GOVERNOR-GENERAL'S SPEECH
31 July 2025 • Australian Federal Parliament
View on Parliament WebsiteMs CHESTERS (Bendigo) (12:47): I am very pleased to be able to stand to continue my remarks from a few nights ago. As I said in the first part of my speech, the Bendigo electorate election was close. It was tough, brutal and nasty. Over $2 million, it's estimated, was spent by my opponents to try and buy the seat of Bendigo. They flooded the town with outsiders. During the campaign I was referred to as a dog by somebody who wanted to be the deputy prime minister. That sent shockwaves through people in my community, because they didn't believe that a member of parliament could refer to another member of parliament that way in 2025. I mention that just to demonstrate to other members that, whilst they were in their own battles, this was the nature of the battle in Bendigo.
But the good news is that we held on despite the negativity, nastiness, misinformation and disinformation. My amazing team of volunteers, the local state MPs and my office held on to the seat. At the conclusion of counting I was 2,983 votes ahead of my nearest challenger, securing my fifth term in this place and equalling that of my predecessor. I'm proud to stand here and say we've had 28 years of Labor in the federal seat of Bendigo and counting.
In the future, we hope for elections that are free and fair, honest and respectful. It's the very least that all of us can ask. We want there to be robust debate, but it should be respectful. I ask those opposite who invaded our town during this election to check their language and check their behaviour.
It may happen to one of your own one day, and you would be standing in this place demanding that they be respected in the same way that I am doing now. I got asked during the election, 'What will you do?' I said, 'You always have to call out bad behaviour, not necessarily for yourself but for the next woman or the next candidate.'
I'd like to take a moment to thank the amazing volunteers that stood with me during that campaign. We have a fantastic team of rank-and-file members in Bendigo, as well as volunteers, the people who spend hours on prepoll despite the difficult conditions. Despite being stood over, pushed and provoked, they did not bite. They stood their ground, held their heads high and did the job. I'd like to acknowledge the amazing support that I had from my state colleagues—the Hon. Jacinta Allan, Maree Edwards and Mary-Anne Thomas—and my other federal Labor colleagues like Senator Jess Walsh; the member sitting at the front desk, Minister Giles; and the other fantastic Victorian Labor MPs that stood there with us. You really know that you are in good company when you are in the fight of your political life and your friends come and rally around you.
I'd like to thank my amazing team. We knew it was going to be tight and close, and, after what was the most gruelling prepoll and election day, the party was packed up early. They went to bed, got up and went into quite possibly one of the longest ballot counts that we've had in Bendigo since John Brumby's time as the federal member. I'd also like to thank my amazing family—Matt, Daisy and Charlie. My children are now at an age where they really understand elections, and I'd like to thank them for the love and support that they showed me during that period—picking me up after early voting and letting me know that, if they could vote, they'd vote for me. My children, my family and my extended family's support was truly remarkable.
I'd also like to thank the amazing people of Bendigo. Despite our diversity and the rebuilding that we are now doing, I am so proud to represent you in this place. Thank you for instilling your trust in me again to continue on as the federal member for Bendigo. It is an honour and a privilege, which I know all members stand in this place and say, but we genuinely mean it. Now is the time to get on with delivering the many commitments that we made during the election—funding for skate parks, funding for Bendigo heritage attractions, funding for changerooms for women so that they can change in a safe and inclusive space, funding for upgrades to the North Bendigo Recreation Reserve, funding for reimagining and restoring the Bendigo Creek, funding to deliver a veterans' hub for veterans and families in the Bendigo and district area and funding for a Bendigo headspace Plus. These are some of the many commitments that Labor and I made to the people of Bendigo.
Mr YOUNG (Longman) (12:53): This was my third election, and it was very different to the first two. The first two elections were fought on policy. It was never personal, and I acknowledge the previous candidates for their professionalism in this area. Unfortunately, this election was very personal from my Labor opponent. There were so many lies told about me, and she brought my children into the campaign, which both sides have always agreed is not on. My staff and volunteers were accused of bullying, which is simply untrue. But of course a little bit of mud always sticks, which my opponent of course knew and went ahead with anyway. For the first time I had corflute signs pulled down, and, in many cases, they were replaced with my Labor opponent's signs.
Of course, the temptation is to fight fire with fire, and I could have pulled her signs down, but I chose not to. I was given some personal information on my opponent which was pretty awful, but I chose not to use it, because I want to be part of the solution not part of the problem. I've said from day one that I'd rather lose playing fair than win playing dirty. It still sticks to this day. Now, we know part of politics is about calling out other politicians or candidates for bad policy, but it should never get personal, especially involving families.
The other challenge that I had, which was a little bit unusual, was to put the Family First candidate last on my how-to-vote card.
I had it all sorted out and ready to go, and then I was given some very, very damning information on this particular young man—who I had actually met—and, sadly, he had come out and spoken in a terrible way about women and Jewish people. It was just awful, and he was obviously a confused, young 19-year-old. I took it very hard on having to make a decision, again, on whether to leak that for political gain or to just keep that to ourselves and not put this young man out there for the media to hammer. We took the decision—I think the right decision—to just put him last on the ballot paper and not put him out there to be destroyed by the media, because they can be very, very hurtful.
The problem was that was he disendorsed by the party—and I thought, 'Well, that solves that problem'—but what had happened was the ballot papers were already printed and he still appeared as the Family First candidate. So then I had the Christian community saying to me, 'Why are you putting a Christian last when you're a person of faith yourself?' Then I had to explain it, and that was very difficult as well. It was a pretty messy election, to be honest. But we move on.
Just for a little bit of history, I was very happy in small business before my political career began. I had reached the point of being 50-years old—or young, as I like to say—and getting to the stage where things had got a little bit easier than in those early days in business. We'd navigated those difficult and costly first few years, where 70-to-80-hour weeks and running on fumes was the norm, and the two businesses I had ownership in were 10 years old, and they'd matured. The temptation, of course, at that stage is just to cruise to retirement for the next 20 years and then do a bit of part-time work in the business in retirement, but I don't think I'll ever fully retire.
But I want to reflect on how good this country has been to a kid who was raised in Kallangur and then moved slightly north to Caboolture, which are both very blue-collar, knockabout communities. I left school at 15 and started work as a garage attendant, or petrol pumper as they used to call them in those days, and spent the first four years of my working life working full time on a minimum wage. I understand what it's like to eat vegemite toast for dinner. I worked hard, and I ended up owning businesses and employing young people who were just like me. I wanted to give back in another way to this country that had been so good to me—hence my run in politics.
I'm also driven by the fact that, in many cases, kids who aren't particularly academic feel like they are second-class citizens. If they don't get a degree, then they have no future. I want to give them hope. I want them to know they can make something of themselves, that they have value and as much value as someone with a degree. I despise this hierarchical system that we've created in our society, where people in some vocations are considered by many as more important than others with other types of jobs, simply because they earn more. Monetary worth should never define our value to society or our self-worth. How well we do our job, our behaviour and what we contribute should determine these things.
We all have our place in society, and we're all of equal value, regardless of our gender, sexuality, race, religion or vocation. Of course, different vocations are remunerated in different ways, for many reasons—the market demands, the amount of sacrifice required through training and the amount of risk needed in each vocation, and that's fair enough—but to say that those on higher incomes are more valuable is just not right. The attendants in this place, who look after the politicians so well, are just as valuable, and I thank them for their service.
Being the member for Longman for six years, I've always visited and met with the various community and sporting groups along with the City of Moreton Bay council to find out the needs of the Longman community. I spent most of my life living in the Longman community, apart from a couple of stints away for work, and, as a result, I know the community pretty well. As a result of these meetings and my experience there, I was pleased to obtain 27 election promises if the LNP had been elected on 3 May. Sadly, Labor only made two of the same commitments—so that's 25 much-needed projects that will either not go ahead, be delayed or have to be funded another way.
It means that the Pine Rivers Cricket Club won't get their lights so they can expand their ever-growing junior and female sides, as there's not enough daylight to support extra teams. The Caboolture Sports Football Club—or soccer, if you want to call it that—won't get their electronic scoreboard. North Pine Netball won't get their courts resurfaced.
