House debates

Thursday, 4 June 2026

Matters of Public Importance

Budget

4:11 pm

Photo of Pat ConaghanPat Conaghan (Cowper, National Party, Shadow Assistant Treasurer) | Hansard source

We, on this side of the floor, know that, if you tax something more heavily, you get less of it. This Labor government has decided to take aim at aspiration, ambition and Australian values. Are those the things that we really want less of in our nation? We need our nation to prosper.

They also appear arrogant enough to believe that the promises made prior to an election can be arbitrarily broken with the flick of a pen and that Aussies should thank them for it, because let's be clear: no-one voted for these taxes. Before the election, the Prime Minister stated, more than 50 times, he would not introduce them. So much for 'my word is my bond'!

In the pages of this budget, we see a desperate Treasurer at the helm of a sinking ship that's sailing on a sea of broken promises—and I should say 'a pirate ship', because Labor is pillaging the pockets of millions of hardworking Australians because it cannot mention the nation's finances. And the hardest hit by this pirate Treasurer parading as an intergenerational Robin Hood are our small-business owners and our generational farmers—the backbone of our economy and the largest employers in regional Australia. They're the ones that take the risks, and train and employ our young people, and, more importantly, produce things—produce things for their communities and this nation. But the government is reaching into their tills and taking a 47 per cent stake claim.

All those unflattering memes of the PM and his Treasurer alongside small-business owners have flooded our social media pages, and they paint a very clear picture: they've done none of the work and taken none of the risk, but they'll take half of what you earn in the end. And, like pirates, they're taking something that they haven't earned because they saw the opportunity to do so and just because the lower house has the numbers on their ship to do so with disturbing ease.

It's no wonder that Australia is now in the unenviable position of having more than 50 per cent of voters reliant on government as their main income, because why would you take a punt? Why would you get out there and risk everything? Creating, managing and growing a small business or farming enterprise is hard. I can say this from personal experience, having run a business for 18 years before coming to this place—unlike those opposite, who roll out of university into union jobs or political office and have never once shouldered the burden of managing the bottom line, keeping their staff safe and paid, or dealing with cash-flow issues or midnight BAS submissions. Very few have also ever tended to crops or livestock while battling the weather and global factors and everything in between.

Comments

No comments