

- Title
QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE: TAKE NOTE OF ANSWERS
Budget
- Database
Senate Hansard
- Date
24-06-2010
- Source
Senate
- Parl No.
42
- Electorate
Australian Capital Territory
- Interjector
- Page
4365
- Party
ALP
- Presenter
- Status
Final
- Question No.
- Questioner
- Responder
- Speaker
Lundy, Sen Kate
- Stage
Budget
- Type
- Context
Questions Without Notice: Take Note of Answers
- System Id
chamber/hansards/2010-06-24/0254
Previous Fragment Next Fragment
-
Hansard
- Start of Business
- BUSINESS
- BUILDING ENERGY EFFICIENCY DISCLOSURE BILL 2010
- BANKRUPTCY LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2009
- TRADE PRACTICES AMENDMENT (INFRASTRUCTURE ACCESS) BILL 2009
- BROADCASTING LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (DIGITAL TELEVISION) BILL 2010
-
EXCISE TARIFF AMENDMENT (AVIATION FUEL) BILL 2010
CUSTOMS TARIFF AMENDMENT (AVIATION FUEL) BILL 2010 - TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (2010 MEASURES NO. 3) BILL 2010
- TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (2010 GST ADMINISTRATION MEASURES NO. 3) BILL 2010
- TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (FOREIGN SOURCE INCOME DEFERRAL) BILL (NO. 1) 2010
- INTERNATIONAL MONETARY AGREEMENTS AMENDMENT BILL (NO. 1) 2010
- NATIONAL HEALTH AMENDMENT (CONTINENCE AIDS PAYMENT SCHEME) BILL 2010
- CORPORATIONS AMENDMENT (CORPORATE REPORTING REFORM) BILL 2010
- FINANCIAL SECTOR LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (PRUDENTIAL REFINEMENTS AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2010
- TRADE PRACTICES AMENDMENT (AUSTRALIAN CONSUMER LAW) BILL (NO. 2) 2010
- CRIMES AMENDMENT (ROYAL FLYING DOCTOR SERVICE) BILL 2010
- HIGHER EDUCATION SUPPORT AMENDMENT (INDEXATION) BILL 2010
- SUPERANNUATION INDUSTRY (SUPERVISION) AMENDMENT BILL 2010
- AGRICULTURAL AND VETERINARY CHEMICALS CODE AMENDMENT BILL 2010
- IMMIGRATION (EDUCATION) AMENDMENT BILL 2010
- BUSINESS
- ELECTORAL AND REFERENDUM AMENDMENT (HOW-TO-VOTE CARDS AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2010
- BUSINESS
- SOCIAL SECURITY AND INDIGENOUS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (BUDGET AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2010
- VETERANS’ AFFAIRS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (2010 BUDGET MEASURES) BILL 2010
- VETERANS’ ENTITLEMENTS AMENDMENT (INCOME SUPPORT MEASURES) BILL 2010
-
APPROPRIATION (PARLIAMENTARY DEPARTMENTS) BILL (NO. 1) 2010-2011
APPROPRIATION BILL (NO. 1) 2010-2011
APPROPRIATION BILL (NO. 2) 2010-2011 - FAMILY ASSISTANCE LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (CHILD CARE BUDGET MEASURES) BILL 2010
- DEFENCE LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (SECURITY OF DEFENCE PREMISES) BILL 2010
- PETITIONS
- NOTICES
- BUSINESS
- COMMITTEES
- CHOICE OF REPAIRER BILL 2010
- PARLIAMENTARY BUDGET OFFICE BILL 2010
- FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY AMENDMENT (VALUE FOR MONEY IN GOVERNMENT SPENDING) BILL 2010
- COMMITTEES
- MINISTERIAL ARRANGEMENTS
-
QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
-
Budget
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Evans, Sen Chris) -
Broadband
(Crossin, Sen Trish, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Asylum Seekers
(Brandis, Sen George, Evans, Sen Chris) -
Asylum Seekers
(Hanson-Young, Sen Sarah, Evans, Sen Chris) -
Building the Education Revolution Program
(Mason, Sen Brett, Carr, Sen Kim) -
Taxation
(Bishop, Sen Mark, Sherry, Sen Nick)
-
Budget
- DISTINGUISHED VISITORS
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
- DISTINGUISHED VISITORS
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE: TAKE NOTE OF ANSWERS
- PETITIONS
- COMMITTEES
- SRI LANKA
- CHINA AND TAIWAN
- COMMITTEES
- GREEN LOANS PROGRAM
- NATIONAL CONTAINER DEPOSIT SCHEME
- COMMITTEES
- MINIMUM PRICE F0R ALCOHOL
- PRINCIPLE OF INFORMED CONSENT
- ADOPTION OF A ‘ROBIN HOOD’ TAX
- NOTICES
- COMMITTEES
- PERSONAL EXPLANATIONS
- BUSINESS
- BUDGET
- COMMITTEES
- INSURANCE CONTRACTS AMENDMENT BILL 2010
- AVIATION TRANSPORT SECURITY AMENDMENT REGULATIONS 2010 (NO. 1)
- COMMITTEES
- AVIATION TRANSPORT SECURITY AMENDMENT REGULATIONS 2010 (NO. 1)
- COMMITTEES
- BANKRUPTCY LEGISLATION AMENDMENT LEGISLATION
- COMMITTEES
- GOVERNMENT SERVICE DELIVERY
- BUSINESS
- ELECTORAL AND REFERENDUM AMENDMENT (MODERNISATION AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2010
- BUSINESS
-
HEALTHCARE IDENTIFIERS BILL 2010
HEALTHCARE IDENTIFIERS (CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS) BILL 2010 - BUSINESS
- FARM HOUSEHOLD SUPPORT AMENDMENT (ANCILLARY BENEFITS) BILL 2010
-
BANKRUPTCY LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2009
