Senate debates

Wednesday, 3 February 2021

Statements by Senators

Tasmania: Morrison Government

1:52 pm

Photo of Carol BrownCarol Brown (Tasmania, Australian Labor Party, Shadow Assistant Minister for Infrastructure and Regional Tourism) Share this | Hansard source

My apologies, Madam Acting Deputy President. Tasmania is well behind the eight ball in the development of a clean energy hydrogen production and export industry at Bell Bay, because this government and this Prime Minister are long on rhetoric and short on actual delivery. They failed to make a commitment towards this important new industry for Northern Tasmania at the last election, and, whilst they like to make supportive noises—as they have done in the past on many projects, they make the noises and talk about support—they have continued to fail when it comes to stumping up any actual investment. This failure has real-world, tangible impacts.

We have the potential, with the right investment from the federal government, to create well-paid, secure and decent manufacturing jobs in Northern Tasmania, but this government and this Prime Minister simply aren't interested. When it comes to rorting taxpayers' money and securing dodgy land deals for mates in his own backyard, this Prime Minister can't sign up quickly enough, but, when it comes to actually investing in creating jobs in places like Tasmania, he's nowhere to be seen. Tasmania desperately needs more good and secure jobs and jobs with higher wages. With higher unemployment and lower wages, a greater proportion of people and businesses in Tasmania are reliant on JobKeeper and JobSeeker than the nation as a whole. Yet next month Mr Morrison and this government are proposing to abandon these people and businesses by ending JobKeeper and axing the coronavirus supplement.

The government claims it will have something to announce. We've heard that before. This is what the government is saying: the government claims it will have something to announce regarding JobSeeker prior to the end of the supplement. Sadly, the many thousands of Tasmanians who rely on this payment to make ends meet and put food on the table are now used to this government stringing them along until the last possible minute. This is no way to give people the certainty they need to help them secure a job. This is no way to treat people who, through no fault of their own, have found themselves without a job or without enough hours of work because of the impacts of this pandemic. We also know that many tourism, travel, creative and event businesses and workers in these industries are continuing to struggle with international borders set to remain closed for some time and the continuing impact of capacity restrictions.

Just this week, the Tourism Export Council released figures showing that domestic travel has replaced less than 20 per cent of the revenue received from international visitors. In fact, 55 per cent of tourism businesses exposed to the international market will not survive until September without some kind of government support. Yet, as it has done to unemployed Australians, the government has failed to communicate with businesses in the tourism industry about any plan.

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