Transcript - Doorstop - 1 April 2026
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
E&OE TRANSCRIPT
DOORSTOP PRESS CONFERENCE
MURAL HALL, PARLIAMENT HOUSE
WEDNESDAY, 1 APRIL 2026
SUBJECTS: Albanese Government banning unfair trading practices; ACCC; AI; fuel supply
ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR COMPETITION, ANDREW LEIGH: Good morning, my name is Andrew Leigh – the Assistant Minister for Competition. I'm very pleased to be joined this morning by two of Australia's leading consumer advocates, Stephanie Tonkin and Erin Turner, and by a number of my Labor colleagues who have been campaigning hard for this reform. Carol Berry, Libby Coker, Michelle Ananda-Rajah, Tania Lawrence, Louise Miller-Frost, Gabriel Ng, Madonna Jarrett and Renee Coffey. So just a delight to have all of these colleagues here who have been working really hard on this issue of banning unfair trading practices.
Today is April 1, and it should be a day for whoopee cushions and tall tales, not for subscription traps and hidden fees. Yet for too long, Australians have had to put up with the frustration of subscriptions that are easy to get into but hard to get out of. Frankly, there's some subscriptions in Australia that are tougher to get out of than an escape room. We have a situation where Australians are signing up to subscriptions for gyms and newspapers, online services. All terrific services in their own right, but in some cases finding them so hard to cancel that they're choosing instead to cancel the underlying credit card because they can't cancel the subscription itself. That ends with these laws. These laws will ban subscription traps and make it clear to companies offer offering subscriptions that they need to make it as easy to cancel a subscription as it was to get into it in the first place. Subscriptions will continue. Subscription traps will be a thing of the past.
The legislation will also get rid of drip pricing. Drip pricing is that practice where you see a cheap headline price and then additional fees get added on like rabbits in a veggie patch. Eventually you find yourself paying a cost that was higher than you thought you'd be paying at the beginning. If Australians see a headline price, they should know that it includes all mandatory per-transaction fees, and that's exactly what the bill that I'm introducing to Parliament today will do. It will ensure that Australians don't suffer the indignity of seeing additional fees added through the transaction that are unavoidable.
These reforms are great for consumers, but they're also good for businesses. Right now, honest businesses are out there offering subscriptions that are easy to cancel and honest prices that include every fee you will pay. And yet they are being undercut by dodgy players who are using subscription traps and drip pricing. This reform will not just be good for consumers, it'll be good for competition. This law will be backed by some of the biggest penalties around. Maximum penalty of three times the benefit gained from the breach, 10 per cent of turnover, or $100 million thanks to Labor having increased those maximum penalties which were just $10 million dollars when we came to office.
Media Release - Banning Unfair Trading Tricks and Traps - 1 April 2026
The Hon Jim Chalmers MP
Treasurer
The Hon Dr Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
Banning Unfair Trading Tricks and Traps
1 April 2026
At a time when cost‑of‑living pressures are biting, Australians should be able to trust that markets are fair, transparent and not stacked against them.
That is why today the Albanese Government will introduce the Competition and Consumer Amendment (Unfair Trading Practices) Bill 2026, a major reform to ban unfair trading practices that cost time, money and confidence.
The Bill will introduce a ban on unfair trading practices, crack down on drip pricing, and put an end to subscription traps. We’re putting a stop to business tactics that rely on confusion, design tricks, needless friction or sheer consumer exhaustion.
Our work on unfair trading practices does not stop here. We have already commenced targeted consultations on extending protection from unfair trading practices to small businesses and franchisees. We are also considering whether further steps are appropriate in the financial services sector, ensuring we do not overlook areas where consumers may be exposed to potential gaps.
Read moreTranscript - 2CC Radio Canberra - 31 March 2026
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
E&OE TRANSCRIPT
RADIO INTERVIEW
2CC RADIO CANBERRA, LIVE WITH LEON DELANEY
TUESDAY, 31 MARCH 2026
SUBJECTS: Fuel supply; fuel excise; Middle East conflict; artificial intelligence
LEON DELANEY: Let's check in with our local federal government representative, the Member for Fenner and Assistant Minister for Competition, Productivity and Charities and Treasury, Dr Andrew Leigh, good afternoon.
ANDREW LEIGH: Good afternoon Leon, great to be with you.
LEON DELANEY: Is the Prime Minister poorly advised?
ANDREW LEIGH: Not in the least. He's made the decision today to halve the fuel excise on diesel and petrol for three months and also to cut the heavy vehicle road user charged to zero for three months. And that's on top the significant range of things that we've announced beforehand. The Fuel Supply Task Force Coordinator. Releasing a fifth of Australia's petrol reserves. Making sure the ACCC is on the job on fuel monitoring and issuing spot fines against any fuel supplier that does the wrong thing.
LEON DELANEY: Well, people have been calling for this reduction in the fuel excise now for more than a week. Why has it taken so long for the Prime Minister and the government to see common sense?
ANDREW LEIGH: Well, the Prime Minister met today with Premiers and Chief Ministers and this is a decision that flowed out of National Cabinet. This is substantial cost-of-living relief. So, if you've got a 65 litre tank, it takes down the cost by about $19. We take advice based on what comes to us. Engaging with experts, engaging with the community. And what we've been doing over the last few weeks is successively announcing decisions in order to keep that supply flowing. While Australia has more fuel in the country than we did before the crisis hit, the challenge we have is that there is a significant spike in demand. We don't have a supply problem. We have a challenge around, in certain cases, fuel stations running out of fuel. Because there's an increase in demand.
LEON DELANEY: Yeah, because some people have seen the need to stock up, fill as many jerrycans as they can, because they're concerned about the supply potentially being interrupted further down the track if the conflict in Iran continues beyond another three or four weeks. That's inevitable, isn't it?
Opinion Piece: In the age of AI, judgement may be Australia’s scarcest resource - 29 March 2026
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
In the age of AI, judgement may be Australia’s scarcest resource
Published in The New Daily
29 March 2026
Artificial intelligence is everywhere. It is drafting marketing plans, writing code, preparing legal briefs and advising small business owners on pricing strategy. The debate is often framed in terms of productivity, and rightly so. Yet focusing only on output risks missing another shift. AI is also changing what is scarce.
Economists have long built their thinking around signals. Degrees signal skill. Output signals effort. Expert advice signals judgement. These proxies have never been perfect, but they have generally been reliable enough to guide decisions by firms, investors and policymakers. Artificial intelligence is beginning to weaken some of these connections. That matters for how Australia positions itself in an increasingly volatile global economy.
One place where the change is especially visible is the labour market. For decades, the dominant story in advanced economies was skill-biased technological change. New technologies increased demand for highly educated workers, widening the earnings gap between graduates and non-graduates. The prescription was straightforward: expand access to education and productivity gains would follow.
AI throws a digital spanner in the works. Large language models can now draft extensive consulting reports and produce complex strategy documents. Tasks once seen as the preserve of professionals can be performed on demand. Early evidence suggests that these tools often lift the productivity of less experienced workers more than that of top performers. Instead of amplifying innate ability, they can compress differences in performance.
Read moreOpinion Piece: How lowering prescription cost helps health – and the economy - 28 March 2026
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
The Hon Emma McBride MP
Assistant Minister for Mental Health and Suicide Prevention
Assistant Minister for Rural and Regional Health
How lowering prescription cost helps health – and the economy
Published in Canberra CityNews
28 March 2026
At a pharmacy in Belconnen or Tuggeranong, the moment is easy to miss. A card is tapped, a receipt prints, and the price is lower than it would have been a few years ago. For many Canberrans, that smaller number helps. It makes the household budget stretch further and ensures people are more likely to take their prescribed medications.
The Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme has long been one of Australia’s great social institutions. Since 1948, it has ensured that life-saving and life-improving medicines are available at an affordable price, with the Commonwealth covering most of the cost. New medicines are assessed independently for clinical effectiveness and value for money before being listed. The PBS is a compact between government, taxpayers, patients and industry: rigorous evaluation in exchange for broad access.
