ADJOURNMENT
28 July 2025 • Australian Federal Parliament
View on Parliament WebsiteMr NG (Menzies) (19:45): It's been around eight weeks since I was elected member for Menzies. I have made it a priority to get out and meet as many people, community groups and local organisations as possible. It has been an eventful eight weeks. I've had the privilege of visiting local schools, attending citizenship ceremonies, welcoming new Australians and visiting our many sporting clubs. It was a pleasure to attend the Bulleen Boomers, Donvale Football Club, Doncaster Bowling Club and the Bulleen Templestowe football and cricket clubs. Sports clubs like these are a vital part of the electorate that provide not only physical health benefits but a sense of community. I am continually blown away by the work and dedication that the committees and other volunteers put into keeping these clubs going.
It was also a privilege to meet our local students at East Doncaster Secondary College, Warrendyte High School and Blackburn High School. I have no doubt that some of them will go on to become the leaders of tomorrow. They are bright, thoughtful and full of energy. While visiting these schools, I was fortunate to meet their teachers and school leaders. They are fierce advocates for their communities, showing remarkable dedication and skill in one of the most important jobs there is. I would particularly like to acknowledge the achievement of Blackburn High School, who in May this year travelled to New York and made history by performing at the prestigious Essentially Ellington jazz festival. I had the privilege of hearing them play at state parliament, and their talent and hard work, as well as the dedication of their teachers, was clear in every note. It is moments like these that remind me why it is such an honour and an inspiration to serve.
I'd also like to congratulate the successful recipients of the latest Stronger Communities Program grants and thank them for the work they do to make our community the inclusive, vibrant and compassionate place that it is. The successful recipients showcased the width and breadth of the community life across the electorate. Congratulations to Warrandyte arts, Warrandyte Football Club, the Veneto clubs, the Bulleen Lions, Doncaster Bowling Club, Doncare Community Services, the Bulleen Templestowe Basketball Club and Manningham United Blues. These grants will support improvements in safety and accessibility, help upgrade facilities and contribute to lowering power costs. Most importantly, they will allow these organisations to continue to grow and serve the people of our community into the future.
This past Saturday morning I was out doorknocking in Blackburn South, speaking with residents about the issues that are important to them. One of the most common concerns raised was the importance of being able to access affordable, timely health care. I was pleased to share with the residents I spoke to that our government's record investment in Medicare will boost bulk-billing rates. We'll also be increasing the health workforce, with the largest GP training program in Australian history funding the training of 2,000 new doctors by 2028.
While the Albanese Labor government have successfully brought down inflation and provided 18 months of real wage growth, we know that cost-of-living pressures remain. The residents I spoke to were happy to hear that they will receive a further $150 in energy bill relief this year. Others asked about the government's solar battery discounts, which will help families reduce their energy bills while supporting the transition to renewable energy. We also discussed education, housing affordability and climate change.
These conversations made it clear that the people of Menzies are engaged, thoughtful and deeply invested in the wellbeing of the community. It was a pleasure to be back doorknocking, and I want to thank all the residents of Blackburn South who gave their time and shared their views. Your voices matter.
On Sunday I had the opportunity to take part in National Tree Day. I planted indigenous trees and shrubs, alongside local volunteers. I want to thank Manningham Council and Whitehorse City Council for organising these events, and also the friends of Wurundjeri Walk for their work caring for our open spaces.
Menzies is full of activity, energy and community spirit. Whether in our schools, sports clubs, businesses or bushland, there is always something happening. As the saying goes, start as you mean to go on. I will continue to reach out to, listen to and be ready to advocate for the people of Menzies.
Mr HAMILTON (Groom) (19:49): It's the hour of brotherly love, so I welcome to the parliament the member for Menzies and commend him for his doorknocking. Speaker, I express my unending joy at your re-election to the speakership—I think of all the good, fun times we have had together, one on either side of 94(a)! I stand with a perfectly unblemished record in this 48th parliament. Speaker, I wish to commend you on your commitment to civics education across the country and invite you to Darling Heights State School, the most diverse school we have on the Darling Downs, with 41 different cultures and around 36 different languages. The teachers there do a fantastic job with an incredible challenge in front of them. I know they would be absolutely beside themselves to see you.
I rise this evening to take a look ahead at what I think is the most important work that is in front of us in this parliament. I am now entering my third term, and one conversation that comes up over and over again is how our national tax policies affect us. I think it's important to point out that tax policy has the ability to shape the nation. We respond to what it incentivises. It shapes our way of life. We are what we tax. If we get the settings right, we foster aspiration and social mobility and reward generosity. If we get the settings wrong, we foster dependence, enable inequality and reward selfishness. Our tax settings are very, very important.
I am reminded of the tax settings in pre-civil-rights-era United States—some deplorable tax settings. There were poll taxes that kept black Americans out of the democratic system in the south and tax receipts being divided by race so that black schools got less money than white schools. There was proposition 13, the famous case in California that capped land tax rates for existing landowners but allowed them to increase for new—that is, Hispanic or black—landowners and kept people out. My point in raising these is that not everyone in the US at the time under those laws was racist, but everyone under those laws had to abide by them and it shaped the country of its time. It's the worst possible example of how tax systems shape a nation, create that inequality and make a nation worse. So that's why I think it is such an important conversation for us to be having.
When I think about the sort of tax settings I want for this country and what I hear from my constituents, I think if you are looking after each other then Australia should be looking after you. If you invest your time, your money, your energy and, if you are lucky, your love in someone else, Australia should be building its future around you. That idea of family is a powerful one. It's changed a lot over time. It means a lot of things. But, if two people are coming together and giving something of themselves to each other, they make a greater contribution to our society and we need to reflect that in our tax system.
I think we should also extend this into how we care for each other. There is a man in my electorate by the name of George. Both he and his mother are profoundly disabled and, over time, the mother's needs have grown greater than George's. He now looks after her. The carers allowance he receives is $159.30 a fortnight. I don't think that that reflects the care and the love that he provides that relationship. That's a family. That is two people looking after each other. I think we can do better than that. These are conversations I want us to have.
When I first came into this place I talked about the role of income splitting and treating a family unit as one for taxation purposes. When I raise this, one of the more vocal objections I get is that this is some far-right policy. It is actually a policy I have stolen from socialist France. It's been a policy there since 1945. They see no trouble with it. I think we need to stop looking at things from 'left' or 'right' and see what they'd do for our nation and what they'd do for families. So that is where my attentions will be turned this term. I think it is important that we address these issues and do everything we can in this place to make Australia a better place.
The SPEAKER: I look forward to visiting the Darling Downs in the member for Groom's electorate.