 per cent. Under the Liberals, net government debt has risen by more than $5,000 per person. Wage growth is at a 30-year low. The home ownership rate is at a 60-year low. Inequality is at a 75-year high. In the past generation, the top 1 per cent has doubled their share of income. And yet the Liberals want to deliver a tax cut to those earning over $180,000, 94 per cent of which will go to the top 1 per cent.

Nowhere is inequality more stark than in the housing market. When John Howard and Peter Costello halved the capital gains tax rate in 1999, they expected it would lead to a surge of investment in innovative companies. Instead, we saw a flood of investment in property speculation.

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Voters don't want a Government that can only plan a couple of years in advance - Transcript, 666 ABC

E&OE TRANSCRIPT
RADIO INTERVIEW
ABC 666
MONDAY, 27 JUNE 2016

SUBJECTS: Labor’s positive plans for the Budget.

PHILIP CLARK, PRESENTER: Andrew Leigh, Member for Fraser, Shadow Assistant Treasurer, is in the studio here with me this morning. Andrew, good morning.

ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: Good morning, Philip. Great to be with you.

CLARK: Last week of the campaign, it will all be over soon. Forecast, or deficit forecasts, or forecast of what the budget is likely to be in ten years or so have to be met with a great deal of scepticism and the Government is getting into Labor for saying that, well, your forecasting a bigger deficit in the near years – you're both saying that by 2020-21 the budget will be back in some sort of surplus. So you're both predicting that that'll arrive at around the same time, but it's just the path to get there is different. But how much stock could we put in these things anyway?

LEIGH: Philip, there are clear differences in the way in which the parties have couched a number of big decisions. In the case of our changes to negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount, existing properties are grandfathered. So these are savings that build over time, like money put in a term deposit. The Coalition's biggest promise – indeed, the biggest promise of the election – is a $50 billion tax cut to the largest companies in Australia. That too, builds over time in its cost to the budget, like a stick of dynamite with a very long fuse. So that's why the Coalition aren't going to be giving you their ten year numbers, Philip, because they are not at all proud of them. They have got a ten year plan to cut company tax, but they're not going to give you the ten year costings around that. I think Canberra households are making long-term decisions. Sending a child to school is a decision for thirteen or fourteen years. Taking on a mortgage is a decision for twenty or thirty years. So voters don't want a government that can only plan for a couple of years in advance.

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Could you live in a sharing economy? - Op Ed, Herald Sun

COULD YOU LIVE A MONTH IN A SHARING ECONOMY?

Claire Marshall's goal was simple: to see if she could live for a month in the "sharing economy".

Emerging in recent years, the sharing economy connects suppliers of goods and services with people who need them. More than one in 10 of us have used a ride-sharing service like Uber.

More than one in 200 homes are on apartment rental sites like AirBNB. If you need a parking spot, Parkhound lets you rent a nearby driveway. If you'd like a caravan for a week, Camplify lets you lease one.

According to one estimate, the sharing economy is growing at 140 per cent per year, driven by the combination of smartphones, fast internet and clever entrepreneurs. But like most advances, it isn't all upside.

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Labor has put scammers on notice. The Liberals? *sad trombone* - Media Release

LABOR HAS PUT SCAMMERS ON NOTICE. THE LIBERALS? *SAD TROMBONE*

A recent wave of allegations of misleading and often unconscionable conduct by pharmaceutical, food, a recently-privatised health insurance company, and private colleges that targeted vulnerable people, has left many Australians hoping the consumer watchdog will be given the powers it needs to have their back.

Only Labor has put scammers and dodgy operators on notice.

A Shorten Labor Government will introduce a comprehensive suite of competition reforms that deter and punish anti-competitive and anti-consumer conduct.

To date, the Liberals have been deafeningly silent on consumer protection.

Below is a helpful checklist of positive competition and consumer policies and actions.

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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.