ECONOMIC SECURITY
Dr JENSEN (Tangney) (7:30 PM) —I would dearly love to stand before you
today in support of the motion that Mr Hale brought forward—
Mr Hale —You can.
Dr JENSEN —I cannot. The Leader of the Opposition in fact offered full
bipartisan support, including roundtable talks, to work with the
government on the best solution. These offers were rejected. The Prime
Minister and his bumbling, incompetent, so-called Treasurer went full
steam ahead with a package they thought was right—once again, policy on
the run—not looking forward to the possible ramifications, for example,
of the freezing of the funds of thousands of people. The Treasurer
advised them just to pop down to Centrelink. What a joke the Treasurer
is and what a joke that statement is. All that shows is utter contempt
for Australians. When the government were asked in parliament to
release details of their so-called strategy, time after time they
refused. If they did know the details, why did the Prime Minister
continually avoid the questions? Some questions were as simple as
requiring a yes or no answer but he still could not do it. Australians
deserve to have these questions answered in full. I put it to you that
the Prime Minister did not know the answers to the questions on his
quickly-thrown-together economic security strategy. The strategy has
been rushed and bungled from the very start, and it is already showing
signs of being a complete disaster. With their unlimited bank deposit
scheme the government again did not want to have talks with the
opposition or listen to valid suggestions such as a cap on those
guarantees. Even more reprehensible, they did not even bother to hold
discussions directly with the Governor of the Reserve Bank. Why?
Because apparently they know it all. Well, clearly they do not, and we
are in a mess with our surplus dwindling by the minute.
I
really must ask this, because I am sure there are a lot of people who
would love to know. What would the Prime Minister have done? What would
his strategy have been if the Howard government had not paid off the
$96 billion of debt left by the last Labor government? What would he
have done without the healthy surplus the government inherited to use
for his answer to the global financial crisis? We fought for the
government to increase the pension by $30 a week. The Prime Minister
and his ministers freely acknowledged that they could not survive on
the pension yet argued the point and flatly refused to increase the
pension until another one of the Prime Minister’s reviews was complete.
Even though he promised prior to the election that he would reduce the
price of fuel and reduce the price of groceries, what did he do? He
watched the price of fuel go up and he watched the price of groceries
go up. Older Australians were really struggling and yet he still
refused to take immediate action until he needed to spend some money to
stimulate the economy—and, bang, he used pensioners and announced
one-off payments for them. Whilst supporting this measure, short term
as it is, I am sure the pensioners of Australia are cynical as to the
motives when only a couple of weeks before he and his Minister for
Health and Ageing stated that there would be no increase in the pension
until his review was completed next May.
The global
financial crisis is huge and there are many reports that it is by no
means over. The government had an opportunity to prove they could
handle the economy. I think that the rushed, uninformed, go-it-alone
attempt at their rescue package shows that Australia is in real trouble
with these clowns at the wheel.