PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
22/02/2000
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
11677
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS AT COMMUNITY LUNCHEON SCHOOL OF ARTS, NOWRA NSW

E&OE...............................................................................................

Well Prime Minister. It sounds strange when I say that now. To the Mayor,

to Joanna Gash, to John Anderson the Deputy Prime Minister, my other Cabinet

colleagues, and my other parliamentary colleagues, ladies and gentlemen.

We in the Federal Cabinet do this quite often. We get out of Canberra,

we get out of Sydney, we get out of Melbourne, and we try and hold a spread

of Cabinet meetings in the regional and rural areas of Australia whenever

we can so that we can have an opportunity of meeting a cross-section of

the local community, and can have an opportunity of communicating to you

our concern about all sections of Australian society. Can I say to my

prime ministerial counterpart today that this is a government that endeavours

to listen to the concerns of people in rural and regional Australia. It

is a government that recognises that Australia is made up of many parts.

We have a lot in common as Australians, and the things that bind us together

are a lot more important than the things that might push us apart. And

right at the moment our country at a national level is doing very well

economically. We've rarely done as well. But I recognise that not

everybody is sharing that to the full whether they live in some of the

suburbs or whether they live in some of the regional parts of Australia.

And what we hope to do by these Cabinet meetings is to supplement the

quality of the representation that the regional areas of Australia has

in the federal parliament. And can I say to you very enthusiastically,

and very genuinely that you have an outstanding federal representative

in Joanna Gash the member for Gilmore.

Required reading for me before I came here was a long memorandum that

Jo has delivered to the Lodge. I sat up last night and read through it.

She gave me a list of things that she wanted the government to do, it

was quite long. She reminded me of many of the things that we had already

done. And she also reminded me that this was a community that was bound

together by a common commitment to make Australia a stronger and better

place in which to live. And Jo has certainly been an outstanding representative

of this very diverse electorate since she won it in March of 1996. She's

played a big role in the party room in shaping social policy. She's

always fairly and strongly represented the interests of the electorate

of Gilmore. It was Joanna's persistent lobbying of me and of John

Anderseon that led me to make on behalf of the government a commitment

in 1998 that we would declare Main Road 92 as a road of national importance.

And that meant that the federal government committed itself to funding

of half of the cost of constructing that road. And I know that the Shoalhaven

Shire Council has made an enormous financial commitment and I thank you

for that Mr Mayor. I'm disturbed that so far the New South Wales

government has not matched the commitment of the federal government. And

I think that's a great shame because this is a road that's very

important to this area. And we remain absolutely committed to the financial

provision that I promised before the last federal election. I made that

promise on behalf of the government and I don't intend to walk away

from it. But I've got to get the New South Wales government to do

its bit to carry its share of the responsibility. And as a further step

in putting pressure on the New South Wales government to do its bit and

to pick up 50% which you always do with roads of national importance,

I'll seek urgently in the next few weeks a meeting with the New South

Wales Premier Mr Carr to see if we can't progress the New South Wales

contribution to the construction of this road. And I hope that that will

be effective, and I hope it is not necessary for us to consider alternatives

to that kind of approach.

Ladies and gentlemen, good government for Australia is about attending

to those things that need to be attended to at a national level, and also

responding to the legitimate interests and concerns of people at a local

level. We at the moment are engaged in a very big debate in Australia

about reforming our taxation system. And I'm not going to burden

you with a whole lot of detail about that today, you'll be relieved

to hear. But I can tell you this – that we have done a lot of things

to make the Australian economy run better. And the reason we committed

ourselves to taxation reform at the last election, why we laid it all

out before the Australian people, was because we believed that taxation

reform would be good for the Australian people and good for the Australian

economy. And in the end that's what it's all about. It's

not about how it might effect this person or that person, or this group

or that group. It is whether at the end of the day reforming the Australian

taxation system will make Australia economically stronger and more internationally

competitive. And whether it will by giving a secure funding base to the

State guarantee more effectively the delivery of important local services

such as hospitals and schools and roads and police.

And it's because we believe those things that we committed ourselves

to taxation reform. It's not easy. There are unpopular elements in

it, but at the end of the day we'll have taxation cuts worth $47

a week for the average family. We'll have cheaper fuel in the regions

of Australia. We'll have more competitive exports. We'll have

significant reductions in business costs. We'll have in aggregate

a $12 billion cut in personal income tax. And overall it will be of enormous

economic benefit to Australia and it's because of the national economic

benefit that we remain so absolutely committed to the cause of taxation

reform.

Ladies and gentlemen, one of the great resources that this country has,

is of course, the inventive capacity of its people. We are for a nation

of under 20 million people capable of punching well above our weight in

areas of technology and areas of science. We are often at the leading

edge of many activities in this area and you don't only find this

in Melbourne and Sydney and Canberra but you also find it in the regions

of Australia.

And in that context I'm delighted to announce today that the Federal

Government will provide $1 million for the Solar Sailor project which

is based at Ulladulla and this money will support the construction and

demonstration of a catamaran powered by solar and wind energy with compressed

natural gas as a backup.

It will represent leading edge technology, the solar wing uses energy

from the sun or wind separately or in combination. It represents the potential

to travel on our waterways and oceans in a clean environmentally friendly

manner. Australia has a proud record of exporting leading edge marine

technology and Solar Sailor represents an exciting new direction. The

development of this technology is a credit to the people involved and

is the latest evidence of the innovation and potential that does exist

in regional Australia. And, as I say in this instance, the people of Ulladulla

and surrounding regions stand to reap the benefits of this exciting development.

It's always to me a tremendously energising experience to come to

a gathering like this, to know that you are meeting a cross section of

the Australian community. Not all of them are people who will agree with

you on everything or necessarily support everything that you seek to do

on a political level. But it's an authentic representation of the

great volunteer spirit of the Australian people. The catering today provided

by the volunteers of the local fire service. The lovely choir who I heard

earlier is part of the mass choir at the Australia Day celebration in

Sydney not so long ago. And as I look through the list of the guests,

the CWA, the local ministers of religion, the leaders of all the other

local organisations and one of the great traditions of this country is

that we do work together as a people.

We bring out the best in ourselves when we work as a community to tackle

problems. And I find these gatherings, wherever they are in Australia,

always tremendously energising. I find them always different. I find them

a simple way of expressing the essential unity and the essential commitment

to the long term goals of building a better Australia which is inherent

in all of the Australian people.

And may I say to my fellow prime minister today, that that was a very

touching, incisive, effective introduction. I must say that it was a quieter

question time than I'm normally used to. Perhaps we could bring you

down to Canberra and when you stand up you would hush them all into absolute

silence. And I thought you spoke a great deal of wisdom. I thought you

reminded all of us of the way of life that is special about regional Australia.

But there are some aspects of living outside the capital cities of Australia

that are not only different, but they're very special. We can't

all live there. We don't all necessarily wish to. There are great

aspects of living in the big cities. The great thing about Australia is

that we have tremendous diversity. But what your speech reminded me of

and what I think today's gathering reminds me of is that Government's

are elected to govern for all of the Australian people and not just one

section and we seek through meetings such as this to reach out to the

people of the regions of Australia to recognise the need to give help

where it's needed. To also recognise that many parts of the regions

of Australia are doing very well and there are many businesses that are

doing very well.

And I know that there are many parts of the Gilmore electorate where

business is booming and where there's a great deal of prosperity.

I also know there are sections of it where things aren't going so

well and I can assure all of you that that situation is well and truly

and faithfully represented in Canberra on your behalf by Joanna Gash.

May I thank her for inviting us here today. Can I congratulate her again

on the tremendous job that she does as your local representative. And

can I say on behalf of all of my Cabinet colleagues how absolutely delighted

we are to be amongst you today.

Thank you.

[Ends]

11677