ELECTORAL AND REFERENDUM AMENDMENT (HOW-TO-VOTE CARDS AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2010
RENEWABLE ENERGY (ELECTRICITY) AMENDMENT BILL 2010
TRADE PRACTICES AMENDMENT (AUSTRALIAN CONSUMER LAW) BILL (NO. 2) 2010
TRADE PRACTICES AMENDMENT (INFRASTRUCTURE ACCESS) BILL 2009 - COMMITTEES
- AUDITOR-GENERAL’S REPORTS
- DOCUMENTS
- MINISTERIAL STATEMENTS
- DOCUMENTS
- WASTE MANAGEMENT STUDY
- COMMITTEES
- ADJOURNMENT
- LEAVE OF ABSENCE
- NOTICES
- ADJOURNMENT
- Adjournment
- DOCUMENTS
- QUESTIONS ON NOTICE
Page: 4365
Senator LUNDY (3:17 PM)
—It is my pleasure to follow Senator Bernardi in speaking on this take note motion. There is nothing more fascinating for the public of Australia, I am sure, than to listen to that speech. How is it that those opposite can stand up and reflect on Labor’s decisions in relation to leadership, having cleaned out two leaders of their own and having ditched a leader on the back of a principle in circumstances that defied their own claims that it was a policy area of no regard—that is, climate change? What we have is a new leader who will take this country forward with pride, dignity and vision.
How is it that those opposite can stand there with any credibility and say that this government has not achieved anything? Our achievements are so comprehensive compared with the 11 years of the coalition government’s absolute neglect of our education system—both secondary and tertiary. Education, research and development and the investment we need to make in enhancing what we build, design and export all suffered under the Howard government. We went backwards on so many national indicators including, very importantly, our connectivity.
We on this side of the chamber know that the economic infrastructure of the future is bandwidth, and yet we have those opposite still saying that they will oppose the National Broadband Network in the face of an agreement by Telstra to participate in it. In the face of universal acclamation of the elegant structure of the telecommunications policy as we have put it forward, we have this lot opposite now saying they will withdraw the investment that Labor has made in the type of technology that will underpin our education system going forward. They will pull those computers out of schools. They will stop the funding flowing to the physical infrastructure of our education system to the detriment of every generation hence that leaves schools in Australia and enters our workforce.
Theirs is a backward thinking party. We know they were a backward thinking government because we experienced 12 years of that under Howard. Now they have the gall to stand up and ask us what we have done. We have done so much. We have built new libraries. We have built new physical infrastructure in schools that changes the day-to-day experience of kids. It inspires them to know that the government of this country values their education. And, trust me, the impact of that is critical. The message that young people received under the Howard government was that the government did not care. That government had no regard for their future—for where they were going to take those children down the track.
I do not have enough time to list the successes of this government, but let me turn briefly to the investment in health. We know the health costs were blowing out. We look at the numbers under the Howard government and we look at the disinvestment. We look at the $1 billion stripped out by the Howard government, and everybody knows that we were heading to a bad place with respect to health services. Only under the Rudd government, and now the Gillard government, has there been a program for health reform involving substantive investment. We have put in place a system that will bring about real change for this country. We are talking about the health of our citizens. Combined, these two issues—investment in education and health—represent two of the very core issues that Australians hold dear.
Under the Howard government, on all those indicators, we went backwards, and you cannot stand up across the opposite side of this chamber and hold up flagpoles and compare them to the sort of physical and organisational investment we are making in our education system. You cannot compare a $1 billion withdrawal of funding from our public health system to our multibillion dollar investment in the future of a national healthcare system coordinated through our states and the federal system to deliver universal health services to Australians. They cannot compare. They know it. They have nowhere to go, and Ms Gillard will make a fine Prime Minister for this country. (Time expired)