House debates

Tuesday, 18 August 2009

Private Members’ Business

Defence Procurement

12:57 pm

Photo of Steve GibbonsSteve Gibbons (Bendigo, Australian Labor Party) Share this | Hansard source

When they invented the term ‘hypocrisy’ it was the Liberal Party they had in mind. This motion is a prime example of Liberal hypocrisy, incompetence and sheer laziness. Let us examine the facts. The Department of Defence announced the Land 121 phase 4 vehicle replacement program, the biggest vehicle replacement program in the history of the ADF. Part of this program will replace some of the ADF’s existing Land Rover fleet with light armoured protected mobility vehicles. On 26 February 2008 then Parliamentary Secretary for Defence Procurement issued a media release outlining initiatives designed to assist the Australian defence industry, stating:

The announcement of these programs fulfils Labor’s election commitment to emphasise preference for Australian content and require tenderers to develop detailed strategies for involving Australian industry to the greatest possible extent

The member for Paterson was silent.

On 29 October 2008 the then defence minister, the member for Hunter, issued a statement saying the government had joined the US Joint Light Tactical Vehicle program, which was developing similar prototypes. The same media release said Australian defence manufacturers would also be given the opportunity to participate in the Land 121 vehicle replacement program, including the protected light mobility vehicles. The member for Paterson remained silent. I issued a media statement on 18 December 2008, published on the front page of the Bendigo Advertiser on 19 December, welcoming the announcement and pointing out the opportunity this presented for Thales in Bendigo. The member for Paterson, totally oblivious to this course of events, remained silent.

Australia joined the US JLTV program because there are no Australian manufacturers currently producing this type of vehicle. In fact there are no US manufacturers currently producing this type of vehicle. Thales Australia produces the highly successful and world-beating Bushmaster Protected Mobility Vehicle with a gross weight of around 15 tonnes, and the US is currently producing the 30-tonne MRAP protected vehicles. The PMV-light specifications call for a gross vehicle weight of just seven tonnes.

The Australian government, in line with our election commitments and the statements I mentioned earlier by the previous minister and parliamentary secretary, directed Defence to engage with local industry in late February 2009 on the PMV-L program as per our election commitment. The new Minister for Defence Personnel, Materiel and Science released a request for proposal specifications that will facilitate Australian manufacturers’ involvement on Friday, June 12.

The Australian government is determined to provide the best protection available for our fighting men and women. That is why it signed up for the US JLTV program and that is why we are engaging local manufacturers to test their capability in producing Australian prototypes to test against the US vehicles. To do otherwise would be irresponsible and extremely dangerous. This is precisely the same procedure followed by the Howard government when Thales won the original contract to provide Bushmasters to the Australian Defence Force.

The member for Paterson fails to acknowledge that the former Howard government tried to torpedo the Bushmaster contract on several occasions and had to be dragged kicking and screaming into finally providing, through the Bushmaster program, the best protection for our fighting forces available in the world. Thales has a next generation protected mobility vehicle on the drawing board, based on the outstanding success of the Bushmaster platform. Now, in line with Labor’s election commitment and the statements mentioned earlier, Thales will have the opportunity, along with other Australian manufacturers, to bid for funding to develop Australian prototypes. I have been in regular contact with Thales representatives and I am more than confident that Thales’s next generation vehicle will compete successfully with any vehicle produced anywhere in the world.

The member for Paterson is a Johnny-come-lately to this vehicle replacement program debate. He had no idea of the potential for local manufacturers in the PMV-L project until a story appeared on the front page of the Bendigo Advertiser quoting a prominent Bendigo business leader expressing concern over the government’s involvement with the US JLTV program. We know the member for Paterson is not the sharpest tool in the shed, but his level of laziness and, indeed, incompetence are not only mind-boggling but very, very dangerous, especially if he should ever have carriage of a defence portfolio in government. His ridiculous attempts to be seen to be driving this issue and claiming the credit for the government’s decisions are now exposed and would be simply laughable if the protection of our fighting men and women was not so serious and this government’s top priority. As I said earlier, when they invented the term ‘hypocrisy’ it was the Liberal Party they had in mind. When they invented the terms ‘lazy’ and ‘incompetent’ it was the member for Paterson that they had in mind.

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