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Hansard
- Start of Business
- MINISTER FOR ENVIRONMENT, HERITAGE AND THE ARTS
- PERSONAL EXPLANATIONS
- PRIVILEGE
- ELECTORAL AND REFERENDUM AMENDMENT (CLOSE OF ROLLS AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2010
- COMMITTEES
- EDUCATION SERVICES FOR OVERSEAS STUDENTS AMENDMENT (RE-REGISTRATION OF PROVIDERS AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2009
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CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME BILL 2010
CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME (CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS) BILL 2010
AUSTRALIAN CLIMATE CHANGE REGULATORY AUTHORITY BILL 2010
CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME (CHARGES—CUSTOMS) BILL 2010
CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME (CHARGES—EXCISE) BILL 2010
CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME (CHARGES—GENERAL) BILL 2010
CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME (CPRS FUEL CREDITS) BILL 2010
CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME (CPRS FUEL CREDITS) (CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS) BILL 2010
EXCISE TARIFF AMENDMENT (CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME) BILL 2010
CUSTOMS TARIFF AMENDMENT (CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME) BILL 2010
CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME AMENDMENT (HOUSEHOLD ASSISTANCE) BILL 2010 - CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME (CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS) BILL 2010
- AUSTRALIAN CLIMATE CHANGE REGULATORY AUTHORITY BILL 2010
- CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME (CHARGES—CUSTOMS) BILL 2010
- CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME (CHARGES—EXCISE) BILL 2010
- CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME (CHARGES—GENERAL) BILL 2010
- CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME (CPRS FUEL CREDITS) BILL 2010
- CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME (CPRS FUEL CREDITS) (CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS) BILL 2010
- EXCISE TARIFF AMENDMENT (CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME) BILL 2010
- CUSTOMS TARIFF AMENDMENT (CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME) BILL 2010
- CARBON POLLUTION REDUCTION SCHEME AMENDMENT (HOUSEHOLD ASSISTANCE) BILL 2010
- NATIONAL HEALTH SECURITY AMENDMENT (BACKGROUND CHECKING) BILL 2009
- MINISTERIAL STATEMENTS
- MAIN COMMITTEE
- NATIONAL HEALTH SECURITY AMENDMENT (BACKGROUND CHECKING) BILL 2009
- CRIMES LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (TORTURE PROHIBITION AND DEATH PENALTY ABOLITION) BILL 2009
- MINISTERIAL STATEMENTS
- CRIMES LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (TORTURE PROHIBITION AND DEATH PENALTY ABOLITION) BILL 2009
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QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
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Home Insulation Program
(Hunt, Gregory, MP, Garrett, Peter, MP) -
Climate Change
(Rishworth, Amanda, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP) -
Home Insulation Program
(Hunt, Gregory, MP, Garrett, Peter, MP) -
Economy
(Sidebottom, Sid, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP) -
Home Insulation Program
(Hunt, Gregory, MP, Garrett, Peter, MP) -
Economy
(Neumann, Shayne, MP, Tanner, Lindsay, MP) -
Home Insulation Program
(Hunt, Gregory, MP, Garrett, Peter, MP) -
Employment
(Burke, Anna, MP, Swan, Wayne, MP) -
Home Insulation Program
(Hunt, Gregory, MP, Garrett, Peter, MP) -
Employment
(Champion, Nick, MP, Gillard, Julia, MP) -
Home Insulation Program
(Hunt, Gregory, MP, Garrett, Peter, MP) -
Closing the Gap
(Turnour, Jim, MP, Snowdon, Warren, MP) -
Home Insulation Program
(Abbott, Tony, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP) -
Health
(Adams, Dick, MP, Roxon, Nicola, MP) -
Minister for the Environment, Heritage and the Arts
(Abbott, Tony, MP, Rudd, Kevin, MP)
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Home Insulation Program
- PRIME MINISTER
- DISTINGUISHED VISITORS
- AUSTRALIAN WINTER OLYMPICS TEAM
- QUESTIONS TO THE SPEAKER
- PERSONAL EXPLANATIONS
- AUDITOR-GENERAL’S REPORTS
- DOCUMENTS
- HANSARD: INCORPORATION OF SPEECHES
- MATTERS OF PUBLIC IMPORTANCE
- ADJOURNMENT
- Adjournment
-
Main Committee
- Start of Business
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CONSTITUENCY STATEMENTS
- McPherson Electorate: Australia Day
- Hindmarsh Electorate: Camden Classic Carnival
- Grey Electorate: Drought
- Robertson Electorate: Radiotherapy Service
- Gilmore Electorate: Digital Black Spots
- Iran
- Forrest Electorate: Country Women’s Association
- Hasluck Electorate: Midvale Early Childhood and Parenting Centre
- Indi Electorate: Defence
- Kingston Electorate: Voluntary Organisations
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APPROPRIATION BILL (NO. 3) 2009-2010
APPROPRIATION BILL (NO. 4) 2009-2010 - ADJOURNMENT
- Adjournment
Page: 1202
Ms BURKE (2:26 PM)
—My question is to the Treasurer. Will the Treasurer update the House on the employment data released this morning and what it says about Australia’s economic performance?
Mr SWAN (Treasurer)
—I thank the member for Chisholm for her question. I think today’s employment figures are a tribute to the resilience of the Australian economy and to the hard work that employers and employees have done in extremely difficult circumstances over the past 12 months. They really are something special because, in the circumstances in which this country has found itself in over the last 12 months, to have created over 180,000 jobs is something very special. What it says a lot about is the impact of the stimulus. It says a lot about the resilience of our employers and the hard work of our employees. What we particularly celebrate about these figures today is the thought that 52,700 Australians have told their families in January that they got a job. Nothing is more important to somebody’s security than the certainty of their employment and the knowledge that they have a pay packet.
What has driven this government, particularly from the beginning of this global recession, has been jobs. It has been at the centre of everything that we have done in the economy. What it has meant is that when employment in other countries such as United States, such as Canada and many other countries was going backwards at a rate of knots, here we achieved such a special outcome for our country.
Mr Tuckey
—No you didn’t. The Chinese did that.
Mr SWAN
—It just shows you what little priority those opposite give to jobs. Those sorts of interjections just demonstrate the fundamental misjudgments and misrepresentations that are coming from those opposite, particularly when it comes to economic policy. That comment just demonstrates how wrong the Liberal Party got its response to this global recession by because, if it had not been for the stimulus that was put in place, this country would be in recession. Instead of growing by 0.6 per cent in the year through to September we would have gone backwards by two per cent and we would be standing here today talking about far higher unemployment.
But, of course, those opposite have so misunderstood the economy, so misunderstood the global economy, that they are a threat to future employment and investment in this country. As the Prime Minister said before, we had the Leader of the Opposition out saying on radio that saving jobs was a waste of money. Well, go and tell that to all of the Australians who are in jobs as a result of the stimulus. Go and tell that to all of the small businesses whose stores are still open as a result of the stimulus. But of course those opposite are masters of misrepresentation and masters of misjudgment, and no misjudgment is more fundamental than the misjudgment that the Leader of the Opposition made when he appointed Barnaby Joyce to the role of shadow finance spokesman. This was summed up in an article in the Courier Mail on 8 February by Tim Hughes, who writes a regular economic column. I do not think he is normally a friend to the government, but this is what he had to say:
What does it say about Abbott when he puts Joyce into the second-most unsuited portfolio for him? … To me it suggests that Abbott thinks the economy is a joke. Either that or he simply does not understand the serious responsibilities of government.
He went on to say:
Abbott made the appointment and, in so doing, has effectively disqualified himself from running our economy. Australia’s long-term future depends on a strong rate of investment and much of the funding for that investment comes from offshore.
That brings me back to Mr Joyce, because Mr Joyce has been out there campaigning against foreign investment—campaigning against the arrangements the government has put in place to make sure that we protect the national interests of this country through the Foreign Investment Review Board. It is a fact that one in four jobs in mining in regional Australia depend on foreign investment, and Mr Joyce has been campaigning right around this country against that foreign investment. But, of course, he let the cat out of the bag at the Press Club earlier this week, when he admitted that he had been flying around the country with Clive Palmer, the biggest recipient of the foreign investment in this country that is creating jobs. What that says is that Mr Joyce has one standard when he is in the front bar of the pub in Roma or somewhere like that and entirely another when he is in the plane with Clive Palmer at 30,000 feet, sipping a scotch. What that shows is just how short-term—how opportunistic—these people are. There is not a principle that they adhere to, and that is why they are such a massive risk to our economy.