The Moodlu Men's Shed won't get their much-needed upgrades. The Bribie Island Surf Club may have to compromise on the size of their extensions to their clubhouse. The Caboolture Snakes rugby league will have to wait longer for their new clubhouse. The kids who use the Bellara skate park on Bribie Island are disappointed. The Narangba Eagles will miss out on stage 2 of their clubhouse redevelopment. The Delaneys Creek Pony Club won't get their building upgrade. The Elimbah Soldiers Memorial Hall will have to wait for its much-needed refurbishment. The Lindsay Road sports complex, Sandstone Point community complex, the Burpengary and Morayfield community halls, along with the Burpengary Pony Club and St Eugene College will all miss out on much-needed CCTV security cameras to protect community assets.
There will be no help with the toilet facilities at the Bribie Island Golf Club or extra shade sails for the Bribie Island Bowls Club or the new cabins at the Bribie Retreat and Recreation Centre so that more camps can be hosted. Stanley Rivers Rugby League Club misses out on a much-needed clubhouse and change room upgrade as their female participation rate continues to grow. The Caboolture netball courts won't get the resurfacing so desperately needed, and the Narangba Crows AFL will miss out on their lighting upgrade to LED.
But the biggest commitment that I was able to obtain was the $74 million for stage 1 of the much needed Caboolture West connectivity initiative. As one of the fastest growing communities in the country, these projects are vital for the Longman electorate, and the message people of Longman got from Labor during the campaign was they simply don't care about the people of Longman. It's not too late, Prime Minister. If you want to show the people of Longman that you do care, I'll be only too happy to discuss these projects with you and get them under way.
I'm going to continue to advocate for the people of Longman and work with the Crisafulli state government and speak to them about a lot of these vital projects, like the four-laning of Morayfield Road. As I said, we're a very, very fast growing community, and the infrastructure is simply not keeping up with the population growth. In the six years that I've been in this place, the voting population of my electorate has grown from 116,000 to 143,000—in just six years. We have over 200,000 people in the electorate, so we need this infrastructure.
Morayfield Road takes a lot of the burden when the Bruce Highway is congested on a Friday afternoon or Sunday afternoon, with people going to and from the Sunshine Coast. Having two lanes, down to one lane and then back to two lanes is ridiculous. We need four lanes all the way from King Street, in Caboolture, right down to the highway. We need an acceleration in the timeline of the Bribie Island Road and the new bridge, four-laning from the Bruce Highway to the bridge, and then a new bridge. It's currently set for completion in 2039. Bribie has the oldest average population in Queensland. Sadly, in 2039, there might be a few people there now that might not see the new bridge. We need to bring that forward; it's a car park.
The Bruce Highway must have four lanes from the Pine Rivers Bridge to the Bribie Island turn-off, and upgrades are needed at the Morayfield-Uhlmann Road exit and Exit 150 Buchanan Road, along with the four lanes and the flyover to Caboolture River Road.
I mentioned earlier the election promise I was able to get for $74 million. This is needed, because they have just started turning dirt on one housing estate in my electorate that will contain 25,000 homes, which will house 70,000 people. To put that in perspective, that's one housing estate that's the same size as the city of Mackay in Central Queensland. These people won't have a way to get to the Bruce Highway, but many of them will be commuting to Brisbane for work. This initiative, planned by the council, will go from Caboolture River Road and the Morayfield Road intersection. A bridge will be built over a shopping centre and a train line to connect to a current two-lane road, which needs to become four lanes, and then it will go out to the highway. I was so pleased to be able to get that promise, but now that it hasn't happened, the council won't have the money to do it on their own—it's a big project for a local council—and that will delay the project another three years, unfortunately.
I also spoke to TMR a couple of weeks ago in regard to the Bruce Highway. I commend the LNP state government for speeding up this process on the Bruce Highway works, including the four-laning from Dohles Rocks Road right up to Bribie Island Road, as well as the extra work on the new exit that I mentioned earlier.
The train crossings at Dakabin, Boundary Road, Narangba Station and Pumicestone Road must be upgraded urgently, as they were neglected by the former state Labor government and their local members for nine long years.
