National Accounts: June Quarter 2004
September 1, 2004Economic management, the ALP’s interest rate pledge, Labor’s payroll tax – Official election campaign launch of Trish Worth
September 3, 2004TRANSCRIPT
THE HON PETER COSTELLO MP
TREASURER
Press Conference
Treasury Place, Melbourne
Thursday, 2 September 2004
10.30am
SUBJECTS: Scoresby Freeway, Latham’s broken promise, Medicare
Safety Net, interest rates
TREASURER:
Mark Latham has betrayed the people of Victoria. He had a choice. He could
honour the Labor promise to build the Scoresby Freeway, he could honour
the agreement between the Commonwealth and the State to build the freeway
with no tolls. He could keep faith with the people of Victoria and he could
demand that Steve Bracks keep his word. Whatever trust Mr Latham expected
to try to earn in Victoria was shattered this morning because Mr Latham
has indicated that if he is elected at the next election, he will tear up
the Scoresby agreement, he will connive with Steve Bracks breaking his word,
he will not honour the promise that Federal Labor made in 2001 and he will
consign the people of Melbourne to pay tolls to use their freeway for the
rest of their commuting lives.
No Victorian can trust Mark Latham.
Now I want to show you the documentation that exists in relation to the
Scoresby Freeway. There is a written agreement for the Scoresby Transport
Corridor between the Commonwealth of Australia and the Government of Victoria.
It was signed in October of 2001 by John Anderson, the Minister for Transport
of Australia and Peter Batchelor the Minister for Transport of Victoria.
It is an agreement to jointly fund the construction of the Scoresby Freeway,
clause 3(d) of that agreement reads as follows: ‘Victoria undertakes to
ensure that users of the Scoresby Freeway will not be required to pay a
direct toll.’ The Liberal Government will honour this agreement. Mark Latham
says if you vote for him, he will break it.
I want to then show you the letter that Steve Bracks wrote to all of the
residents in the Eastern Suburbs of Melbourne in November 2002, in the material
I have handed out under the heading, ‘Bracks, Listens, Acts.’ He said this
before the State election in Victoria, ‘Labor will build the Scoresby Freeway
on time and on budget. These are not just election time promises. They are
firm commitments to you and your family and they will be honoured.’ He wrote
that before the State election in November 2002.
Now I want to show you the third document in the pack which is the ALP
Statement of 28 October 2001 by Simon Crean, Shadow Treasurer and Martin
Ferguson, Shadow Minister for Transport, before the last federal election.
It begins by saying ‘a Beazley Labor Government will deliver a total Scoresby
Transport solution, not the half-hearted solution offered by the Howard
Government.’ It goes on, I want to take you down to the fourth paragraph.
‘Federal Labor will contribute $445 million for the construction of the
$890 million Scoresby Freeway linking Ringwood, Dandenong and Frankston.
Victoria pays the remainder.’ Now that has been Labor policy from October
of 2001 until today. That has been Labor policy from October of 2001 until
today and that is, to honour the agreement which has been signed.
Our Government has put aside that $445 million, it is in the Budget, for
the construction of that freeway. Until today, the Australian Labor Party
has always said that at the Commonwealth level they would fund the Scoresby
Freeway with that $445 million. And today, Mr Latham appeared in Victoria
and he smashed the trust of all Victorians. You can’t believe Labor on road
funding. Mr Bracks did it before his last State election, the Federal ALP
did it before the last Federal Election, three years later they tell you
that those promises meant nothing.
And I don’t care what promises Mr Bracks, Mr Latham goes out and makes
now on road funding in Victoria, it is just another pre-election promise,
it is a Scoresby promise, you can not believe it. It should be given precisely
the same weight as his Scoresby promise.
Three years ago, and I say to the people of Victoria, don’t be conned,
three years ago he was telling you he would fund the Scoresby Freeway, they
signed agreements, they had that policy for three years and they broke it.
