Senate debates

Wednesday, 4 February 2026

Bills

Housing Australia Amendment (Accountability) Bill 2025; Second Reading

9:07 am

Photo of Malcolm RobertsMalcolm Roberts (Queensland, Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party) Share this | Hansard source

I thank Senator Bragg for introducing the Housing Australia Amendment (Accountability) Bill 2025, which One Nation supports. There's an urgent need for this bill, which restores the Senate's right to scrutinise regulations issued under a bill.

In recent years, more and more provisions which would previously have been included in the bill—hard coded, if you like—are now provided for in regulations which are written by bureaucrats for the benefit of bureaucrats, ministers, donors and mates. These are regulations that, in many cases, are beyond the reach of parliamentary scrutiny. They avoid parliament. We are increasingly seeing not government but dictatorship—a collectivist agenda informed by communist ideology and deployed with complete contempt for the parliamentary process and the large majority of Australians who did not vote Labor or Greens. The Liberal Party had form on this, yet Labor have normalised it.

The Albanese Labor government is in the process of removing the option of homeownership from the reach of everyday Australians. Young people will simply not be able to own their own home or use that home in the way that most in this chamber have been able to. Let me explain. One Nation opposed the Help to Buy scheme because the scheme ensures that people will, most likely, never fully own their own home—never. In the many, many years that this scheme makes you a slave to the government, in your own home, the government does nothing for you. For example, with any renovations you make, the government benefits from what you pay. Installing a new kitchen for $20,000 means you get only $12,000 in capital appreciation and the government pockets $8,000 in additional equity for doing nothing. If you spend $21,000, you'll first need to get the government's permission to modify your own home. You can't use any equity you do accumulate to refinance and free money up for buying a business, for instance. That's expressly forbidden.

Say your children get into trouble or need a hand to buy their own home. You can't help them. There is no part refinancing. You're trapped. If you want to buy the government out, then you have to pay them back in five per cent lots. Why? Well, the government knows prices appreciate. Taking a loan to pay all of the equity off in one go costs the government money. They miss out on the capital appreciation during the period you're paying that loan off. Say you want to use your home as security for a personal loan: no. There are no secured loans against one's own home. They're expressly prohibited. That's why we did not support the scheme.

We are proud we didn't support it, because it's a trap. It's not about letting our young get ahead; it's about limiting the amount they can get ahead by. That's what Labor is doing. As usual, communists make every person equal by making everyone poor. This scheme is a tax dressed up as a helping hand, a solution to the exemption of family homes from the capital gains tax. Nobody stands between this Labor government and the money they want to give away to other people in electoral bribes—sorry, 'promises'.

One Nation opposes the Albanese government's low-deposit homeownership scheme, which allows borrowers to get a home loan with a five per cent deposit—or, if they are single parents, two per cent. The government underwrites the mortgage so the bank does not wear the risk. You'll notice a pattern here: this government is every bit as friendly with Australia's rapacious banking sector as the Liberals were. Under the low-deposit scheme, the home can't be valued at more than $1.5 million, and there's no limit on the income of the applicant or the number of mortgages issued. Don't you just love this scheme! It should be called the 'making it easier for high-income earners to buy a house in urban Labor electorates' scheme.

No wonder the government's support in recent opinion polls is strongest amongst those earning more than $100,000. It's the party of the workers no more. The party of the rich is a better description of Labor. No wonder the Liberals have lost market share. Labor is stealing their voters. One Nation is now the party of the worker and the party of small-business owners who use their home as security to grow their business.

Our opposition to the low-deposit scheme has been proven to be the right decision. House prices in capital cities went up by between eight per cent and 10 per cent in the year to January 2026, adding $100,000 to the average Sydney home price. That's $100,000 more that people will have to borrow to get their home. Thanks, Labor! The additional demand for homes from these schemes forced the price up and made affording the mortgage harder. A low deposit is no help if you can't afford the repayments on 95 per cent or 98 per cent of a $1-million-plus mortgage. They've done this and destroyed hopes. The combined average price for a home in our capital cities is now $1.14 million.

