Showing posts with label Albanese Labor Government. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Albanese Labor Government. Show all posts

Sunday 28 August 2022

Royal Commission into Robodebt and Terms of Reference announced by Albanese Government


 

Ministers for the Department of Social Services, media release, 25 August 2022:


Establishment of the Royal Commission into Robodebt


Joint with:


Anthony Albanese MP

Prime Minister of Australia


Amanda Rishworth MP

Minister for Social Services


Bill Shorten MP

Minister for the National Disability Insurance Scheme

Minister for Government Services


Mark Dreyfus QC MP

Attorney-General


The Governor-General His Excellency General the Honourable David Hurley AC DSC (Retd) has issued Letters Patent establishing a Royal Commission into the former debt assessment and recovery scheme commonly known as Robodebt.


The inquiry will examine, among other things:


  • The establishment, design and implementation of the scheme; who was responsible for it; why they considered Robodebt necessary; and, any concerns raised regarding the legality and fairness;

  • The handling of concerns raised about the scheme, including adverse decisions made by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal;

  • The outcomes of the scheme, including the harm to vulnerable individuals and the total financial cost to government; and

  • Measures needed to prevent similar failures in public administration.


The Royal Commission’s focus will be on decisions made by those in positions of seniority. The full scope of the inquiry is outlined in the Royal Commission’s Terms of Reference.


Commonwealth agencies will work to respond expeditiously to requests made by the Royal Commission.


The Royal Commissioner is Catherine Holmes AC SC. The Commissioner is a former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Queensland and brings vast experience from a distinguished legal career.


The Commissioner led the Queensland Floods Commission of Inquiry following the 2010-11 floods and acted as counsel assisting the Commission of Inquiry into Abuse of Children in Queensland Institutions in 1998-99.


The Government has allocated $30 million for the Royal Commission and the final report will be delivered to the Governor-General by 18 April 2023.


The headquarters of the Royal Commission will be in Brisbane and information about hearing dates and how to participate will be provided in the coming weeks.


A legal financial assistance scheme will be available to people requested to formally engage with the Royal Commission, for example, to appear as a witness.

___________ENDS___________



The Monthly, 25 August 2022:


The government has announced the terms of reference for a royal commission into robodebt, fulfilling an election promise to get to the bottom of a calamity that we still know so little about. The inquiry will be led by former Queensland Supreme Court chief justice Catherine Holmes, with the final report to be handed down in April 2023. It will examine, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said today, “the establishment of the scheme, who was responsible for it, and why it was necessary, how concerns were handled, how the scheme affected individuals and the financial costs to government, and measures to prevent this ever happening again”. Government Services Minister Bill Shorten, who spent years raising concerns about the automated recovery scheme, labelled it “a shameful chapter in the history of public administration in this country”, adding that it had caused “untold harm”. The Opposition has already rubbished the commission, with leader Peter Dutton calling it a “witch-hunt” and a “get-square” with Scott Morrison, who was social services minister when the scheme was established. It’s little wonder the Coalition doesn’t want this looked into. But it is utterly shameless of it to continually insist that nothing in the past matters – that we don’t deserve answers to what went on in the years it spent using and abusing the office of government.


Following along with Dutton’s comments today, there was little differentiation between when he was talking about the robodebt royal commission and when he was talking about the inquiry into Morrison’s secret portfolios, which he has also begun labelling a “witch-hunt”. “[The prime minister] should be concentrating more on how he can help families and less on how we can get square with Scott Morrison,” Dutton told reporters this morning, ostensibly talking about robodebt….


BACKGROUND


Australian Parliament, Senate, Community Affairs References

Committee, Centrelink’s Compliance Program, Accountability and justice: Why we need a Royal Commission into Robodebt, May 2022.




