Media Release - Sugar Code of Conduct Review - 5 May 2026
Senator the Hon Anthony Chisholm
Assistant Minister for Resources
Assistant Minister for Regional Development
Assistant Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry
Senator for Queensland
The Hon Dr Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
Member for Fenner
Tuesday, 5 May 2026
Sugar Code of Conduct Review
The Albanese Labor Government is committed to a strong sugar industry in Australia, where fair and robust regulatory settings support our sugarcane growers and sugar millers.
More than 80% of all sugar produced in Australia is exported as bulk raw sugar, ranking Australia as one of the largest raw sugar exporters in the world.
The sugar industry is a fixture of rural and regional communities across Queensland and northern New South Wales and supports more than 40,000 jobs directly and indirectly across the industry.
To ensure the industry’s regulatory settings are benefitting growers and millers, the government is commencing a review of the Sugar Code of Conduct today.
The Sugar Code of Conduct regulates the relationship between sugarcane gro0wers and sugar millers and supports transparency and fairness in commercial arrangements.
The code was introduced in 2017 and is due to sunset on 1 October 2027.
Read moreTranscript - ABC Radio Brisbane - 4 May 2026
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
E&OE TRANSCRIPT
RADIO INTERVIEW
ABC RADIO BRISBANE, DRIVE WITH ELLEN FANNING
MONDAY, 4 MAY 2026
SUBJECTS: Albanese Government reforming the minimum charitable tax deduction, instant tax deduction, housing, Middle East conflict, interest rates, tax
ELLEN FANNING: Soon you’ll be able to claim donations from as little as a cent on your tax. At the moment you have to donate at least $2 to claim it as a tax deduction. Dr Andrew Leigh is the Assistant Minister for Productivity and Treasury. Dr Leigh, why the change?
ANDREW LEIGH: Well, thanks for having me on Ellen. Part of the change is just to ensure that people can do these round up for charity events which are, in many cases, raising hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars for charities. There’s one example in which Woolies partnered with Foodbank and raised three-quarters of a million dollars. There’s organisations such as Rounda and GoGive that allow people to round up for charity.
But right now those little round ups can’t be claimed at the end of the tax year. And what we’re saying is let’s scrap the $2 donation deduction threshold and so you can claim any charitable deduction you make.
ELLEN FANNING: I was at Woolies on the weekend and OzHarvest said, you know, ‘Would you like to round up by 60 cents?’ Yeah righto, so I did. I jabbed ‘Yes’, as I’m sure a lot of people would. How am I meant to keep track of that, Andrew?
ANDREW LEIGH: Well, right now it’s not deductible because it was less than $2, and so you don’t keep track of it because you can’t claim it. But over the course of the year, if you do that on every shop, then you might be talking tens or hundreds of dollars that you can appropriately claim at tax time.
We hope it will encourage another pathway to generosity. And after all, this $2 donation threshold comes about in a very strange way. Back in 1927 it was set to be one pound, which was then worth about $100 today, and then when we went to decimal currency, one pound became $2, and it’s stayed there ever since.
ELLEN FANNING: Really? I love that you know that Dr Andrew Leigh, Assistant Minister for Productivity and Treasury. Who’s been getting the kudos or deductibility for our donations to date for these little multiple cent donations?
Media Release - Playground upgrade opening at Cranleigh School - 4 May 2026
The Hon Jason Clare MP
Minister for Education
Member for Blaxland
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
Member for Fenner
4 May 2026
Playground upgrade opening at Cranleigh School
Minister for Education and Federal Member for Blaxland, Jason Clare and Member for Fenner AM Andrew Leigh today opened a new playground upgrade at Cranleigh School in Holt, ACT.
The playground upgrade includes the replacement of six existing soft fall areas and the installation of a new soft fall zone featuring a new double swing, giant sandpit and shade sails.
The playground upgrade will give Cranleigh School students and community groups a safe, compliant environment that supports students to access fixed play equipment confidently and securely.
The Commonwealth Government has provided funding of $250,000 through the Schools Upgrade Fund towards this project, with additional funds coming from Cranleigh School.
Read moreOpinion Piece: Opportunity Knocks - 2 May 2026
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
Opportunity Knocks
Published in The Saturday Paper
2 May 2026
In My Brilliant Career, Miles Franklin gave Australia a portrait of frustrated talent in the figure of Sybylla Melvyn. Sybylla is intelligent, ambitious, restless and painfully aware of the narrow world around her. She knows she has ability, and she can see how few doors are open to a girl in her position. Her family’s fortunes are sliding, money is scarce, and marriage to a wealthier man is held out as the respectable route upward. She refuses it. The book’s title is ironic: this is not the story of a brilliant career fulfilled, but of one blocked at the outset.
More than a century on, we still argue about the same question in different language. How tightly should a person’s future be tethered to their parents’ income, their suburb, their school, or the people they happen to know? How much should a childhood predict?
As a politician, I see that as a question of fairness. As an economist, I see it as a question of efficiency. A country is less productive when it does a poor job of finding talent, nurturing talent and deploying talent. Social mobility is not only about justice between citizens. It is also about whether we are making full use of the abilities of our own people.
That matters because talent is common, while opportunity is not.
Read moreMedia Release - Data confirms the environment is good for Australia’s economy and our wellbeing - 24 April 2026
Senator The Hon Murray Watt MP
Minister for the Environment and Water
Senator for Queensland
The Hon Dr Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
Data confirms the environment is good for Australia’s economy and our wellbeing
Friday, 24 April 2026
The Albanese Government has released the second set of National Ecosystem Accounts, which will help improve our environmental stewardship for the future.
The data tracks the condition of Australia’s ecosystems and will help inform future decision-making processes and better measure environmental impact.
The accounts put a dollar value on the carbon storage, fresh water, and wild fish that our environment provides to the national economy, as well as measuring the contribution of some of Australia’s land, freshwater and marine ecosystems to the economy, showing:
• Australia had 3 consecutive years of La Nina from 2020 to 2023, which caused carbon-retaining grasslands and forests to grow. In 2021-22, these environments stored 34.6 billion tonnes or $59.5 billion worth of carbon
Read moreMedia Release - Old Well Station Road Upgrade Completed At Nadjung Mada Nature Reserve - 29 April 2026
The Hon Kristy McBain MP
Minister for Regional Development, Local Government and Territories
Minister for Emergency Management
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
Member for Fenner
Tara Cheyne MLA
Minister for City and Government Services
Old Well Station Road Upgrade Completed At Nadjung Mada Nature Reserve
29 April 2026
The ACT Government has completed a major upgrade of Old Well Station Road through Nadjung Mada Nature Reserve.
This project marks the final milestone for a program of works delivered by the Parks and Conservation Service for Canberra’s northern grasslands that received $2.1 million from the Albanese Government through the Disaster Ready Fund. This package also included major remediation and restoration works at Jarramlee Nature Reserve and the Budjan Galindgi Nature Reserve, which all provide critical habitat for threatened species.
Jointly funded by the Australian and ACT governments the Building Climate Resilient Visitor Infrastructure project also delivers safer access, stronger emergency management capability and improved protection for nationally significant grassland habitat in Canberra’s north.
The upgraded road now provides a safe, reliable, all‑weather route built to rural roading standards. It supports bushfire response, emergency services and land management operations, while also improving community access for pedestrians and cyclists connecting surrounding neighbourhoods with schools, services and the wider city.
Read moreOpinion Piece: Why leaving a bequest should become part of every Australian’s estate-planning - 23 April 2026
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
Why leaving a bequest should become part of every Australian’s estate-planning
Published in The New Daily
23 April 2026
Jennie Mackenzie spent her life helping children learn.
As a former Play School director and early childhood educator, she believed in nurturing potential.
After facing cancer herself, she became interested in the work of the Charles Perkins Centre at the University of Sydney. When she died, she left a bequest to support early-career researchers.
One recipient said that support helped make her return to Australia possible after postdoctoral work in Canada and the United States.
It is a striking example of what a bequest can do. A person dies, but their values keep working.
Read moreSpeech: Mobility Is a Productivity Policy - 24 April 2026
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
Mobility Is a Productivity Policy
Keynote Address to Inequality and Intergenerational Mobility Workshop
Australian National University, Canberra
Friday, 24 April 2026
I acknowledge the Ngunnawal people, on whose lands we meet today, and pay respects to all First Nations people present. My thanks to Peter Siminski for organising this important workshop on inequality and mobility, and to the Australian National University for hosting us.
There is a certain irony in speaking at a mobility workshop at the same institution where I was a professor sixteen years ago. As my continued presence on this campus suggests, mobility is easier to theorise than to demonstrate.
In 1901, a young woman from the drought-stricken New South Wales bush published a novel about a girl intelligent enough to see exactly why she was trapped, and powerless to escape. Miles Franklin called her book My Brilliant Career. The title was a joke. The career, at least in the novel, never comes. Sybylla Melvyn is clever, ambitious, full of force. Yet she inherits her father’s debts, her mother’s bitterness, and a social order that offers her one respectable ladder out: marriage to a wealthier man. She refuses it. So she remains where she began, with her eyes wide open, which is perhaps the cruellest version of the story.
Ninety years later, Tim Winton published Cloudstreet, with its two working-class families in post-war Perth, the Pickles and the Lambs, and in many ways he was asking the same question in a different key: does where you come from determine where you end up? Australian literature has worried at that question for as long as we have had a literature. Empirical economics arrived later, armed with big data and computing power, but it is still grappling with the same old problem.
Read moreMedia Release - Eight New Classrooms Open At Holy Spirit Catholic Primary School - 23 April 2026
The Hon Dr Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
Member for Fenner
Eight New Classrooms Open At Holy Spirit Catholic Primary School
23 April 2026
Students and teachers at Holy Spirit Catholic Primary School will benefit from eight new classrooms and a new two-storey learning building, supported by a $1 million Australian Government investment through the Capital Grants Program.
Member for Fenner Andrew Leigh has officially opened the new facilities, which also include two reading rooms, two teacher planning spaces, a flexible learning space, outdoor decking and gardens.
Assistant Minister Leigh said the new building would strengthen the school’s capacity to support students now and into the future.
“Holy Spirit has built a warm and ambitious school community. This new building gives that community more room to grow, with modern spaces for students to learn and for teachers to plan and work together,” Assistant Minister Leigh said.
Read moreTranscript - 2CC Radio Canberra - 21 April 2026
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
E&OE TRANSCRIPT
RADIO INTERVIEW
2CC RADIO CANBERRA, BREAKFAST WITH STEPHEN CENATIEMPO
TUESDAY, 21 APRIL 2026
SUBJECTS: One Nation; Middle East conflict; fuel supply
STEPHEN CENATIEMPO: Alright. Time to catch up as we do on a fortnightly basis with the Assistant Minister for Competition, Charities and Treasury and the Member for Fenner, Dr Andrew Leigh. Andrew, I’m sure I forgot one of your portfolio responsibilities there?
ANDREW LEIGH: I think you did all four of them there, Stephen!
STEPHEN CENATIEMPO: Did I? Okay. No, Competition, Charities and Treasury, what’s missing?
ANDREW LEIGH: Productivity.
STEPHEN CENATIEMPO: Productivity, that’s it. The important one.
ANDREW LEIGH: A big priority for the government.