One Nation policy is to allow first home owners to top up the first home owners' grant with secured equity from the person's own superannuation account. We will allow low-income earners to buy with a five per cent deposit against a government guarantee on the mortgage. Why won't this force up home prices? It will be because of the thing the Albanese government refuses to do: stopping mass immigration. A One Nation government will deport around 200,000 people who are here illegally and will have a moratorium on new arrivals for three years, creating negative immigration. As Australians engage with the housing scheme, they will find there will be a home available to purchase without the price of homes being pushed up. One Nation policies have been thought through. One policy complements another, and every Australian will benefit. Our policies come in suites—s-u-i-t-e-s—unlike this Labor government, which continues to throw money at problems it never solves because it never thinks things through. They want to look good, not do good. It's shallow and hurting young people.

Yesterday, the Reserve Bank put up interest rates by 0.25 per cent, which would not have happened if government policies had not driven up house prices by eight to 10 per cent in the last year. Every mortgage holder in Australia is now facing higher repayments because of the Albanese government's inability to manage government policy. Senator Bragg is right that this bill is necessary to provide scrutiny and to try and elevate the standard of government in this country. Can I say to the Labor government: for the love of Australia, please, please stop trying to help. You're making it worse, especially for young people. Let people get about their business, keep more of their own money and more easily pay for their homes themselves. Stop bringing in millions of new arrivals—millions of new arrivals—all of whom need a home in which to live. Stop forcing people out of their homes with the evil land tax, as Labor are doing in Victoria, so that your mates running union super funds can buy up the homes. Every new scheme makes things worse for young Australians. That's why we don't support your idiot ideas—your dishonest, ludicrous ideas.

Where else should the accountability be forced on the government? Foreign corporations used to pay 30 per cent withholding tax on housing investments like build to rent. Labor has cut that tax to 15 per cent. It's been halved; you've looked after your corporate mates from overseas. Labor makes it easy for its mates, globalist foreign wealth funds, to rip more money out of Australia and to rip more money off Australians. You lower the tax, and the tax will come out of the people instead. Let's be clear. This Labor government said to foreign corporate landlords like BlackRock, Vanguard, State Street and First State—with interlocking ownership, they are in reality BlackRock Inc. Labor said to BlackRock Inc., 'We'll cut the amount of tax you pay in half.' Australians: forget the Australian dream of owning your own home. Labor's dream is that you live in a shoebox apartment paying rent to BlackRock Inc forever whilst those foreign corporations pay less tax than you do. Labor has just cut it in half.

That's what 'build to rent' means. Whenever you hear 'build to rent' from Labor, remember renting forever to a foreign corporate landlord. They will build homes for sure, but Australians will never ever own them. It's 'build to rent' forever. Part of the United Nations and World Economic Forum's agenda is global control of people and wealth transfer from the people to global wealth funds like BlackRock Inc. This Labor government is helping that along by giving these foreign corporations a big tax cut to incentivise foreign corporations to buy Australian homes.

The bill did not reduce the tax for Australian owners; it brought foreign owners' tax rate down to the same level as Australian investors. That's the most telling part of all. This bill only changed the tax treatment of foreign predatory multinational corporations. Is Labor the party for Australia, or is it the party for foreign corporations? Build to rent answers that question. Clearly Labor is for the foreign corporations like BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street—BlackRock Inc. That's why Labor's policies on mass immigration and housing are designed to destroy homeownership for all young families.

Instead, One Nation is for Australians owning their own home. On all this, I told you so for years. I initiated the mass immigration and housing debates four to five years ago and have hammered both. Only One Nation's housing policy covers all aspects: supply, demand, construction cost and finance. I'm going to do something a little unusual and quote extensively from Senator Bragg's dissenting report on the build to rent bill. I hope you don't mind, Senator Bragg. It goes to the very heart of what's wrong with the Labor Party. The following passages are taken from the dissenting report following the committee inquiry into the Labor Party's build-to-rent scheme:

Build to Rent has had minimal cut-through in Australia because our tax settings are designed to favour individual, 'mum and dad' investors, not institutions. That is appropriate.

This legislation seeks to tip the scales in favour of institutions through tax concessions, in order to make Build to Rent projects profitable for industry super funds and foreign fund managers. Labor thinks that institutions need a leg up over Australian first home buyers.

