This data was produced by OpenAustralia from a variety of sources.
Cameron Caldwell MP

- Liberal National Party Representative for Fadden
- Shadow Assistant Minister for Housing (since 17 Feb 2026)
- Entered House of Representatives on 15 July 2023 — Federal election
- Email me whenever Cameron Caldwell speaks (no more than once per day)
Most recent appearances in parliament
- Business: Consideration of Legislation (3 Mar 2026)
“This is a regrettable step by the government. We know that these are extremely consequential bills.”
- Private Members' Business: Housing (2 Mar 2026)
“This is an important motion because it seeks to effectively give the government a pat on the back for housing, when in actual fact we know that they're failing quite broadly on housing. What we do know for sure is that the minister has absolutely no solutions to this problem. She continues to talk about this aspirational plan that they have to deliver 1.2 million homes. She continues to talk...”
- Statements by Members: Cost of Living (12 Feb 2026)
“Today I want to deliver a message to all Australians: you deserve better from this government. I say that because I know that in suburbs in my electorate, like Parkwood, Pimpama or Pacific Pines, you're struggling under the burden of this cost-of-living crisis that has been thrust upon you by this Albanese Labor government. We know that the Reserve Bank thinks that you're doing it tough too,...”
Numbers
Please note that numbers do not measure quality. Also, Representatives may do other things not currently covered by this site. (More about this)
- Has spoken in 50 debates in the last year — above average amongst Representatives.
- People have made 0 comments on this Representative's speeches — average amongst Representatives.
- This Representative's speeches are understandable to an average 16–17 year old, going by the Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level score.
- 2 people are tracking whenever this Representative speaks — email me whenever Cameron Caldwell speaks.
- Has used three-word alliterative phrases (e.g. "she sells seashells") 64 times in debates — below average amongst Representatives. (Why is this here?)