Address to the National Youth Futures Summit - Speech
ADDRESS TO THE NATIONAL YOUTH FUTURES SUMMIT
THURSDAY, 9 JUNE 2022
[Acknowledgements omitted]
It has been a really tough time for young Australians. Over the course of the past nine years, we've seen work become less stable for many people. The rise of the gig economy is good for consumers, but tough for those who work in the sector. We had a period a couple of years back where in just six months we had more than five fast food delivery drivers killed. And because they were working under casual conditions, their families didn't get the compensation they might have received if those workers had been part of a regular firm.
We increasingly have workers working in an environment in which their boss is an app, in which they can't set their hourly charge, but they're treated like contractors. That instability of employment has extended across the labour market. I remember one labour market economist telling me that if you went back a generation, pretty much anyone who graduated from university could expect to walk into a full time job. And now increasingly, he said, part time employment is common even for people coming out of university.
Read moreIntroductory address to staff at the Australian Bureau of Statistics - Speech, Canberra
INTRODUCTORY ADDRESS TO STAFF AT THE AUSTRALIAN BUREAU OF STATISTICS
CANBERRA
THURSDAY, 9 JUNE 2022
As a stats nerd, this is a pretty exciting job to have.
I'm thrilled to have the opportunity to have Assistant Ministerial responsibility for the Bureau of Statistics, and I do so with a huge respect for the work that you all do. As you know, the great maxim ‘what gets measured gets managed’ really holds up. You determine many of the key things that Australians focus on. You shape the national conversation around inflation, unemployment and growth, but also deeper conversations too about the social statistics - about how we're tracking as a country in terms of our environmental measures, the social health in the nation, the levels of trust.
Read moreAustralia Reconnected – Speech, Australian Progress Conference
AUSTRALIA RECONNECTED
ADDRESS TO THE AUSTRALIAN PROGRESS CONFERENCE
CANBERRA
TUESDAY, 7 JUNE 2022
It's an honour to be in the room with so many friends, activists, people who I greatly admire. The Australian Progress conference is Davos for altruists.
I want to talk about the civic crisis that Australia is facing today. Over the last couple of generations, we've seen a four-fifths decline in the number of organisations per person. We've seen a decline in the share of Australians who say they can trust government to do the right thing. We've seen a drop in the volunteering rate from 35 per cent of the start of the millennium, now down to 25 per cent. In the 1950s, half the population used to regularly attend a religious service – now that’s down to a seventh. In the 1980s, union membership was half the workforce - now down to a seventh. Australians are less likely to participate in team sports. Compared with the mid-1980s, Australians have half as many close friends and know half as many of their neighbours.
Now I've been involved in progressive politics for over three decades, since I joined the Labor Party in 1991. If you'd asked me when I first joined the Labor Party how much should we care about community and social capital, I would have said it's not that important an issue. I've fundamentally changed my view over that period, as I’ve come to believe that it goes to who we are as a society. Just as inequality is a choice between a society of ‘we’ and a society of ‘me’, so too civic community is a choice between a society of ‘we’ and the society of ‘me’. Inequality and community are two sides of the same coin.
Read moreAlbanese Government ready to reset relationship with charities - Transcript, ABC Radio Canberra
E&OE TRANSCRIPT
RADIO INTERVIEW
ABC CANBERRA MORNINGS
MONDAY, 6 JUNE 2022
SUBJECTS: The resignation of Gary Johns; Labor’s plans to support the charities sector; Canberrans and donations; ACCC.
ADAM SHIRLEY, HOST: Gary Johns - head of the Australian Charities and Not for Profits Commission - will step down at the end of next month. Now his stewardship caused some consternation and open criticism from the then opposition, now federal government. Andrew Leigh is the federal Member for Fenner and newly appointed Assistant Minister for Competition, Charities and Treasury. Dr Andrew Leigh, good morning to you and thank you for your time.
ANDREW LEIGH, ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR COMPETITION, CHARITIES AND TREASURY: Morning, Adam. Great to be with you.
SHIRLEY: You've had some days to get, well a few days to get your knees under the desks of these new portfolios. First of all to Dr Gary Jones, you were quite critical of some of his decisions and he in that role in the months prior. Did you ask for his resignation?
Read moreThe resignation of Gary Johns - Media Release
THE RESIGNATION OF GARY JOHNS
I welcome the news that the Commissioner of the Australian Charities and Not‑for‑profits Commission, Gary Johns, has tendered his resignation.
The Australian Government will now commence a search for a suitable replacement, who can work constructively with charities and non‑profits to not only uphold the laws and regulations, but to strengthen the social fabric.
The election ended the Liberals’ nine‑year war on charities.
Better healthcare for Canberra families under a Labor government - Media Release
SENATOR KATY GALLAGHER
LABOR SENATOR FOR THE ACT
ANDREW LEIGH MP
MEMBER FOR FENNER
DAVID SMITH MP
MEMBER FOR BEAN
ALICIA PAYNE MP
MEMBER FOR CANBERRA
MADDY NORTHAM
LABOR CANDIDATE FOR THE SENATE
BETTER HEALTHCARE FOR CANBERRA FAMILIES UNDER A LABOR GOVERNMENT
Under an Albanese Labor Government, Canberra’s families will have increased access to cheaper urgent medical care that they need by providing sick or injured Canberrans a Medicare Urgent Care Clinic as an alternative option to the Emergency Department.
Labor has committed to 50 Urgent Care Clinics across Australia and the Federal ACT Labor Team has announced that one of these clinics will be established on Canberra’s southside.
Read moreReconnecting Australia - Speech, Melbourne
RECONNECTING AUSTRALIA
ADDRESS TO THE CONNECTING UP CONFERENCE
MELBOURNE
THURSDAY, 12 MAY 2022
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Over the course of the last two generations, Australia has become more disconnected. We've seen a decline in the share of Australians who give money to charities. We've seen a fall off in the share of Australians who volunteer their time. There are now fewer associations per person than they were in the late 1970s, and our big mass membership organisations - whether they be Scouts, Guides, Rotary Lions, or indeed political parties - have shed members of an alarming rate. We've surveyed the number of close friends Australians had in the 1980s and done so again more recently, and those surveys show that Australians have half as many close friends as they did a generation ago. The same is true of neighbours. Australians know about half as many of their neighbours as they did in the mid-1980s - ironically, when Neighbours itself first hit the screens.
Read moreDelivering a better future for Canberra’s vulnerable students - Media Release
CHRIS STEEL MLA
ACT MINISTER FOR SKILLS
CATHERINE KING MP
SHADOW MINISTER FOR INFRASTRUCTURE, TRANSPORT AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
MEMBER FOR BALLARAT
ACT FEDERAL LABOR TEAM
DELIVERING A BETTER FUTURE FOR CANBERRA’S VULNERABLE STUDENTS
An Albanese Labor Government will invest in a Youth Foyer at the Woden CIT campus to deliver student accommodation for young people at risk of, or experiencing, homelessness.
Delivered in partnership with the ACT Government as part of the revitalisation of Woden Town Centre, this $10 million commitment by Federal Labor would provide accommodation for up to 20 young people at a time, aged between 16 and 24.
Read moreLabor to improve mobile coverage in Jervis Bay territory - Media Release
MICHELLE ROWLAND
SHADOW MINISTER FOR COMMUNICATIONS
MEMBER FOR GREENWAY
BRENDAN O’CONNOR MP
SHADOW MINISTER FOR DEFENCE
MEMBER FOR GORTON
ANDREW LEIGH MP
SHADOW ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR TREASURY
SHADOW ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR CHARITIES
MEMBER FOR FENNER
LABOR TO IMPROVE MOBILE COVERAGE IN JERVIS BAY TERRITORY
An Albanese Labor Government will help keep Jervis Bay connected by improving mobile phone coverage for the region.
Mobile coverage is unreliable and at times unavailable for many residents in the Jervis Bay Territory, who face a dangerous bushfire season surrounded by the Booderee National Park with only one road in and out.
Read moreSlice off havens to fund more services Australians rely on - Op Ed, The Canberra Times
HAVENS NO MORE
The Canberra Times, 7 May 2022
Measured by revenue, Walmart is the world's biggest company. Yet a few years ago, financial sleuths discovered that it had $76 billion in assets sitting in more than a dozen tax havens.
The kicker: Walmart had zero stores in those tax havens.