We just cannot cope. People are sitting and waiting for two or three light changes to get across a train line, and it's simply not good enough. I grew up in the area, and I can tell you that all these crossings are the same as they were back in the 1970s, when six people and a dog lived in some communities. Something needs to be done because there are a lot of people living there now.
After two years of meetings, forums and development, I will present in October to the Queensland LNP government my solution to fixing the homeless situation created by this government's irresponsible immigration policy. It's a solution that I've worked hard on with state members from both sides of politics, with local councils, with organisations that are in the homelessness space and with a lot of the charities and churches as well, and the local community. We've come up with a really great solution, and I think it's going to work. I look forward to talking to the LNP state government about getting this going. I'd like to see something by the end of the year because the homelessness in my community is horrific. I've never seen anything like it. When I drive around, I see all these tents and people living in cars—and they're working people. It's horrendous.
In my maiden speech I was positive, and I remain so, despite the incredibly negative nature of politics. I've got a slogan on my billboards that says 'Terry Young gets things done'. I'm going to continue to get things done for my awesome community. Common sense, freedom and respect for all Australians' point of view and their right to have their own point of view, even if I don't agree with them personally, are ideals that I'll always adhere to in my role. I will always try to give the people I serve hope, rather than trying to score political points by creating fear and anxiety. As long as I have the honour to serve in this role, I will try and inspire the next generation to have a go, sharing my personal journey with young ears—both the successes and the failures that I've had in my life, because young people need to know it's okay to fail. In fact, failure is not a final destination; it's part of the journey to success, as we learn more lessons from our failures than our successes and that develops resilience.
I want to thank my volunteers for their commitment and hard work not only during the campaign and nearly three weeks of counting the vote but for their service during the term. I won't mention any names, as to miss one name would be an injustice. You all know who you are and the individual but vital role you played in the campaign. I also want to thank my staff for their commitment and the hundreds of extra hours they did during the campaign, and their commitment to our great party and to me personally. I could not do this without you.
I give a big shout-out to my family and friends, who support me not just practically, by handing out at a polling booth, even though a lot don't like doing that stuff—letterboxing and the like—but also with your love and support during the most difficult and stressful of times. My wife, Alex, and my youngest daughter, Jess, bear most of the load, as they are the ones who live with me! The others have all left home. So thank you, ladies.
Lastly, thank you to the people of Longman for putting your trust in me for a third consecutive term. As always, my door is open to meet with you, and, when you see me out and about, please come and say g'day, because I'd love to meet you. I promise you I will work my hardest to ensure our community gets what it needs. I will continue to speak the truth and use common sense and my life experience to serve you and fulfil my vision to make Longman the greatest community in Australia in which to live, work and play.
Mr BURNELL (Spence) (13:08): It gives me great pleasure to make a contribution to this address-in-reply debate. Before I congratulate other people, Deputy Speaker Scrymgour, I want to congratulate you on your deputy speaker role. I think it is a significant tick of approval to the person that you are and the contribution you have made since joining this parliament in 2022 alongside me. Well done. I do want to extend my congratulations to the Speaker of the House, the member for Oxley. He has been a fantastic contributor in my time here and has really elevated the role of Speaker, in my view, since my election. I also want to extend that to the Deputy Speaker, Ms Sharon Claydon, a very dear friend and someone who has offered me quite a lot of advice over the last three years.
To the Governor-General, on Her Excellency's fine address to this parliament last week: thank you for everything you've done since your appointment to the Governor-General position, but also I really want to extend very warm thanks for the way in which you engaged with my daughter last week during the reception after your address.
She met Senator the Hon. Penny Wong, her political idol—but you came in at a very close second. So, I do say thank you for that.
To the people of Spence, who have entrusted me for a second term: from the bottom of my heart, thank you very much for the great honour of being able to stand in this chamber and represent your needs on a day-to-day basis. It is by far and away the greatest privilege of my life. As a young boy growing up in Mildura, in country Victoria, I never thought in my wildest dreams that I would make it to this place. To have had three years as the member for Spence and then to be re-elected is such a privilege. As I'm sure every member in this place acknowledges, it is an absolute gift to have your name called to speak on behalf of your constituency.
So, to every person who voted for me, thank you. And for those who didn't vote for me, there's still time! Hopefully at the 2028 election you might change your view and swing in behind me, and hopefully we can get that margin up over 50 per cent; that would make my day, for sure. But any day when I get called as the winner of the seat of Spence, I'll be very happy and eternally grateful and will always put my best foot forward to represent our community. So, thank you very much for that.
Whilst I'm giving thanks, I do really want to say thank you to the union movement for having my back over the last three years—a big shout-out to the SDA, AWU, HSU and SA Unions and especially my union, the TWU. To Sam McIntosh and the team down at Chief Street in Brompton: thank you so much for everything you've helped with over the last three years. When I needed help, you guys were always there and really went that extra mile to make sure we got the job done. So I do want to say thank you.
But I also want to acknowledge our great mate, my former boss and a great mentor to me—Ian Smith, the former secretary of the TWSA/NT branch. It's been just over 12 months since his passing. It would be remiss of me not to acknowledge the contribution and impact that you've had on my life as well as the confidence you had in encouraging me to nominate for preselection and subsequently run as the candidate for Spence in 2022 and re-election this year. Thank you, mate. I'll be eternally grateful for everything you did for me.
Then there are my amazing volunteers. There's not a person in this place who could say, hand on heart, that they got here by themselves. Yes, we get to do all the fancy stuff and turn up to things and get acknowledged for being the member or the candidate. But ultimately we don't get here without the hard, tireless work of hundreds of volunteers in our respective electorates, and mine is no different. I had hundreds of volunteers lining up to letterbox, to doorknock, to help at prepoll, to make phone calls and to help pack booth boxes—to do those little one per cent things that make such a difference for the candidate. There were more than 200 volunteers. There's not enough time on the clock to list everybody and do justice. But to each and every one of my branch members, to my community volunteers, to those who answered the call to come and help us to re-win this seat, I want to say thank you. We have had a thankyou barbecue, and I am so appreciative of the near-100 people who turned up to that. But, for those who didn't, I do want to say to you today: thank you from the bottom of my heart for every minute, every hour, every day you put in on the campaign. It made a huge difference, and I'll be eternally grateful for it.
To Michael Atkinson, my campaign manager: mate, it was quite a journey. I learnt a bit about you, you learnt a bit about me, but ultimately we got a job done.
I am extremely thankful for all of your guidance before, during and since the election. I look forward to our friendship growing over the coming years and will be eternally grateful for everything you have done.
To my beautiful wife, Cassandra, thank you for giving me the opportunity to do this. I wouldn't be here if you hadn't supported me in 2022 to put my hand up. Everybody in here knows that it's a huge commitment not just from us but from our families. It takes a toll on them. We have to make sure that we look after our family when we're home. We can't get absorbed into this role and forget about things outside of it, because it's very easy to. Everybody wants a piece of us all of the time. It is so important that we put aside five minutes every day to make that phone call or tell our staff: 'No, I'm sorry. We're having Sunday as a family day.' That's what maintains our relationships. It's what keeps us grounded in this job so that we don't lose sight of what we're here to do.
Mr Hill: He likes his family.
Mr BURNELL: Thank you, Member for Bruce! My wife has been an absolute rock, and I always look forward to getting home and giving her a kiss and saying thank you, because this is a great honour, but I can't do it by myself.
To my broader family, thank you. Like I said earlier, I had my daughter here last week for the opening ceremony. It is such a great thing to be able to take your family for a walk through these halls, behind the doors, not on a public gallery tour but as your family. You get to take them behind the doors and into your office. It's such a special thing to do.
It's quite fitting that I stand in this position now. When I was elected, my seat was just over here and I sat beside—I believe they were my first seat buddy—the former member for Dunkley, Peta Murphy. I subsequently now sit behind the new member for Dunkley, Jodie Belyea. Unfortunately, in the 47th Parliament, we said goodbye to some good people. Peta Murphy was one of those good people. She was a shining light for many colleagues in this place, both on this side and on the other side of the chamber. I know the member for Gippsland was a very good friend. It was very unfortunate that we had to say goodbye to her. But, in her own way, she made sure that she imparted something extremely special to every single person in this place. I absolutely benefited from every single contribution she made in her seat. It has made me a better speaker. It has given me a lot more confidence. It would be remiss of me not to say thank you.