Thursday 28 July 2022

SOCIAL SECURITY (ADMINISTRATION) AMENDMENT (REPEAL OF CASHLESS DEBIT CARD AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2022 closes the cashless debit card program no later than 19 September 2022 and repeals Part 3D of the Social Security (Administration) Act 1999 (Administration Act) no later than six months after bill becomes law



The SOCIAL SECURITY (ADMINISTRATION) AMENDMENT (REPEAL OF CASHLESS DEBIT CARD AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2022 came before the Australian Parliament on the second sitting day of the 47th Parliament at 11:53am.


This bill closes the cashless debit card program no later than 19 September 2022 and repeals Part 3D of the Social Security (Administration) Act 1999 (Administration Act) on the day on which Part 2 of Schedule 1 to the Social Security (Administration) Amendment (Repeal of Cashless Debit Card and Other Measures) Act 2022 commences, ie no later than six months after the bill receives Royal Assent.


The bill was introduced by the Minister for Social Services, Amanda Rishworth MP.


The Minister read into the Hansard record in part, the following:


The bill will:

Remove the ability for any new entrants to be put on the card;


Enable the more than 17,000 existing cashless debit card participants to be progressively transitioned off the card as soon as the bill receives royal assent, which we aim to have occur in the next sitting period, in September, allowing for participants to regain the financial freedom they've been asking for;


Enable the Family Responsibilities Commission to continue to support their community members by placing them onto income management where the need exists;


Allows for me to determine, following further consultation with First Nations people and my colleagues, how the Northern Territory participants on the CDC will transition, and the income management arrangements that will exist; and


Finally, it will allow for the repeal of the cashless debit card on a day to be fixed by proclamation or a maximum of six months after royal assent—allowing for the necessary time to support a staged transition off the card. It will also make consequential amendments to a number of other acts and effectively removes CDC from all social services legislation.


Our absolute priority is to ensure participants are supported through their transition off the card in a safe and structured way.


This will be done through extensive communication and an outreach strategy so that participants are well informed about the changes and what it means for them.


Information and education sessions will be held in each cashless debit card site over the transition period with culturally appropriate information and support.


Services Australia will conduct individually targeted transitional support interviews for those who need it, or want this additional assistance, to make sure exiting participants are well informed on the options available to them.


Not everyone will need this level of assistance—but this approach will ensure no-one is left behind due to being forced onto this card by the former government…..


The bill was read a second time on 27 July, with debate adjourned [Luke Howarth, LNP Qld MP] and the resumption of the debate made an order of the day for the next sitting.


I suspect that the forthcoming debate may be rather politically uncivil on the part of Coalition Opposition MPs. Given the brief prelude by way of interjection by backbench LNP MP for Longman Terry Young and Shadow Minister for Education & Liberal MP for Aston Alan Tudge - a cashless debit card enthusiast who as then Minister for Human Services made a joint announcement in March 2017 extending the debit card trial sites, with then Minister for Social Services Christian Porter.


Friday 1 July 2022

Faced with one of the Morrison Government's ticking time bombs - this one locked in by $7 billion dollars worth of private contacts - the new Albanese Labor Government still managed to insert a little kindness into Morrison's attempt to see his personal war on the poor & vulnerable live on after him


 

Australian Ministers Media Centre, media release, 28 June 2022:


A clean slate and more flexibility for job seekers


Ministers:

The Hon Tony Burke MP

Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations

Minister for the Arts


The Albanese Labor Government is making changes to the new employment services system so job seekers will start with a clean slate and have more flexibility in how they choose to get job ready.


Workforce Australia will replace jobactive on July 4. Under jobactive, participants had to complete 20 job applications as a mutual obligation in return for income support.


The Government supports mutual obligation but jobactive was a rigid system that all too often resulted in job seekers applying for work they were not suited to, wasting their time and the time of employers.


Workforce Australia will instead centre around a points-based activation system that will give participants more choice and control over how they meet their mutual obligation.


The previous federal government locked in the points system – and signed more than $7 billion worth of contracts with providers – shortly before the election. But it never properly explained the new system to the Australian people.


