House debates

Wednesday, 9 September 2015

Questions without Notice

Trade with China

2:38 pm

Photo of Ms Julie BishopMs Julie Bishop (Curtin, Liberal Party, Minister for Foreign Affairs) Share this | Hansard source

I do thank the member for Hasluck for his question. The member for Hasluck knows that this is an agreement with another country. This is in the Foreign Affairs and Trade portfolio. I can tell him that, indeed, there is substantial support for the free-trade agreement with China across the Australian community from exporters of goods and services, from industry groups, from the business sector, from people looking for jobs and even from those outside the Australian community, who have recognised the significant advantages this agreement will bring us. For example, Tim Groser, New Zealand's trade minister, said:

…we are using the Australian FTA as part of the structure of an argument as to why we know need to upgrade China's first FTA.

In other words, New Zealand reaped such enormous benefits from its 2008 free-trade agreement with China, it now wants what China has offered us in our agreement. But it is what Labor luminaries had to say that is the most interesting. Former Labor Premier of Victoria, John Brumby, now head of the Australia-China Business Council said:

ChAFTA is a high quality agreement that will deepen Australia’s relationship with our biggest trading partner…

Premier Daniel Andrews, Labor Premier of Victoria, said:

It is very exciting to see the free trade agreement that, for the first time takes a really bold step in terms of services.

Labor Premier of South Australia, Jay Weatherill, said:

This free trade agreement will give us the impetus to grow that trade opportunity even further.

Former Labor Prime Minister, Bob Hawke, said the Labor Party 'must not go backwards on this issue'. Former Labor foreign minister, Bob Carr, stated categorically:

There will be more jobs and higher wages in Australia if the China free trade agreement goes ahead.

The Chief Executive of the Minerals Council of Australia, Brendan Pearson, called any decision to block the trade deal as 'unthinkable'.

Brent Finlay, President of the National Farmers' Federation said:

If the Parliament fails to ratify ChAFTA this year

… … …

This will damage the competitiveness and affordability of all Australian products in China, and set Australian agriculture back $300 million in 2016.

So why is it that the Leader of the Opposition opposes this free-trade agreement and the benefits that will flow? Because he is the puppet of the CFMEU. The myth that a flood of underskilled Chinese workers will steal Australian jobs is a disgrace.

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