But we also said goodbye to our good friend Senator Linda White, a class colleague of the class of 2022. She, unfortunately, did not have enough time in this place to make the contribution that she was destined to make, but in the time that she did have she wasted not a minute. Not a minute did she waste. She ensured that her fingerprints were left in this place for eternity. She should be extremely proud of that contribution.
It's also a reminder to every single person elected in this place and the other that we don't have time to waste, that when we come to Canberra we're here to do a job. We're here to represent our constituents. We're here to represent our state, if you're a senator. We're here to represent the people of Australia and make decisions that will put them in a better place. That is ultimately the responsibility bestowed on each and every single one of us. I choose not to waste a minute of my time here, because it is too valuable, because we don't know when we won't get the chance to have our name called and speak on behalf of our communities. I don't say that just because of the two people I have spoken about. I say that because of the 33 people that didn't make it back to this place. Some of them did not have the opportunity to give a valedictory and yet made significant contributions to this House. They probably did not envisage that their time was going to be called at the last election.
It is incumbent on us as elected members of this House to make the most of every single day that we have got, because the next election might be when, unfortunately, you don't get to come back.
I say that in jest to all the excited new members of the 48th Parliament. I watch in envy the contributions that you've already made—the amazing first speeches, so many amazing first speeches, not just on our side of the House but also on the other side. It was an absolute pleasure to sit in this chamber and hear what your story is about you as a person and the contribution that you look forward to making to this place and to our country. You should all be very, very proud of the speeches that you have given so far.
To the Australian Electoral Commission, especially the divisional returning officer Laurence Staiff, who was the overseer for my election: thank you very much to you, to your entire team both at the headquarters and at each of the prepolling locations, and to the staff that you're responsible for on election day. Your team went above and beyond to make sure that not just me but all eight candidates were informed of what was going on and also that the voter experience in our electorate was not like some of the others that we've heard about across the country. That takes good leadership, and it starts with your role, so I want to say thank you, because it is about making sure that voters are encouraged to come back and fulfil their democratic obligation at each and every single election. Thank you very much.
Over the last three years, we have had such a fantastic opportunity to deliver so many great outcomes for our community. I'm going to start with what is probably my most favourite policy front. No, it's not defence, Member for Lalor! It's education because education has the capacity to unlock the door to opportunity, lift people up and give them a chance at a great life. I remember when we got the Australian Universities Accord:interim report. Inside that paperwork, for those who actually took the time to read it, there was a piece that said that regional university study hubs and suburban university study hubs connecting outer metropolitan, regional and rural students to the opportunities of higher education make it more attainable. I looked at it, and I said, 'That's exactly what my electorate needs—exactly what my electorate needs.'
I want to say a huge thankyou to the City of Playford for partnering up with Flinders University and the University of Adelaide and sitting down to have the conversations to make sure we got the right proposal before the selection committee to give ourselves the best chance of delivering a study hub right in the heart of our electorate. We were successful in getting that. The interim hub has been opened. In the not-too-distant future, we will be opening its forever home at the TAFE campus in Elizabeth, and it will change the educational outcomes for thousands of young people in my electorate. It'll change the educational outcomes for thousands of adult-entry students in my electorate.
That is what Labor governments are elected to do: to create opportunity for those who haven't had it in the past and to change the outcomes. We did it through fee-free TAFE. During the election campaign, I had the skills minister come down. We went for a walk through the wet room, played around with a bit of builders' mud and tried our hand at bricklaying. I'd never done bricklaying before in my life, but I did lay a better brick than the good minister! He'll probably come in here and say that's not the case. What we saw was the young people who were doing a fantastic job of getting their skills and their trade certifications so that they can contribute to the housing construction needs of today and tomorrow to provide the houses for those who need them most in our community and communities across the country.
That's the power of education and something that I will be forever grateful of our government.
I could go on forever, but I want to close off by saying to my community: thank you so much for the greatest privilege of my life to give back to our community, to represent our community with a strong voice and to fight for what's right each and every single day. For that, I thank the House.
Debate adjourned.