So he goes out today and says ‘Oh there will be a free road somewhere else,’
you cannot believe him on that anymore than you can believe him on the Scoresby
Freeway. Mark Latham has betrayed the people of Victoria this morning. There
is only one way that you will get a government that will hold Victoria accountable.
There is only one government that is interested in looking after the people
of the Eastern Suburbs, and I am going to make one last point here.
Where is the Labor Candidate for La Trobe on this? Susan Davies was an
Independent in the Victorian Parliament where she pledged to keep Bracks
to his promises. Bracks has broken his promise and she has joined the Labor
Party. Where does she stand in relation to this broken promise today on
behalf of the constituents of the outer Eastern Suburbs of Melbourne?
JOURNALIST:
You haven’t been able to hold the Bracks Government accountable either,
I mean there is no sign that they are going to reverse the decision so that
is money that doesn’t seem to be coming to Victoria anyway.
TREASURER:
Oh no, that money is allocated to the Scoresby Freeway and it will be spent
when we get a freeway. Now, can I just say that the Victorian Government
is not going very well on its plans to impose a toll on the Scoresby Freeway
and I will refer you to the Herald Sun, on the 20th
of July 2004, where Martin Ferguson said this of the Bracks attempts to
impose tollways, ‘it seems that the whole process is a dog’s breakfast,’
he said, ‘asked how the freeway issue would affect the Federal ALP’s chances
in the Scoresby corridor, Mr Ferguson said, “Federal Labor is hardly assisted
by the Scoresby debacle,” that is what he said, he is the Transport Spokesman
for the Labor Party. Now, at that point of course Federal Labor was saying,
don’t punish us because it was Bracks that broke the promise. Now Federal
Labor has joined the broken promise.
JOURNALIST:
Are you saying that there are no other roads though, road projects in Victoria
that could possibly be deserving of this money…
TREASURER:
Well we have announced a whole raft of projects in Victoria under the Auslink
Programme. The Hume Freeway, the Craigieburn bypass, the Albury-Wodonga
bypass, we announced the Geelong-link road, we have announced upgrades to
the Port of Melbourne. But the economic proposition, the highest economic
return for road construction in Victoria is the Scoresby Freeway, that is
why it has been signed. And here is the agreement, it has been signed, a
freeway, and you know that clause 3(d), no tolls, that was actually put
in there by the Victorian Government. So, I just ask you this, after a signed
written agreement, after a personalised letter to every householder, which
Labor has broken, who would believe Labor with a promise on any other road.
It is just the most open and shut case I have ever seen in politics.
JOURNALIST:
Can you rule out any toll roads under the Auslink Programme in the future?
TREASURER:
Well, we’ve announced our whole Auslink Programme, and that whole Auslink
Programme does not include tolls on the Scoresby Freeway.
JOURNALIST:
What about…
TREASURER:
It doesn’t…
JOURNALIST:
…in the future…
TREASURER:
I’m sorry, we have no proposals – we’ve have put it out for five or six
or more years, I forget what it is – for tolls in Victoria.
JOURNALIST:
What about elsewhere?
TREASURER:
Well, the Auslink Programme is down there and it’s been announced, it’s
out there. But when you announce a road, you generally build it, and you
build it in accordance with an agreement. Can I say one other point, there
is no other State Premier that has every tried to behave like Steve Bracks.
We have never signed an agreement with another Premier who has repudiated
it before. Now if I were a Labor Premier today I’d sign a lot of agreements
with Mark Latham, because you know he will never hold you to those agreements,
and there will be other State Premiers, Premier Carr and Premier Beattie
will be sitting down today saying to themselves, why can’t we do a Bracks?
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, the Government’s already got two final bids to build the project
as a tollway, isn’t what Latham said in the past, just a recognition of
the reality that the Government is going to choose somebody in the next
few months to build it as a tollway? Isn’t that the commercial reality of
what is happening now?
TREASURER:
I don’t think the commercial reality is for a profitable tollway at all.
Some private operator is going to tender for a tollway, and build it and
try and make a profit. They are going to have to know that they can make
a profit, that they will get enough people to use it to make a profit. Now,
you see what the Bracks government hasn’t yet announced is where the rat
runs will be. Because in order to get people paying high tolls on Scoresby
they are going to be closing roads all over the Eastern Suburbs of Melbourne,
and creating rat runs. And I think once the public sees where the rat runs
are going to be going, up and down their roads of the Eastern Suburbs, and
once they see what proposed fees they are going to be paying, and now they
know that a vote for Latham is for full fee recovery, I think that road
has got a very long way to run. A very long way to run. By the way, I put
the developers on notice, they should all be on notice, that the Commonwealth
Government does not support tolls on that Scoresby Freeway.
JOURNALIST:
So what are you going to do about it?
TREASURER:
They will get no assistance. They will get no assistance. Anybody who wants
to put a toll on the Scoresby Freeway is not going to get any assistance
from the Commonwealth.
JOURNALIST:
Will they stand to get any assistance?
TREASURER:
Well they might be looking for roads to be closed, so that people can’t
travel on free roads.
JOURNALIST:
That’s a State issue…
TREASURER:
Well, I think it has got a long way to go.
JOURNALIST:
If the road goes ahead as a tollway, aren’t Victorians better off under
Latham because that’s 420 that is going to come into the State?
TREASURER:
If the road goes ahead as a tollway under Latham, you have got to understand
this, every person, every single day of their lives on their way to work,
and on their way home from work, is going to be paying for the broken promise
of Mark Latham and Steve Bracks. Get in your car, go to work, pay for the
Latham broken promise on your way to work, pay for the Latham broken promise
on your way home from work. Pay for the con that Steve Bracks put to you,
every single day. These things don’t go away you know. They don’t go away
after three months, or six months or twelve months. They are every single
working day commuting in from the seat of La Trobe, and Deakin, and Dunkley,
and Casey, and McMillan, every single day of your life you will pay for
the broken word of Mark Latham. The Latham toll on the Scoresby Freeway.
Now that is not going to make them better off. He ought to put a big picture
of himself up on the Scoresby Freeway.
JOURNALIST:
(inaudible) funding stand off with the States, that $420 million isn’t
being spent (inaudible)?
TREASURER:
Well, we don’t accept that for a moment. No, we don’t accept that for a
moment. As far as the Commonwealth is concerned, we insist on a freeway,
and we have $445 million that can build it for a freeway, and what is more,
can I just say, Steve Bracks has $445 million to build it for a freeway.
Can anybody here tell me that Steve Bracks doesn’t have $445 million? He
has got $445 million. He has got that in his bottom line, and by the way,
it is spent over four years. Is there a reason why Steve Bracks can’t spend
$445 million on the freeway, because if there is I haven’t heard it? What
is the reason? I have never heard it. They have $445 million.
JOURNALIST:
What about the $2 billion road (inaudible).
TREASURER:
Well, then they started expanding the project, and say, oh well, you know,
this, this and this. But hang on, we have got a written agreement. He has
got the money, and we’ve got the money. The land is cleared. We should be
building this now.
JOURNALIST:
Can you guarantee that the parameters of the safety net will not change
next year with regards to 80% Commonwealth (inaudible) 80% of the out-of-pocket
costs, that the thresholds won’t change, and that pregnant women 35 at birth
will be able to claim the two-thirds back?
TREASURER:
The parameters of the Medicare Safety Net will not change.
JOURNALIST:
Bernie Fraser the former Governor of the Reserve Bank says it is inevitable
that interest rates will rise after the election. Do you believe him?
TREASURER:
Well I never comment on the future movement of interest rates, but if there
were a change of Government, yes interest rates I believe will rise, significantly,
very significantly.
JOURNALIST:
Will they rise if you …
TREASURER:
Ah, well our record is on the board. We have averaged interests rates at
7% compared to Labor at 12.75%. So I think there are two post election scenarios.
There is the low interest rate scenario of the current Government, or there
is the Latham roller coaster. That is the choice which I think is very clear
in the next election.