That’s one of the reasons the new Government is implementing a “clean slate” policy, meaning people who have accrued penalties or demerits under the old system will start over under the new one.


A new system means a fresh start.


This decision will give participants a number of months to adjust to the new system with little risk of financial penalty.


I have also worked with my department to make other immediate changes, including:


  • Increasing the points value attached to a number of the activities that help people get job ready and move into secure jobs (see attached).


  • Ensuring that someone participating in full-time study or training that improves their long term job prospects is not putting their qualifications at risk. This includes ensuring that vulnerable individuals will have no job search requirements if they are undertaking approved short full-time courses.


  • Reducing the new minimum job search requirement from 5 to 4 per month.


  • Reducing the points target for some participants to better recognise personal circumstances and weak labour market conditions that could impact their ability to find work.


These changes will provide real incentives for people who are making an extra effort to be job ready.


It is important to note that people who continue to do exactly what they did under the old system – apply for 20 jobs a month – will still meet their points requirements and therefore satisfy their mutual obligation.


Further guidance on the changes and the new arrangements will continue to be provided to those affected via their current jobactive inbox. Additional staff are also being deployed to the Digital Services Contact Centre to help anyone with questions or who needs support to adjust to the new arrangements.


More information about the system and these changes can be found at www.dese.gov.au/workforce-australia.




Changes to Australia's ... by clarencegirl


Monday 6 June 2022

New Minister for Government Services Bill Shorten announces user service audit of "myGov" website and a robodebt royal commission


The Sydney Morning Herald, 4 June 2022:


Labor wants to end the “digital workhouse” approach to people trying to get government payments, with new minister Bill Shorten planning to turn using myGov from an often-frustrating experience into a seamless one.


Shorten is taking briefings on his new government services portfolio but wants to get moving immediately on a user service audit of myGov, the online entry portal into services such as Centrelink, Medicare and the Australian Taxation Office.


His ultimate aim is to make it “a much more seamless exercise” that doesn’t force people to spend hours of their own time applying for payments or updating details, the new minister said in an exclusive interview.


They’ve created digital workhouses, basically. You know, workhouses were a 19th century place where the kind-hearted burghers of Victorian England and Australia said, ‘Well, if we’ve got to pay you for three meals a day, you can go and work in a workhouse,’” he said.


And I think that we’ve used, in some cases, digital technology to create two classes of Australians.


We haven’t privatised the service. We just privatise your time. You spend hours on it. I’m amazed there’s not more rage out there.”…..


Services Australia is effectively the delivery shop for a huge range of other portfolio areas, administering payments for everything from childcare subsidies and Medicare rebates to disaster relief and paid parental leave, along with the more traditional welfare payments such as pensions and JobSeeker…..


However, it has come under pressure in recent years for increasingly forcing people online to make those claims, with nearly 30 Centrelink or Services Australia shopfronts closing around the country, leaving 318 dedicated outlets. Shorten has previously said people seeking support and services must have the option to speak with real people, not merely be pushed onto a website or sit in an automated phone queue.


Another top priority for Shorten in his new role is launching a royal commission into robodebt as soon as possible…... 


As new Minister for the National Disability Insurance Scheme Bill Shorten is looking to reform those elements of the scheme which are shortchanging people with disabilities



Brisbane Times, 3 June 2022:


Labor has vowed to crack down on providers overcharging for services claimed on the National Disability Insurance Scheme and to clear the backlog of thousands of legal appeals for funding, while delivering COVID-19 booster shots to people with disabilities.


NDIS Minister Bill Shorten said he was disturbed by the "twin pricing system" for services to people with disabilities and says restoring trust between scheme participants and senior bureaucrats was vital.


The National Disability Insurance Agency has come under fire for cutting the funding packages of disabled people as it faces rising costs. Shorten said it was an obscenity that there were 5000 appeals on NDIS packages before the Administrative Appeals Tribunal…..


"Under the last regime, we're spending more money on the process of fighting people for amounts which are less than the amount we're spending in the fight. How did we end up in that parallel universe?"


The number of appeals on NDIA decisions that make it to the AAT has more than doubled over the past year and legal costs are running at tens of millions of dollars.


The NDIS will cost almost $36 billion in 2022-23 and costs are forecast to keep increasing.


Shorten acknowledged the need to tackle the pricing of services charged to NDIS packages, saying it seemed to be a "black box" where providers come up with fees but "you don't know the magic of how they're coming to it".


"I'm disturbed at the twin-rate system or the dual system where if you don't have a package, you pay X dollars, if you do have an NDIS package, you get charged X plus $100. The scheme can't cross-subsidise everyone else," he said.


Making sure people with disabilities - both NDIS participants and those on disability support pensions - have quick access to their third and fourth COVID boosters is also a priority for the new minister…..


Shorten's longer-term goals include working with the states to improve support in schools, community mental health services, housing and bed block in hospitals as a way of tamping down NDIS costs.


But he said he was wary of any approach to the rising NDIS costs that suggested people with disabilities were the problem.


"I think there's been a level of incompetence and wastage. I think there's a breakdown in trust," Shorten said.


Sunday 5 June 2022

Albanese Labor Government tells Fair Work Commission that "The new Government has a different view on the Annual Wage Review to the previous Government" and proceeds to put the case that low paid workers - particularly females & the young in casual employment - deserve a real wage


On 30 May 2022 the Australian Fair Work Commission issued a statement in response to the Albanese Labor Government seeking to make a new submission of the Annual Wage Review 2021–22.


[2022] FWCFB 84


STATEMENT


Fair Work Act 2009

s.285—Annual wage reviews to be conducted

Annual Wage Review 2021–22

(C2022/1)


JUSTICE ROSS, PRESIDENT

VICE PRESIDENT CATANZARITI

DEPUTY PRESIDENT ASBURY

COMMISSIONER HAMPTON

MR FERGUSON

PROFESSOR WOODEN

MS LABINE-ROMAIN MELBOURNE 30 MAY 2022


AMENDED TIMETABLE


[1] The current timetable for 2021-22 Annual Wage Review provides that parties are to lodge submissions on the National Accounts March quarter 2022 by Friday 3 June 2022 and submissions in reply are to be lodged by Tuesday 7 June 2022.


[2] On Friday 27 May 2022 the President received correspondence from the Prime Minister seeking leave to make a new Australian Government submission to the 2021-22 Annual Wage Review. The correspondence states that the new submission will outline the Government’s position ‘on a fair increase to minimum and award wages for Australia’s lowest paid workers, noting the rising costs of living’.


[3] Section 289(1) of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) (the Act) requires the Commission to ensure that all persons and bodies have a reasonable opportunity to make submissions to the 2021-22 Annual Wage Review. We note that from 11 April 2022 until recently, the Australian Government was in caretaker mode.


[4] A key consideration in responding to the request is the statutory constraints on the conduct of annual wage reviews. In particular, s.285(1) of the Act requires the Commission to‘conduct and complete an annual wage review in each financial year’. It follows that 30 June 2022 is the outer limit for completion of the 2021-22 Review. As a practical matter, our decision must be published some time before 30 June to allow sufficient time for draft award variation determinations to be published and for interested parties to submit corrections or other amendments to the draft determinations.


[5] In the course of the public consultations on 18 May 2022 the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry and others foreshadowed that they would seek an opportunity to respond in the event the Australian Government Government made a further substantive submission.1


[6] We grant leave for the Australian Government to make a new submission.


[7] The statutory deadline and requirement to provide interested parties with an opportunity to make comments on such a submission impose some practical constraints on the timing and length of the new submission.


[8] Accordingly, the timetable for the 2021-22 Annual Wage Review is varied as follows:

1. The Australian Government may lodge a new submission to the Review by no later than 4pm (AEST) on Friday 3 June 2022. The submission is to be no longer than 10 A4 pages.

2. Interested parties may lodge submissions in reply by no later than 4pm (AEST) on Wednesday 8 June 2022.

3. Reply submissions regarding the National Accounts March quarter 2022 may be lodged by no later than 4pm (AEST) on Wednesday 8 June 2022.

4. Parties have liberty to apply.


PRESIDENT

Printed by authority of the Commonwealth Government Printer

<PR742109>


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


The Fair Work Commission have granted permission for a new submission the Albanese Government lodged an 6 page 29 point document three days later, pressing the case for a further increase in the minimum wage, pointing out that high and rising inflation and falling real wages are creating cost-of-living pressures, particularly for Australia’s low-paid workers.


New Australian Government Submission to the Fair Work Commission

Annual Wage Review 2022, 3 June 2022:


1 Executive Summary


1. The Government thanks the Fair Work Commission’s Expert Panel conducting the Annual Wage Review (‘the Panel’) for the opportunity to make a submission. In this submission, the Government provides updated evidence on the economy, labour market, and low-paid workers to assist the Panel in making its decision.


2. Given the highly unusual and challenging economic conditions, the Government is making a recommendation to the Fair Work Commission in relation to this year’s wage decision.


3. The new Government has a different view on the Annual Wage Review to the previous Government. In particular, the direction of the previous Government’s submission headed “The importance of low-paid work” does not reflect the priorities of this Government.


4. High and rising inflation and falling real wages are creating cost-of-living pressures, particularly for Australia’s low-paid workers. Economic conditions are particularly challenging given inflation is at a 21-year high of 5.1 per cent and is expected to increase further in the near-term due to persistent and compounding supply shocks. The current inflation rate is 2.7 percentage points higher than wages growth as measured by the Wage Price Index (WPI), which means on average, Australians are experiencing the sharpest decline in real wages in 21 years. The National Accounts results released this week provide further evidence of the broad-based domestic price pressures which were clear in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) release for the March quarter 2022.


5. In considering its decision on wages for this year, the Government recommends that the Fair Work Commission ensures that the real wages of Australia’s low-paid workers do not go backwards.


6. High and rising inflation and weak wages growth are reducing real wages across the economy and creating cost-of-living pressures for low-paid workers. It is critical to ensure that these workers do not bear a disproportionate impact of these challenging conditions.


7. The new Government does not want to see Australian workers go backwards; in particular, those workers on low rates of pay who are experiencing the worst impacts of inflation and have the least capacity to draw on savings.


8. The Government notes that over the past decade, in 9 out of 10 years, the Panel has increased the minimum wage rate in line with, or above, inflation. The largest increase in recent years was in 2018-19 where a 3.5 per cent increase was ordered, when inflation was only 1.9 per cent. This submission does not suggest that inflation should be the only consideration when determining wages.


9. This submission does not suggest that across-the-board, wages should automatically increase in line with inflation. The key driver of real wage growth (excluding inflation) over the longer-term is labour productivity. The current economic circumstances are highly unusual and challenging, and the Government’s submission pertains specifically to the low-paid and in the current macroeconomic context.


10. Australia’s low-paid workers, many of whom are young, female and in casual employment, are far more likely than higher paid workers to find themselves experiencing financial hardship. Many of these workers made significant contributions in the provision of essential services during COVID-19.


11. Maintaining the relative standard of living of low-paid workers is not expected to have a material impact on employment.


12. Ensuring that real wages for low-paid workers do not go backwards in these circumstances will protect the relative living standards for these workers, prevent further financial hardship and avoid adverse distributional outcomes and broader economic and social risks.


13. This submission is one of the important first steps in the Government’s plans to address the impacts of the skyrocketing costs of living for Australian workers and families. It is part of the Government’s broader economic plan, calibrated to address inflation by driving productivity growth and expanding the capacity of the economy to alleviate supply side pressures. The Government will do this through investments in cleaner and cheaper energy, in a better-trained workforce with higher participation and in the care economy, digital economy and a future made in Australia.


2 Economy and labour market update…..


14. Over the past 12 months, global and domestic inflationary pressures have significantly increased. These pressures are now expected to be stronger and more persistent, due to compounding global supply shocks. The war in Ukraine and China’s COVID-19 outbreak are exacerbating existing strains in global supply chains and significantly driving up global energy and food prices.


15. Domestic headline consumer price inflation increased by 5.1 per cent through the year to the March quarter of 2022, the fastest increase in 21 years. The trimmed mean measure of core inflation also picked up to 3.7 per cent through the year to the March quarter, the highest increase since early 2009. Inflationary pressures have begun to broaden, with prices increasing in 80 per cent of the inflation components in the March quarter.


16. The Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) May 2022 Statement on Monetary Policy now forecasts that inflation will peak at around 6 per cent in the second half of 2022.


17. While some external inflationary pressures, such as international shipping costs, appear to have peaked, they remain elevated and other inflationary pressures are increasing. The COVID-19 outbreak and major city lockdowns in China present a significant upside risk to imported goods prices. Domestically, higher wholesale electricity prices could add further pressure to retail electricity prices and headline inflation.


18. Higher inflation is now expected to persist throughout 2022 and into 2023. If, as currently expected, global supply chain pressures dissipate, oil prices moderate and consumption patterns return to a more normal balance between goods and services, headline inflation would be expected to ease over the course of 2023.


19. Wages as measured by the WPI grew by 2.4 per cent through the year to the March quarter. With inflation at 5.1 per cent, this means that on average, real wages have seen the sharpest decline in 21 years. The Government notes that this fall in real wages follows persistently and historically low real wages growth over the past decade.


20. While the Government welcomes recent falls in the unemployment rate, it notes that this has not yet been associated with broad-based wages growth. Assuming global supply factors driving up inflation dissipate as expected, nominal wages growth is expected to begin outpacing inflation.


21. The RBA’s May 2022 Statement on Monetary Policy forecast the WPI to grow by 3.3 per cent through the year to the June quarter 2023 and by 3.7 per cent through the year to the June quarter 2024.


22. The stronger than expected rise in inflation has seen consumer prices outpace wages to date, resulting in larger near-term declines in real wages. The near-term pick-up in inflation creates particularly acute cost-of-living pressures on the low-paid.


23. There are also significant economic risks associated with falling real wages. Most notably, reduced capacity to spend could weigh on household consumption with flow-on effects to aggregate demand more broadly.


24. While higher inflation and the anticipated tightening of monetary policy may dampen activity, it is not expected to lead to a substantial increase in the unemployment rate or a deterioration in economic growth.


25. The current economic circumstances are complex and substantial risks remain, including the possibility of more significant and sustained price pressures, or a more substantial slowing in activity.


3 Low-paid workers and the cost of living…..


26. The current cost-of-living pressures will have a disproportionate impact on low-paid workers.


27. Recent inflationary pressures have been stronger for non-discretionary goods and services, which increased by 6.6 per cent through the year to the March quarter of 2022. Fuel, food and new dwellings contributed nearly 3 percentage points to headline inflation, with fuel rising by 35 per cent in the past 12 months.


28. Low-paid workers have a diverse range of characteristics. In 2020, low-paid workers were more likely to be female, employed on a casual basis and under 30 years of age. Given this, a more substantial increase for those on low wages would be beneficial in assisting to narrow the gender pay gap.


29. With growth in the WPI expected to strengthen over the forecast period, supporting a more substantial increase for low-paid workers will also help maintain relative living standards for the low-paid.


