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Treasurer Dr Jim Chalmers, Great Hall, Parliament House, 26 March 2025 |
From the Canberra Press Gallery: Regional Australia is the engine room of private sector activity in Australia. With the Budget set to see a reversal of the public sector’s growth that has hidden the real cost of living pressures experienced by most Australians, it is difficult to see how the Budget’s public sector and Net Zero focus will help the regions. To put it another way, regional Australians are the biggest losers in this Budget, with no relief in sight.
The night before I went into the Budget Lockup in Parliament House, Alexandra Marshall had this to say in the Unfiltered newsletter:
Of course, we have the Budget release and Speccie writer Michael de Percy has volunteered his sanity to go down and be part of the lockup. If you’re not already, follow us on Facebook where we’ll keep you updated. Michael is going to be looking for the crazy, infuriating, and outrageous detail in Chalmer’s major work that everyone else has missed.
Writing in the Morning Double Shot newsletter before I went into the Budget Lockup, Terry Barnes had this to say:
Today is Budget day, and the Albanese government’s spendathon is tipped to continue. I see from Alexandra Marshall’s Unfiltered newsletter that our gallery correspondent Michael de Percy is going into the media lock-up to pore over the Budget papers, so you don’t have to. In the meantime, he’s written about what he doesn’t want to see in the Budget, and how the Albanese government weak leadership in economic policy is costing Australia dear as we become less efficient and productive. Meanwhile, Alexandra herself is flabbergasted at the brazenness of the Prime Minister’s latest pre-election handout.
The day after my article was released, Terry Barnes wrote in the Morning Double Shot newsletter:
Our man in the Budget lock-up, Michael de Percy, ran his acute political eye over the Budget, with a particular focus on how Chalmers’s effort will go down in regional Australia, where Labor needs to shore up support in areas like the Hunter, while pushing down Coalition support in regional Queensland, Tasmania, and elsewhere. Here is his report, and there’ll be more later today.
Even our illustrious Editor-in-Chief, Rowan Dean, shared the joy:
Regional Australians are the biggest budget losers https://t.co/rSewn8Q6dO
— Rowan Dean (@rowandean) March 25, 2025
It was quite the adventure for a first-time Press Gallery journalist, and it was great to be part of the Spectator Australia team!
My latest in The Spectator Australia, Regional Australians are the biggest budget losers.
Surprise surprise - regional Australians are set to be the 'Biggest #Budget Losers' 😠
— The Spectator Australia (@SpectatorOz) March 25, 2025
"Almost every aspect of funding that will impact the regions has an ideological and climate change focus to it," writes Michael de Percy.https://t.co/IZo4sxlVGh
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