Growing the jobs of the future with Camplify - Doorstop, Newcastle
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DOORSTOP INTERVIEW
NEWCASTLE
FRIDAY, 12 JUNE 2015
SUBJECT/S: Sharing economy; Supporting local start-ups
SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER ANDREW LEIGH: It's a real pleasure to be in Newcastle today with Sharon Claydon, engaging with new industries. We've just been to meet with the founders of Camplify.com.au, a start-up which is launching its updated website today. Camplify gives Australians the opportunity to directly connect with someone who is hiring out a caravan or campervan. It's just another example of how the new sharing economy is creating jobs around Australia. Labor's sharing economy discussion paper recently closed its submissions, and received hundreds of responses from firms and individuals around Australia about how we can make sure that the sharing economy serves consumers and workers. It's a delight to see the hard work that Sharon is putting into growing this industry and providing jobs and opportunities in Newcastle, and I'll just hand over to Sharon now to say a few words.
No joy for Belconnen in week of government gaffes - Media release
Read moreNO JOY FOR BELCONNEN IN WEEK OF GOVERNMENT GAFFES
While the Abbott Government has spent the week insulting first homebuyers and damaging confidence in the renewable energy sector, the Belconnen community has continued its long wait for news about the Department of Immigration move.
It has now been 16 weeks since the government’s own deadline for announcing a decision on Immigration’s future expired.
No silver bullet on housing affordability - ABC 774 Drive
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RADIO INTERVIEW
ABC 774 MELBOURNE
THURSDAY, 11 JUNE 2015
SUBJECT/S: Housing affordability; Negative gearing; Budget; Tony Abbott’s Royal Commission into Trade Unions
RAFAEL EPSTEIN: Andrew Leigh is part of Bill Shorten's team, he's the Shadow Assistant Treasurer and an ALP MP in the ACT as well. Andrew Leigh, good afternoon.
SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER ANDREW LEIGH: Good afternoon Raf, how are you?
EPSTEIN: Andrew, why does your leader refuse to answer detailed questions about his time with the AWU?
LEIGH: Raf, Bill has spent his entire life working to ensure that Australian workers get a better deal. He's been out there making sure that cleaners and shearers get a fair deal in the workplace. He's taken an absolutely firm line on wrongdoing in the union movement and said very categorically that there's no place for people in the union movement who do the wrong thing.
What everyone except Hockey knows about housing affordability - Lateline
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TELEVISION INTERVIEW
ABC LATELINE
TUESDAY, 9 JUNE 2015
SUBJECT/S: Housing affordability
STEVE CANNANE: The Treasurer Joe Hockey said today in relation to housing affordability that people would not be buying homes if they were unaffordable. He also advised young homebuyers to get a good job that pays good money. Is he right?
SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASUER ANDREW LEIGH: Well Joe Hockey seems not only to think that poor people don't drive cars, but also that they shouldn't own houses. He seems to be the only person in Australia not to recognise that housing affordability is a major issue for young Australians. I worry constantly about how people in Sydney on a five-figure income can afford a house that costs seven figures. We've now had numbers showing that the home ownership rate for 25 to 34-year-olds has fallen 10 percentage points over the last decade from 50 per cent down to 40 per cent. That creates real challenges for young Australians looking to break into the housing market.
Intergenerational housing worries - ABC NewsRadio
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RADIO INTERVIEW
ABC NEWSRADIO
MONDAY, 8 JUNE 2015
SUBJECT/S: Housing affordability; Family Tax Benefit cuts
MARIUS BENSON: Andrew Leigh, is it worth Labor considering an end to negative gearing? Or is that just in that never, ever to-be-touched basket politically?
SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER ANDREW LEIGH: Marius, negative gearing is an issue that was actively considered by the Henry tax review in 2009 and they recommended change. It’s an issue which the government's tax discussion paper, a few months ago, also suggested might usefully be looked at. You'd expect a responsible opposition to be looking carefully into this, particularly given where the budget is. But Chris Bowen has laid out clear parameters. We certainly wouldn't do anything that would disadvantage existing owners, and we'd have a careful mind to making sure that there's new housing supply coming into the market.
Innovate, build and you have a working future - Herald Sun
Read moreInnovate, build and you have a working future, Herald Sun, 8 June
One recent Monday morning, I stood in a circle with a dozen others inside a converted warehouse whose windows looked out over Sydney’s Queen Victoria Building. One by one, the current crop of start-up founders in BlueChilli’s incubator program gave a 30-second ‘elevator pitch’ about their big idea.
Richard Owens pitched his service to connect wine buyers directly with producers. Paul McStay, a former Scottish national football representative, has created an app to help soccer coaches identify and manage talent. Fan Valnoresse, a former cabbie, has founded Find A Driver to help boost the amount of time taxis are on the road and increase the number of cabs available when people need a ride.
Government favouring secrecy over sunlight - Doorstop, Canberra
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DOORSTOP INTERVIEW
PARLIAMENT HOUSE, CANBERRA
FRIDAY, 5 JUNE 2015
SUBJECT/S: Abbott Government gutting tax transparency; Economic outlook; Climate inaction; Monis letter
SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER ANDREW LEIGH: Good morning everyone and thanks for coming out on another gorgeous Canberra winter's day. In 2013 the Labor government helped change the laws to make sure that the tax office would publish information of the total income and tax paid by Australia's largest firms. What counts in this place is not what you say about tax transparency but what you actually do. Joe Hockey has had his fair share of big talk – in fact he's even said that firms that didn't say their fair share were thieves. But in 2013 he voted against Labor's tax transparency laws and now he's trying to wind them back still further. Tony Abbott and Joe Hockey don't want you to know how much tax big companies are paying. They want to stand on the side of keeping tax a secret rather than on the side of openness and transparency. Happy to take questions.
JOURNALIST: My reading of the exemptions though is that it's only exempting some companies from having to disclose their total incomes, aren't they? That's what the draft changes involve?
LEIGH: It's a rollback. These are laws that ought to apply to every big firm.
Abbott Government gutting tax transparency - Media Release
Read moreABBOTT GOVERNMENT GUTTING TAX TRANSPARENCY
The Abbott Government has shown its true colours on tax transparency after months of talking tough about tackling corporate tax avoidance.
Late yesterday afternoon the Government quietly published draft legislation to amend Labor’s 2013 tax transparency laws.
These laws require the Australian Tax Office to publish information about the income and tax paid by companies earning over $100 million. They are designed to ensure an open and informed public debate about how much tax our biggest companies really pay.
The Abbott Government now wants to roll these laws back to exempt several hundred privately-held companies from the disclosure requirements.
Deadly Runners
Read moreRunning Group Builds Fitness and Pride, The Chronicle, 2 June 2015
As we stood in the pre-dawn light, the moisture from our breath condensing in the air, someone announced that the temperature had risen… to zero.
We were at a park in Queanbeyan, with a group known as the ‘Deadly Runners’. Formed by Georgia Gleeson last year, the goal was to build fitness and pride in the local Indigenous community, with the goal of running the 5km Mother’s Day Classic.
Cormann comes clean on tax costings - Media Release
Read moreCORMANN COMES CLEAN ON TAX COSTING
The Abbott Government has absolutely no idea what the fiscal impact of its main multinational tax measure will be because no costings were prepared ahead of its inclusion in the Budget.
Finance Minister Mathias Cormann admitted in Senate Estimates that the Government could not give revenue estimates for the proposed Multinational Anti-Avoidance Law because this is completely uncosted: