May 15, 2024
ANALYSING the budget for the 50th time in his career, Kennedy MP Bob Katter says the government’s ministers and their departments have no idea what’s going on outside Canberra, and it shows in the 2024 papers.
As he flicked through the 186-page Budget Paper No. 2 document, Mr Katter said he noted high volumes of spending across a wide spectrum of issues, yet devoid of any succinct detail, as if “the government was trying to cover all bases.”
“Out of a budget worth about $700bn, a good $30bn to $40bn is going back to government departments under the guise of ‘streamlining and developing new processes, or creating reports or improving compliance’,” Mr Katter said.
“I believe the Prime Minister has given orders to his ministers, on what he wants, but they, or their department heads have no idea what’s happening out here. They’re fifth-generation Canberra bureaucrats, a ‘million miles away from North Queensland’.
“So now they’ll be ‘looking into it’ and creating reports, and by the time those reports come back, we’ll have a new government.”
Mr Katter said it was only fair to note this budget lacked vision just as much as previous budgets in the past couple of decades.
“Take Ben Chifley, he gave us telephones, he eradicated tuberculosis, he built the Snowy Mountains and he delivered secondary industry with the Holden motorcar. He did all that in a bit over five years. Now if you put all the Prime Ministers together since I've been here you wouldn't get anything that remotely resembles that.
“There’s money in there for roads, for health, for housing, but it’s all global – there’s no deadlines, details or specifics, we’ll have to vigorously fight for the crumbs – especially in regional Queensland.
“The government outlined it was committing $21bn on infrastructure spend on Queensland, below that it detailed $4bn would go to improve the Southeast transport networks, and then it listed just $467m for the Bruce Hwy corridor.
“Or, we can fight for scraps in the $1bn Roads to Recovery Program.
“If you’re sitting in Brisbane and Canberra making these decisions, you’re a long way away from our crumbling roads.”
Mr Katter said it was evident it was time for the decentralisation of government departments, especially with measures included which would decimate rural Australia.
“They’re hitting us with the ban of live sheep exports, whatever is left of this industry previously destroyed through the deregulation of wool will be gone. They’re hitting us with the New Vehicle Efficiency Standard – driving up the costs of four-wheel drives which people not just remote towns, but regional cities as well.
“Why isn’t the agriculture department based where the agriculture is? Last time I checked, there aren’t too many crops growing at 18 Marcus Clarke St, Canberra.
“When I was made the mines minister in Queensland, I moved the mines department to North Queensland – where the action was. When I was made First Australians minister, I moved the department to Cairns.”
Mr Katter said he did his best to find the positives in the budget and accepted funding linked to critical minerals under the controversial Future Made in Australia Fund and said he would be vigorously chasing funding for the building of facilities in the greater Townsville region.
Among the funding that interested Mr Katter included: