The treasurer, Jim Chalmers, has criticised the opposition leader Peter Dutton’s budget reply speech as “unhinged” and lacking in economic credibility, as he set out around Australia to explain the government’s own economic plan.

With parliament now in recess for a week, Chalmers headed to Port Augusta in South Australia with the environment minister, Tanya Plibersek, and SA state and federal colleagues to promote the government’s renewable energy transition agenda, badged as Future Made in Australia.

But the treasurer also attacked Dutton’s reply speech, delivered in parliament last night.

“All we got from Peter Dutton was the usual unhinged, nasty, nuclear negativity in the rant which he tried to pass off as a budget in reply,” Chalmers said.

He accused the opposition leader of failing to explain how he would pay for the suite of measures he promised a future Coalition government would deliver, including more generous tax cuts and the construction of nuclear reactors at unspecified sites around Australia.

Earlier on Friday, Dutton was challenged over the number of foreigners who buy houses in Australia each year after promising in his budget reply speech to ban foreign investors.

The opposition leader was asked on Nine’s Today show on Friday about the impact of foreign buyers on the housing market after he proposed the ban as a key measure to ease pressure on the market.

He did not provide the number of homes sold to foreign buyers each year, saying instead that his proposed restrictions on migration would ease housing pressures overall.

“We say in the first year, 40,000 homes would be freed up,” Dutton said.

Debating Dutton on the program, the government services minister, Bill Shorten, had the number at hand. “I’ll tell you how low it is,” Shorten said. “It’s less than 5,000, Peter. [Over] two years, less than 5,000.”

Earlier program presenter Karl Stefanovic asked Dutton how he felt about the government labelling him “Darth Vader” for his doom-and-gloom tone. In Thursday night’s budget reply, he had promised to cut migration by 25%, to 140,000 migrants a year, and further cut the number of overseas students.

“When your opponents reduce themselves to personal attacks, you know that you have come up with a policy that they can’t really poke a hole in,” Dutton said.

But when Shorten challenged him to provide the number of home sales to foreign buyers over the past two years, he replied with an attack.

“Well, Bill, back to you. How did you go in the 2019 election?”

Shorten jabbed back, suggesting hypocrisy.

“Oooh, oooh, did you say you don’t like personal attacks?” Shorten asked, adding: “Zinger! You just said before you didn’t like personal attacks. As soon as you’re under pressure, you go personal.”

Shorten repeated the question about foreign homebuyers. Dutton answered a different one.

“We say in the first year, 40,000 homes will be freed up,” he said. “We have a situation where if the government had adopted our policy over a five-year period, you would free up 325,000 homes.

“So the number of people who are foreign citizens who are buying houses in our country is low but nonetheless it contributes to an overall shortage of housing in our country.”

Shorten then provided the number of 5,000 over two years – a number that the education minister, Jason Clare, had also furnished when responding to Dutton’s speech immediately after it was delivered.

skip past newsletter promotion

Peter Dutton delivers budget reply speech – video

After his speech, Dutton also appeared to be unclear about how many foreign students were renting homes in Australia. The ABC 7.30 program presenter, Sarah Ferguson, put to him that only 4% of international students were in the rental market, based on figures from the housing industry.

“Really?” Dutton replied. “Well, where are they living, Sarah?”

On Friday Shorten said Dutton’s reply speech was “lightweight” and “a showbag of slogans and Band-Aids”.

“In the last two years less than 5,000 foreigners have bought houses, so it’s about 2,500 a year,” Shorten told ABC Radio National after the Today show interview. “So he’s going to stop that for two years. We’re going to need more than 2,500 houses a year.”

The minister said the real focus in the migration system should be on net overseas migration.

“What we need to do is reduce, I think in a structured way, the number of visas we’re issuing for people to come to this country,” he said. “We want to get it back to its long-term average.”

Dutton also promised to cut the number of incoming permanent migrants annually from 185,000 to 160,000 to address the nation’s housing shortage.

Tuesday’s federal budget capped migration at 185,000 places, with most dedicated to skilled workers.

Chalmers said Dutton was just “scratching around for something to say in a budget reply speech”.

The Greens leader, Adam Bandt, launched a double broadside in a statement posted on X, condemning Dutton’s migration agenda and the government’s detention legislation.

“Dutton’s vision for the country: blame migrants, refugees & international students,” Bandt posted. “That’s it. More hate. More dog-whistling. Sadly, instead of drawing a line in the sand, Labor’s joining in a race to the bottom with their Trump-like migration bill.”

The Nationals leader, David Littleproud, said the Coalition’s plans to cut migration were focused on the housing market.

“It’s allowing supply to catch up,” Littleproud told ABC News Breakfast. “We have to allow homes to be built and state and local governments to get on with the job, to get on with planning and help industry to build the homes.”

The Reserve Bank governor, Michele Bullock, has acknowledged that the spike in migration since Australia’s borders reopened after the emergency phase of the Covid-19 pandemic was putting pressure on housing. Speaking to journalists on 7 May after the board met and decided to keep official interest rates on hold, Bullock noted that migration had also provided much-needed workers.

“Our judgment is that on balance it really hasn’t added dramatically to inflation, with the exception that it has put big pressure on the housing market and that’s obviously working its way out in rents,” she said.

Read More: World News | Entertainment News | Celeb News
Guardian

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

AFL live updates: Swans star takes aim at Dons’ physical ‘facade’, Bevo’s Dogs face Suns

Essendon’s physicality is under scrutiny after Sydney star Tom Papley took aim…

Mass graves found at southern Gaza hospital raided by Israeli forces

NewsFeed Search teams in Gaza say they’ve uncovered hundreds of bodies in…

ICC T20 World Cup 2024: Can Rohit Sharma’s India win the World Cup?

An experienced India side will look to leave last year’s heartache behind…

Why Nicole Kidman Likely Missed Husband Keith Urban’s CMT Awards Performance

Keith Urban debuted his song “Straight Line,” which is about putting the…