Labor vows to support working from home as Coalition touts public servants cuts – as it happened | Australia news

Labor vows to keep work-from-home entitlements as Coalition touts public servants cuts

More than 36,000 public servants will be axed if the opposition takes power, while Labor vows to keep work-from-home entitlements, saying they save people $5000.

The Liberals have attacked Labor for expanding the public service by 36,000 people as it cut costs on consultants, with opposition finance spokesperson Jane Hume confirming they’d be gone under a Coalition government.

“We think we can bring down the number of public servants to where it was at the end of Covid,” she told Sky News on Sunday.

We think that the 36,000 public servants that have been brought on haven’t demonstrated that the improvements to the services, to the public, have been corresponding.

Hume said frontline services would not be cut. The Coalition has not outlined the source of the cuts.

Australian Associated Press

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Key events

Summary

Rafqa Touma

That is all for today’s live blog. Here is a wrap up, in case you missed anything:

  • Prime minister Anthony Albanese said the government’s additional $150 in energy bill relief, announced last night to be included in Labor’s pre-election budget on Tuesday, will put downward pressure on inflation. “We wanted to make sure that this energy bill relief was extended through this calendar year to the end of 2025,” he said.

  • Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the rebate is not an election bribe but a “hip-pocket relief for households”

  • The Coalition immediately matched the $150 energy bill rebate, with shadow finance minister Jane Hume saying the need for relief from high electricity and gas prices is “caused by Labor’s failed policies”.

  • Albanese called out opposition leader Peter Dutton’s push to end work-from-home for public servants and “sack 36,000 public servants”.

  • The US cut research funding from seven Australian universities, after the Trump administration told Australian university researchers a push to promote administration priorities and avoid “DEI, woke gender ideology and the green new deal” was behind a “temporary pause” of funding.

Thank you for joining us on the live blog – we will see you back here again tomorrow.

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