The National Retail Association, Australian Industry Group, Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Australian Business Industrial and NSW Business Chamber Ltd have taken up the Commissioners' invitation to make new submissions of their own. Which unsurprisingly a not in favour of the new federal government submission, and indeed would like any rise in the minimum wage as applied to specific award classifications pushed back to November 2022. Details can be found at:

https://www.fwc.gov.au/hearings-decisions/major-cases/annual-wage-reviews/annual-wage-review-2021-22/submissions-annual


 

Thursday 2 June 2022

Australian Labor Government First Full Albanese Federal Ministry List

 

Prime Minister of Australia, media release, 31 May 2022:


The Prime Minister the Hon. Anthony Albanese has announced his Government’s first full Ministry.


Cabinet


The Hon. Anthony Albanese MP, Prime Minister

The Hon. Richard Marles MP, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Defence

Senator the Hon. Penny Wong, Minister for Foreign Affairs

The Hon. Dr Jim Chalmers MP, Treasurer

Senator the Hon. Katy Gallagher, Minister for Finance, Minister for the Public Service and Minister for Women

Senator the Hon. Don Farrell, Minister for Trade and Tourism Special Minister of State

The Hon. Tony Burke MP, Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations and Minister for the Arts

The Hon. Mark Butler MP, Minister for Health and Aged Care

The Hon. Chris Bowen MP, Minister for Climate Change and Energy

The Hon. Tanya Plibersek MP, Minister for the Environment and Water

The Hon. Catherine King MP, Minister for Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Local Government

The Hon. Linda Burney MP, Minister for Indigenous Australians

The Hon. Amanda Rishworth MP, Minister for Social Services

The Hon. Bill Shorten MP, Minister for the National Disability Insurance Scheme and Minister for Government Services

The Hon. Mark Dreyfus QC MP, Attorney-General and Cabinet Secretary

The Hon. Brendan O’Connor MP, Minister for Skills and Training

The Hon. Jason Clare MP, Minister for Education

The Hon. Julie Collins MP, Minister for Housing, Minister for Homelessness and Minister for Small Business

Michelle Rowland MP, Minister for Communications

Madeleine King MP, Minister for Resources and Minister for Northern Australia

Senator Murray Watt, Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry Minister for Emergency Management

Ed Husic MP, Minister for Industry and Science

Clare O’Neil MP, Minister for Home Affairs and Minister for Cyber Security


Outer Ministry


Matt Keogh MP, Minister for Veterans’ Affairs and Minister for Defence Personnel

Pat Conroy MP, Minister for Defence Industry and Minister for International Development and the Pacific

Stephen Jones MP, Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Financial Services

Andrew Giles MP, Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs

Anne Aly MP, Minister for Early Childhood Education and Minister for Youth

Anika Wells MP, Minister for Aged Care and Minister for Sport

Kristy McBain MP, Minister for Regional Development, Local Government and Territories


Assistant Ministers


The Hon. Justine Elliot MP, Assistant Minister for Social Services and Assistant Minister for the Prevention of Family Violence

The Hon. Matt Thistlethwaite MP, Assistant Minister for Defence, Assistant Minister for Veterans’ Affairs and Assistant Minister for the Republic

The Hon. Dr Andrew Leigh MP, Assistant Minister for Competition, Charities and Treasury

Patrick Gorman MP, Assistant Minister to the Prime Minister

Senator Jenny McAllister, Assistant Minister for Climate Change and Energy

Senator Carol Brown, Assistant Minister for Infrastructure and Transport

Ged Kearney MP, Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care

Emma McBride MP, Assistant Minister for Mental Health and

Assistant Minister for Rural and Regional Health

Senator Malarndirri McCarthy, Assistant Minister for Indigenous Australians and Assistant Minister for Indigenous Health

Senator Tim Ayres, Assistant Minister for Trade and Assistant Minister for Manufacturing

Senator Anthony Chisholm, Assistant Minister for Education and Assistant Minister for Regional Development

Tim Watts MP, Assistant Minister for Foreign Affairs.


There are 19 women on the 42 strong ministry and portfolio list - 10 women in the 23-member cabinet, 3 women in the 7-member outer ministry and 6 women in the 12-member assistant ministry.