People don't want climate change deniers and blockers - Transcript, ABC Melbourne Drive
E&OE TRANSCRIPT
RADIO INTERVIEW
ABC MELBOURNE DRIVE
WEDNESDAY, 30 JANUARY 2019
SUBJECTS: The Coalition’s policy paralysis on energy, dividend imputation reform, Labor’s plan to level the playing field for first home buyers, Liberals being challenged by former Liberals.
RAF EPSTEIN: Joining us from Brisbane is Senator Bridget McKenzie. She's the Deputy Leader of the Nationals and she is the Minister for Regional Services for Local Governance and Decentralisation - she fits it all on her card somehow. She's in Brisbane. Senator, welcome.
SENATOR BRIDGET MCKENZIE: Great to be with you, Raf. You forgot the most important one - I'm senator for our great state of Victoria.
EPSTEIN: I did too. Sorry. Andrew Leigh joins us. He is the ALP Member for Fenner in the ACT – half of Canberra, I think. He is the Shadow Assistant Treasurer and right now a very big thank you to the Pulse FM community radio station in Geelong. That is where Andrew Leigh is. There is a seat or two, especially the Liberal Sarah Henderson’s seat, that I'm sure Labor's keen to pick up. Andrew, thanks for joining us.
ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: Great to be with you, Raf. And it’s been great to be in Geelong with Libby Coker, our Labor candidate for Corangamite.
EPSTEIN: Just say the name as many times as possible.
LEIGH: Libby Coker, Libby Coker, Libby Coker. Thanks again.
Read moreNew supercomplaints policy - Fact Sheet
Labor Will Give Consumers and Small Businesses a Powerful Voice
The competition regulator must formally respond to ‘super complaints’.
A Shorten Labor Government will allow recognised consumer and small business advocacy groups the power to make ‘super complaints’ to the consumer and competition watchdog. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission would be obliged to investigate and publicly respond to such complaints.
Read moreNew supercomplaints policy will supercharge competition - Media Release
MADELEINE KING MP
SHADOW MINISTER FOR CONSUMER AFFAIRS
SHADOW ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR SMALL BUSINESS
SHADOW ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR RESOURCES
MEMBER FOR BRAND
ANDREW LEIGH MP
SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER
SHADOW MINISTER FOR COMPETITION AND PRODUCTIVITY
SHADOW MINISTER FOR TRADE IN SERVICES
SHADOW MINISTER FOR CHARITIES AND NOT-FOR-PROFITS
MEMBER FOR FENNER
NEW SUPERCOMPLAINTS POLICY WILL SUPERCHARGE COMPETITION
Major consumer and small business advocacy groups will be empowered to make ‘supercomplaints’ about consumer rip-offs, under Labor’s latest policy to support competition and small business.
Many markets are heavily concentrated, and in recent years some of the biggest names in Australian business have been found to have engaged in anti-competitive and anti-consumer conduct.
Read moreLabor takes the wheel for mechanics in Corio and Corangamite - Media Release
THE HON RICHARD MARLES MP
MEMBER FOR CORIO
ANDREW LEIGH MP
SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER
SHADOW MINISTER FOR COMPETITION AND PRODUCTIVITY
MEMBER FOR FENNER
LIBBY COKER
LABOR CANDIDATE FOR CORANGAMITE
LABOR TAKES THE WHEEL FOR MECHANICS IN CORIO AND CORANGAMITE
Labor is driving a better deal for car owners and independent mechanics with a plan to give them access to the technical information they need to get cars fixed.
No matter what you kind of vehicle you own, everyone should be able to choose where they get their car serviced. But independent repairers are struggling to get fair access to the standard service information they need.
Read moreFrom train wreck to Fact Check - Media Release
FROM TRAIN WRECK TO FACT CHECK
Less than a day after an interview in which he muddled up full-time and part-time jobs, Mr Robert has been exposed as misleading Australians over Labor’s plans to reform the unsustainable system of refundable excess franking credits.
The Coalition has waged a scare campaign against Labor’s plans to close tax loopholes used by the wealthiest Australians.
Independent analysis has shown that 92 per cent of taxpayers are unaffected by the change to refundable excess franking credits. Eighty per cent of the benefits flow to the top fifth of retirees.
Read moreThe Golden Whistle - Op Ed, Sydney Morning Herald
THE GOLDEN WHISTLE
The Sydney Morning Herald, 30 January 2019
When investigative journalist Bastian Obermayer received the millions of leaked files from Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca, he was not having a good day. As the German reporter told Fraud Magazine, the rest of his family were sick, and he had just changed his sons’ sheets when the email arrived. ‘It went from being a bad day to a very good one’.
The Mossack Fonseca leak showed that the Panamanian law firm had established shell companies that were being used to perpetrate tax fraud and dodging global sanctions. The Icelandic Prime Minister resigned, as did other prominent officials. The Australian Tax Office began investigations into 800 people identified in what became known as ‘the Panama Papers’.
Just knowing an insider might blow the whistle makes firms less likely to break the law. A recent study of Israel’s tax whistleblowing scheme concluded that it significantly increased the amount of tax paid; particularly in industries that are more prone to tax evasion. The scheme had a powerful deterrent effect on tax dodging. Once firms knew that there was an incentive for employees to report wrongdoing, they were more inclined to pay what they owed. Tax revenue increased by more than one-quarter.
Whether it’s tax or other kinds of corporate fraud, whistleblowers are crucial. A study by Alexander Dyck and coauthors analysed hundreds of US corporate fraud cases. They found that the Securities and Exchange Commission caught just 7 percent, while auditors detected only 10 percent. By contrast, the media uncovered 13 percent of fraud cases, while the employees exposed another 17 percent.
Read moreMaking unfair contract terms illegal: Third Party Support - Media Release
MADELEINE KING MP
SHADOW MINISTER FOR CONSUMER AFFAIRS
SHADOW ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR SMALL BUSINESS
SHADOW ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR RESOURCES
MEMBER FOR BRAND
ANDREW LEIGH MP
SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER
SHADOW MINISTER FOR COMPETITION AND PRODUCTIVITY
SHADOW MINISTER FOR TRADE IN SERVICES
SHADOW MINISTER FOR CHARITIES AND NOT-FOR-PROFITS
MEMBER FOR FENNER
MAKING UNFAIR CONTRACT TERMS ILLEGAL: THIRD PARTY SUPPORT
‘Some big businesses have been snubbing their noses at the current legislation as it lacks any capacity to punish those who abuse their power. The ACCC, who governs this activity, are basically powerless to make certain big businesses stop adding these unfair terms. If the changes proposed by Mr Leigh are made then we will see an immediate change of attitude and behaviour from those recalcitrant businesses or they will be paying big hefty fines.’
- Peter Strong, Council of Small Businesses of Australia chief executive.
Read moreCoalition acting like opposition in exile -Transcript, AM Agenda
E&OE TRANSCRIPT
TV INTERVIEW
SKY NEWS AM AGENDA
MONDAY, 28 JANUARY 2019
SUBJECTS: Labor’s positive policies for the economy, Tony Abbott and Warringah, Labor’s plan to level the playing field for first home buyers, Coalition resignations, political parenting.
KIERAN GILBERT: Joining us now is the Shadow Assistant Treasurer Andrew Leigh. Andrew Leigh, thanks so much for your time.
ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: Pleasure, Kieran.
GILBERT: Well, no secrets as to what the government's main argument will be not just this week, but after the budget and right up until the election in May.
LEIGH: Well, their main argument will be that they're not Labor. That seems to be their entire focus these days.
Read moreUnfair Contract Terms - Fact Sheet
Labor will ensure large firms face penalties and deterrents for unfair contract terms
Labor’s suite of competition and small business measures will be strengthened with the commitment that a Shorten Labor Government will make unfair contract terms illegal, introduce penalties of up to $10 million for contracts that contain unfair contract terms, and increase the number of small businesses eligible for protection from such contract terms.
The case for change
- Legislation to prevent unfair contract terms was originally introduced by Labor in the Trade Practices Amendment (Australian Consumer Law) Bill 2009.
- In 2015, the unfair contact terms provisions of the Australian Consumer Law were updated so that they would apply to some ‘business to business’ contracts (where at least one of the parties is a small business).
- Leading-up to the new law taking effect, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) examined standard form contracts in the advertising, telecommunications, retail leasing, independent contracting, franchising, waste management, and agriculture industries.
Labor backs small business by making unfair contract terms illegal - Media Release
CHRIS BOWEN MP
SHADOW TREASURER
SHADOW MINISTER FOR SMALL BUSINESS
MEMBER FOR MCMAHON
MADELEINE KING MP
SHADOW MINISTER FOR CONSUMER AFFAIRS
SHADOW ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR SMALL BUSINESS
SHADOW ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR RESOURCES
MEMBER FOR BRAND
ANDREW LEIGH MP
SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER
SHADOW MINISTER FOR COMPETITION AND PRODUCTIVITY
SHADOW MINISTER FOR TRADE IN SERVICES
SHADOW MINISTER FOR CHARITIES AND NOT-FOR-PROFITS
MEMBER FOR FENNER
LABOR BACKS SMALL BUSINESS BY MAKING UNFAIR CONTRACT TERMS ILLEGAL
A Shorten Government will protect small business by making unfair contract terms illegal and punishable with significant fines of up to $10 million.
Australia’s current laws aren’t tough enough. While contracts terms that unfairly exploit a power imbalance between the two parties can be voided by a court, there’s no punishment for the entity exploiting its market power. This means there’s nothing discouraging the big end of town from pushing smaller dependent firms to sign onto unfair arrangements.
Read more