Australia news live: John Howard criticises lack of detail on voice to parliament; Scott Morrison jokes on Facebook about extra jobs
Michaelia Cash #MichaeliaCash
Key events
Show key events only
Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature
Employment minister speaking
The shadow employment minister, Michaelia Cash’s, press conference is over and now the current employment minister, Tony Burke, has taken to the microphone in Sydney.
The media conferences come after the release of employment data today and wages data yesterday.
Updated at 23.23 EDT
Cash will not comment on Porter’s responsibilities in Morrison saga
Cash was asked if Christian Porter should have told her about the instruments Morrison was using, but said she would not deal “in hypotheticals.”
Cash was attorney general in 2021, when Morrison took on additional powers in home affairs and treasury and the resources portfolio, and she said she didn’t know that Morrison had gained those additional powers.
Porter was aware of what was going on when he was attorney general in 2020 and Morrison took on the additional portfolios.
Updated at 23.20 EDT
Cash accepts Morrison’s “global apology”
Cash says she isn’t disappointed Scott Morrison didn’t apologise to her personally, because she wasn’t a minister “concerned personally.”
I accept Scott’s global apology yesterday but again, I can assure you this is not something that I dwell on. The reasons are actually issues that are out there affecting people’s ability to run their businesses on a daily basis.
Updated at 23.16 EDT
Cash says jobs and electricity prices should be focus, not Morrison saga
Quite frankly, as someone who has been on the ground for the last few days in Tasmania – ground, listening to in particular small businesses, I can tell you, not one person raised this issue with me but what they did raise was what we are seeing today, the loss of full-time jobs across Australia, the inability to get access to the labour they need … The other policy decision they keep raising with me is that when he went to the election he said to Australia, if I am elected, I will ensure your electricity, our prices are reduced by $275 a year. People voted in good faith on that process. That has really been gone, thrown away by the now prime minister so when it comes to talking to Australians about the issues that matter for them, they are the two main issues raised with me.
Cash – calling out Albanese for breaking election promises – is then asked about Morrison’s dishonesty:
Question: Morrison went to the nation saying Karen Andrews was the only home affairs minister. Should he resign?
He was overwhelmingly elected by the people in his electorate and that was only but a few weeks ago. The people of Cook voted for Scott Morrison to represent them in the parliament. I do not believe he should resign but what I would also say, I am very proud to be proud of the former government literally got Australia through Covid-19 because of the decisions the former government made we saved around 40,000 lives. I don’t think that should ever be forgotten by the Australian people.
Updated at 23.18 EDT
Michaelia Cash accuses prime minister of acting like an opposition leader
Cash says Anthony Albanese should be waiting for legal advice, instead of criticising Scott Morrison.
Instead of acting like a leader of the opposition, act like the prime minister of Australia, await the outcome of the advice from the solicitor general.
Updated at 23.11 EDT
Scott Morrison’s secrecy a ‘great disappointment’, Michaelia Cash says
Cash says she first found out about the Morrison secret ministries saga in the media.
She says that Morrison yesterday explained his decisions but admits it was nevertheless disappointing he didn’t tell his colleagues.
Like so many colleagues and my leader, Peter Dutton, he has expressed disappointment. The decision itself, based on what appears to be section 63 and 64 of the Constitution, is a legal one, but of course the transparency and the not telling the relevant colleagues at the time is a great disappointment and Mr Morrison yesterday, in addressing the media, here acknowledged this, he apologised to colleagues and in particular those affected by his decisions and that was certainly the right thing to do.
Updated at 23.08 EDT
Michaelia Cash calls for government to allow veterans and pensioners to work without affecting their pension
The shadow employment minister says she has recently come back from being “on the ground” in Tasmania where she says the inability to get access to the labour they need is a big concern for small business owners.
They cannot understand why prime minister Albanese has not already implemented the very sensible policy that the leader of the opposition, Peter Dutton, has put forward in relation to allowing veterans and pensioners to work one additional day without affecting their pension.
Updated at 23.05 EDT
Shadow employment minister says loss of jobs and participation rate drop should be ringing “alarm bells” for Albanese government
Shadow minister for employment, Michaelia Cash, is speaking in Perth after the release of the latest job figures today.
When you look at the figure, a reduction to 3.4%, it is just that, a headline figure.
When you actually go behind the figure itself, alarm bells should start ringing for the Albanese government. We saw a loss of full-time jobs of around 80,000.
But what we also saw – which again the alarm bells should start ringing for the Albanese government – is a drop in the participation rate.
Shadow minister for employment Michaelia Cash. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP
Updated at 23.04 EDT
There were 1,170 new cases in the last reporting period, and eight people are in intensive care.
Average earnings growth slow
If the headline jobless rate at 3.4% might not be telling the full story on the labour market, wages numbers out today from the ABS help to fill in more of the tale.
As we saw yesterday, the Wage Price Index for the June quarter was weaker than expected, with the 2.6% annual rate of increase barely higher than the 2.4% pace recording in the March quarter. (And that as the jobless rate kept edging lower.)
Well, average weekly ordinary time earnings are out for the period to the end of May too, and “ordinary” is how many workers will view the figures.
According to the ABS, adults working full time collected $1770 in May, up 1.9% or $33, from the same month a year ago. That’s modest, of course, given CPI was actually running at 6.2% for the month, we learned this week.
More to the point, though, that 1.9% increase was actually lower than the 2.1% annual increase in AWE recorded in November. That decline came even though average monthly employment grew by 46,000, the ABS noted.
This discrepancy will probably get more scrutiny. The ABS puts it down to more people working in lower paying jobs, dragging the average lower.
Bjorn Jarvis, head of labour statistics at the ABS said:
Over the past six months there has been increasing employment, including full-time employment, in some lower paying industries, such as accommodation and food services, placing some downward influence on changes in average earnings.
If that’s the case, we can expect extra emphasis at next month’s Jobs and Skills Summit on how to lift the number of well-paying jobs to keep many households from falling into poverty amid soaring bills for most things.
The ABS says more people working in lower paying jobs, dragging the average wage lower. Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images
Updated at 22.57 EDT