Media

Australia news live: Angus Taylor says booing on Anzac Day ‘shouldn’t happen’ but welcome to country ‘overused’; Victoria announces 20% car rego rebate | Australia news

Australia news live: Angus Taylor says booing on Anzac Day ‘shouldn’t happen’ but welcome to country ‘overused’; Victoria announces 20% car rego rebate | Australia news

Coalition preferencing One Nation in Farrer to stop ‘teal policies’, Angus Taylor says

The opposition leader, Angus Taylor, says the Coalition has directed its preferences to One Nation ahead of the independent in the Farrer byelection to prevent “teal policies”.

The Liberals and Nationals have both placed One Nation before independent Michelle Milthorpe, who has received a small proportion of her funding from the “teal” independent fundraising group, Climate 200.

Angus Taylor. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Polling suggests One Nation will win the New South Wales seat on Liberal and National preferences. Asked why the Coalition parties had put One Nation first, Taylor told ABC program Insiders:

double quotation markIf you vote teal you get Green. And so whilst preferences, beyond preferencing the National party, are picking the least worst option, and we want people to vote for the Liberal party and the National party, the truth is we don’t want to see teal policies for Farrer or for this country.

Asked about One Nation’s threat to the Coalition in regional electorates, Taylor said:

double quotation markI think teal policies, Labor policies are absolute existential for the regions and the Labor government right now. If you get out into these regions, you see what it’s doing to them.

Share

Updated at 

Key events

Krishani Dhanji

Krishani Dhanji

Butler threatens Queensland over hospital funding

The health and NDIS minister, Mark Butler, says Queensland will be “answerable to their community” if they don’t sign onto NDIS reforms, with billions of dollars of hospital funding on the line.

Every state and territory except for the sunshine state has signed a bilateral agreement with the government for the Thriving Kids program, that is designed to take children under nine with developmental delays or low to moderate autism off the NDIS.

The program will be critical to federal Labor’s widespread reforms announced this week, which will see up to 160,000 participants removed from the NDIS, and put onto other state based supports like Thriving Kids or foundational supports.

Speaking to Sky News this morning, Butler says the Liberal government, led by premier David Crisafulli, needs to come to the table.

double quotation mark“Now every state and territory has signed a bilateral agreement with us that details the broad details of the Thriving Kids program … The only state that hasn’t signed yet is Queensland.

I tried to make clear again last week that is part of the deal that sees them get additional hospital funding and frankly, they are answerable to their community if they don’t put the additional supports.”

Share

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *