House debates
Wednesday, 3 June 2026
Questions without Notice
Regional Australia
3:10 pm
Fiona Phillips (Gilmore, Australian Labor Party) | Link to this | Hansard source
My question is to the Minister for Regional Development, Local Government and the Territories. How is the Albanese Labor government delivering real outcomes for regional Australia? What other approaches to the regions is the government being asked to consider?
3:11 pm
Kristy McBain (Eden-Monaro, Australian Labor Party, Minister for Regional Development, Local Government and Territories) | Link to this | Hansard source
I want to thank the member for Gilmore. As my electorate neighbour, I know how fierce she is when it comes to advocating for her local communities. The Albanese Labor government is delivering real outcomes for regional Australia, investing in the infrastructure that our communities need to prosper and delivering it through transparent grant programs—transparency that is not colour coded. But more on that later.
Our Growing Regions Fund is already delivering real results on the ground for regional communities all over the country, thanks to almost $600 million in funding. And I was pleased to recently hear Cassowary Coast Regional Council Mayor Teresa Millwood talk about the revitalisation of the Mission Beach town centre in Queensland, made possible by $8 million in Growing Regions funding. And she said: 'This is going to breathe new life into Mission Beach. It's already happening. We've got people constructing new accommodation around the village green, and I've spoken to business owners, and they tell me that this is just what this place needed, and we must thank the Australian government and the Queensland government, because without their support this would not have happened.'
Through our budget, we're investing a further $750 million for future rounds of Growing Regions and Thriving Suburbs community infrastructure programs, and that's on top of the projects we're already supporting across the country through our $400 million Regional Precincts and Partnerships Program. They're practical, community driven projects that create jobs, grow local economies and strengthen regional resilience.
Just last month, I announced $48 million for 12 new projects across regional, rural and remote Australia, like Wynyard in Tassie, where more than $9.5 million is transforming Big hART artisan precinct into a hub featuring workshops, a greenhouse, cultural spaces and purpose built infrastructure to support regional enterprise growth. Producer Dudley Billing said: 'This funding gives our community a chance to lean into its strengths. The trades that build our region can carry it forward, hand built, handmade, ultralocal and built to last. That's the artisan precinct.'
These projects show what is possible when governments partner with local communities. But our grants programs are assessed based on merit and transparency. And how does this compare to other approaches?
Kristy McBain (Eden-Monaro, Australian Labor Party, Minister for Regional Development, Local Government and Territories) | Link to this | Hansard source
I hear a lot of chirping over there, so maybe if they listen up, they might learn a few things—because, last time they were in government, they used regional grants money as their own personal election war chest. They gave out $261 million of their $272 million Regional Growth Fund to coalition held seats, with $248 million of that funding allocated just before the 2019 election. That's what it's like under them: pork-barrelling on an industrial scale. But not under this government, because on this side of the House, we're a party for all the regions, not some of them.
Anthony Albanese (Grayndler, Australian Labor Party, Prime Minister) | Link to this | Hansard source
It's not the most unpleasant way he's been sat down, after what happened to him at the club!
Opposition members interjecting—
He was defending me! No, he did well. I ask that further questions be placed on the Notice Paper. I also ask that Michael McCormack be given question No. 1 tomorrow.
Milton Dick