Over time, co-payments edged upwards. By 2022, the general patient co-payment had reached $42.50 per script. For someone managing high blood pressure or diabetes, those costs accumulate quickly. For families with children on regular medication, they multiply. When out-of-pocket prices rise, adherence drops. Missed scripts lead to avoidable complications and greater pressure on the health system.
Read moreMedia Release - A Wiggle-Worthy Conversation On Keeping Kids Safe - 28 March 2026
The Hon Dr Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
A Wiggle-Worthy Conversation On Keeping Kids Safe
28 March 2026
Parents and carers are being encouraged to take a closer look at toys and household items young children can access, in a new episode of Wiggle Talk – A Podcast for Parents.
In the episode, What Every Parent Should Know About Toy Safety, Wiggle Talk hosts Simon Pryce and Lachlan Gillespie are joined by Rod Balding from Standards Australia and Sarah Hunstead from CPR Kids to discuss button battery safety, children’s toy safety, and what parents and carers need to know.
The episode outlines how button batteries are commonly found in toys and household items and can cause catastrophic injuries or even death if ingested by a child. It also highlights how Australia’s product safety standards, which businesses must comply with, are designed to reduce risk, the importance of warning labels and secure battery compartments and information for parents.
Read moreTranscript - ABC Radio Canberra - 27 March 2026
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
E&OE TRANSCRIPT
RADIO INTERVIEW
ABC RADIO CANBERRA, BREAKFAST WITH ROSS SOLLY
FRIDAY, 27 MARCH 2026
SUBJECTS: Middle East conflict; President Trump comments; social media ban; latest CHOICE quarterly grocery basket survey; Albanese Government cracking down on supermarkets; Bulk billing GP Clinics for the ACT
ROSS SOLLY: Dr Andrew Leigh, the Member for Fenner and Assistant Minister for Competition is with us this morning. Dr Leigh, good morning to you.
ANDREW LEIGH: Good morning Ross, great to be with you.
ROSS SOLLY: And with you as well. Got a lot to get through, so let's rattle through a few things straight up. Donald Trump overnight singling out Australia, saying he was disappointed that Australia wasn't more forthcoming in helping what's going on in Iran. Has he got a right to be disappointed, do you think?
ANDREW LEIGH: Well, I'm not going to run a running commentary on Donald Trump's comments Ross, but we've not been a party to this conflict. We weren't informed before it started. Our view is that the US' objectives have broadly been achieved and it's time to bring the war to an end. It's clearly having a huge impact around the world economically as well, of course, as the human toll that it's having in Iran. So, we've urged the US and Israel to engage in peace talks that would wrap up that conflict, given the main aim was to reduce Iran's ability to get a nuclear weapon.
ROSS SOLLY: He's obviously applying the full court press, though, Andrew Leigh, to the EU, to, you know, Japan, China and to us to join up. Can we afford to be in his bad books?
Transcript - Press Conference - 27 March 2026
Senator The Hon Katy Gallagher
Minister for Finance
Minister for Women
Minister for the Public Service
Minister for Government Services
The Hon Mark Butler MP
Minister for Health and Ageing
Minister for Disability and the NDIS
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
Member for Fenner
Alicia Payne MP
Member for Canberra
David Smith MP
Member for Bean
E&OE TRANSCRIPT
DOORSTOP
TUGGERANONG
FRIDAY, 27 MARCH 2026
SUBJECTS: Bulk billing GP clinics for the ACT; fuel; Canberra Stadium; EV road user charges
DAVID SMITH MP, MEMBER FOR BEAN: I'd like to acknowledge that we're here on the land of the land of the Ngunnawal and Ngambri people, pay my respect to their elders past and present, and thank them for their stewardship of this land for thousands of years.
And it's just great to be here in the heart of Bean for a really, really exciting announcement, a critical announcement that all my ACT colleagues and myself have worked hard for.
I'm here with Minister Gallagher, Assistant Minister Leigh, and my good friend Alicia Payne, the member for Canberra, and today we're announcing that we've secured the future of the Tuggeranong Family Centre Practice here and announcing the location of the three bulk billing clinics that we committed to during the last federal election.
This, of course, comes on top of the recent opening of the Urgent Care Clinic in Phillip, which I understand has already seen more than 2,000 patients go through, to date.
At a time like this, it's really critical to be delivering that primary health care to as many people across Canberra as possible and in an accessible and affordable way. I'd like to pass over to my good friend, Minister Gallagher.
SENATOR THE HON KATY GALLAGHER, MINISTER FOR FINANCE: Thanks very much, Dave, and it's great to be here with Dave, Alicia and Andrew as the ACT's Federal Labor representatives to deliver on our commitment that we took to the last campaign, which was to provide some additional investment over and above the Bulk Billing incentive and the Bulk Billing practice incentive payment that we have applied across Australia to really specifically intervene in the ACT because of some of the unique circumstances we have here.
Read moreMedia Release - Future Secured For Canberra Health Co-Op And Three New Bulk Billing GP Clinics For ACT - 27 March 2026
Senator The Hon Katy Gallagher
Minister for Finance
Minister for Women
Minister for the Public Service
Minister for Government Services
The Hon Mark Butler MP
Minister for Health and Ageing
Minister for Disability and the NDIS
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
Member for Fenner
Alicia Payne MP
Member for Canberra
David Smith MP
Member for Bean
Future Secured For Canberra Health Co-Op And Three New Bulk Billing GP Clinics For ACT
Friday, 27 March 2026
The Albanese Government is delivering on its $24.3 million commitment to strengthen primary care, boost access to bulk billing GPs, and improve access to respite care in Canberra.
Commonwealth funding is delivering three new bulk billing GP Clinics in the ACT as well as securing the future of Interchange Health Co-op at the Tuggeranong Family Medical Centre, by supporting the new provider, ForHealth Group to take over and maintain services.
The clinics will also be supported to attract additional general practitioners to the ACT and help ensure timely access to primary healthcare services. This is funded by a $10.5 million Bulk Billing GP Attraction Initiative.
Following a highly competitive process, the locations and providers of the three new Bulk-Billing clinics will be:
- Macquarie General Practice, establishing a clinic in Gungahlin
- Next Practice Deakin, establishing a clinic in South Tuggeranong
- Ochre Health, establishing a clinic in Molonglo.
The Bulk Billing clinics are planned to open by 30 June 2026.
Read moreSpeech: Three Ways We’re Protecting Australia’s Fuel Supply - 24 March 2026
The Hon Andrew Leigh MP
Assistant Minister for Productivity, Competition, Charities and Treasury
Three Ways We’re Protecting Australia’s Fuel Supply
Matters of Public Importance
House of Representatives
Tuesday, 24 March 2026
The three major parties of the right in this country have one thing in common: they're very happy to trade in anger but unable to actually come up with answers. They are all about slogans, but they have no solutions to Australia's problems.
If you want to think about how Australia is facing the crisis in the Middle East today, just think about how we would have been placed if the Coalition had remained in office. Under them, when fuel prices exceeded $2 a litre, at the beginning of the Ukraine war, what was the biggest penalty that the ACCC could impose? It was a $10 million penalty. We increased penalties to $50 million in 2022...
DEPUTY SPEAKER (Ms Claydon): The Manager of Opposition Business, you're not even in your seat!
...and we have made clear that we will now increase them to $100 million, with the Treasurer to introduce legislation to this House tomorrow.
Under them, we had four major refineries close. When the Leader of the Opposition was the Energy Minister, we went from six refineries in Australia down to four. Under them we had Australia's fuel reserve sitting in Texas. Under us it sits in Queensland and Victoria. If the Coalition had had their way, Australia would have continued to languish, rejecting the electric vehicle revolution. Under us, we've seen EVs go from four per cent to 12 per cent as a share of new vehicle sales. That means fewer Australians are lining up at the bowser and that the fuel is better able to get around existing vehicle owners. They opposed the New Vehicle Efficiency Standard, which is seeing more Australians move to more fuel-efficient vehicles, taking pressure off the fuel supply. In their last summer in office, there was twice the amount of gas used in the national electricity market as in the most recent summer.
Read more