Dr Murray—

a witness in the inquiry—

was critical of the Bill's attempted perversion of our tax arrangements:

'It's not clear to me why local investors shouldn't be advantaged over foreign investors in Australian housing. I don't see that there's a good argument … for levelling the playing field there. It's not clear to me, if the intention is to attract super funds into this, why owning your own home via your super fund and renting your own home from your super fund is better than owning your own home and using that money to buy what is the best asset to own in retirement.'

That's similar to One Nation's housing policy. Here's another quote from Senator Bragg:

At the public hearing, the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia ('ASFA') suggested that Australians would prefer Black Rock and Cbus be the nation's landlords, and described mum and dad investors as undertaking a 'hobby activity'.

Really? Do you think the Australian people want to rent their house from a super fund? A hobby activity—come on! Senator Bragg continues:

This is the view of a vested interest—

that Labor is cuddling up to—

Most Australians would not agree with this proposal.

Another witness observed that we are seeing a corporatisation of housing in Australia, not from the usual suspects, the Liberal Party, but from the Labor Party, the former party of the workers, headed by Prime Minister Albanese. A witness said:

… pushing mum-and-dad investors out of the housing market will result in less competition. What we're seeing in the Northern Hemisphere is a horrific new software program called YieldStar, which in Atlanta coordinates rental increases for 81 per cent of rental properties. The board of supervisors in San Francisco has now banned this as a monopolistic practice. There's just nothing in this legislation that even prepares us for what's coming …

Hence the need for Senator Bragg's bill. His dissenting report said:

The Housing Industry Association pointed to the importance of Australia's housing market maintaining a focus on individual ownership:

'… with the association and connection with home and with location, and a sense of place and purpose … All the evidence shows that people who own their own home are far less likely to be incarcerated and more likely to be gainfully employed. All of the evidence shows positive economic, social and cultural outcomes.'

Personal responsibility is a cornerstone of a safe and productive society, I say. Senator Bragg continues:

Australians are not interested in subsidising institutional investors. When asked what organisations would be the key beneficiaries of Build to Rent tax concessions, Treasury confirmed that foreign fund managers would be at the centre—

Really? Fund managers? Foreigners? How very corporate of the Labor Party!

Some of the most alarming evidence from the public hearing was that the passing of this bill could see Australian taxpayers subsidising foreign governments in their investment in our housing market. Dr Murray warned the committee:

I find it interesting because we've already even got foreign investment funds doing build to rent. What's even funnier is that the largest one is a foreign government. We've got the Abu Dhabi Investment Council, who owns the Smith Collective on the Gold Coast, which is 1,251 build-to-rent dwellings, and we're now proposing to offer them a better tax treatment for something they're already doing—through a foreign government. I find that a bizarre outcome of this proposed bill.

It seems Prime Minister Albanese is not only best friends with billionaires like Larry Fink from BlackRock and Bill Gates from 'Vaccines R Us' but also best mates with the Islamist Abu Dhabi regime. The dissenting report said:

Approaches like Build to Rent endeavour to emulate the corporate housing model which has seen a downturn in the United States housing market.

Fund managers have become the predominant landlords in the US. According to the US Government Accountability Office ('the GAO'), large institutional investors emerged following the global financial crisis, purchasing foreclosed homes at auction in bulk and converting them into rental housing.

Prime Minister Albanese's housing schemes will lead to foreclosures and misery. This is not an unintended outcome; it's the point of it. Communists detest homeownership. It provides people with independence from the government, and that's the opposite of the fundamental purpose of the Labor government, which is to make people reliant on the government.

Senator Bragg continues:

This corporate housing model, in order to generate a return on investment for institutional investors, relies on individuals being locked into a cycle of perpetual renting.

There is a growing consensus in the US that this model has failed and is hurting prospective first home buyers. Lawmakers from both sides of politics are introducing legislation to limit institutional investment accordingly.

While the US is moving away from corporate housing, the Australian Labor Party is forcing Australia is into it.

One Nation is dedicated to all Australians being able to own their own home and to use that home as they see fit. (Time expired)

Comments

No comments