PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
13/03/1998
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
10895
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
13 March 1998 TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS AT THE OFFICIAL OPENING OF THE BRIZTRAM PROJECT OFFICE, SOUTH BRISBANE

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

Thank you very much to Rob Borbidge, the Premier

of Queensland, to Joan Sheldon, the Deputy Premier and Treasurer,

to John Moore, my federal Ministerial colleague, other Ministers,

the Leader of the Opposition in Queensland, members of the Brisbane

City Council, ladies and gentlemen.

As you are aware, one of the objectives that my

Government has had over the last couple of years is to make certain

that the foundations of the Australian economy are strong, to make

certain that we are seen throughout the world as being a strong,

reliable country economically in which inflation is low and in which

the business investment climate is extremely attractive.

Now that has, of necessity, involved us taking

over that two year period a number of decision which have sought

to reduce our public spending and to get our budget deficit which

we found to be $10.5 billion back into surplus. We have done a very

good job along that path and I hope that in the next federal budget

it will be possible for our Treasurer to announce a budget surplus

with will represent a major turnaround in such a short period of

time.

But that hasn't been an end in itself. When

you embark upon a programme of getting the books in order of fiscal

consolidation as the boffins call it, or simply reducing the deficit

as we call it, when you embark upon that sort of programme, it's

not just end in itself. You also get a benefit from it. It is something

that I call a social bonus. You get something out of sensible economic

decision making, you give yourself the capacity further down the

track to do things in a directed, intelligent, measured way that

you want to do for the long-term benefit of the country.

And one of the social bonuses to come out of our

expenditure restraint and other decisions that we took, was the

capacity we had to announce in the last federal budget the establishment

of a Federation Fund of $1 billion. And that was designed principally

to fund the development of major infrastructure projects all around

Australia, to mark the federation of Australia, the Centenary of

Federation in the year 2001, to generate jobs in the construction

phase of those projects, and to leave the future generations a lasting,

practical memorial of one hundred years of the federation of the

six Australian colonies into the nation of Australia in 1901. And

as a result of that Fund being created, as part of the social bonus,

what we have already announced is a commitment of funds to the Darwin

to Alice Springs railway, a commitment to the National Gallery of

Victoria, a commitment to building that major infrastructure project

at Jervoise Bay in Western Australia which will support the oil

and gas export industries of Western Australia which are so important,

not only to our country, but also to the state of Western Australia.

And I am pleased to announce today that we will

be committing out of that Federation Fund a sum of $65 million towards

the Light Rail Project which was announced by the Premier of Queensland

in November of last year. I share all of the enthusiasm of both

the Premier and the Treasurer for the Briztram project. I share

all of his belief that it will be a visionary transport project

that will tap the heritage values of Brisbane. Just three quarter

of an hour ago, I had the opportunity of talking to a number of

the diplomatic visitors we have at our Liberal Party convention

here in Brisbane, and I was talking about the different cities of

Australia, and I made the observation that I have now been in politics

since 1974 and in that almost 24 years that I have been in politics,

of all of the great cities of Australia, none has been more dramatically

transformed in that 24 year period than the city of Brisbane.

I can still recognise the other cities, and I recognise

some of the old values of Brisbane as well. It still retains some

great deposits of its earlier years, but it really has been transformed

into a modern, attractive, dynamic diverse city. And it needs, part

of that transformation, it needs infrastructure, it needs long term

planning, it needs an adequate transport network and this project

will help to give it that. And that is why it is a project that

admirably fits the bill so far as Federation funding is concerned.

It is precisely this sort of project that the Federation funding

was designed to augment. And it will create the jobs, it will provide

the linkages between communities. And in every respect it does fit

the bill.

And can I say to you, Mr Premier, and to you, Joan,

as the Treasurer of the state of Queensland, that I have an enormous

respect for the commitment you have for the development, not only

of Brisbane, but also to the development of the state of Queensland.

You are both great Queenslanders and you are also very loyal partners

with myself and our other heads of government in the future long

term development of our country.

But you do understand the particular needs of Brisbane,

and the particular needs of Queensland. You are fathers for the

mining industry of this state, you have stood up for the interests

of Queensland in promoting the need for a sensible outcome to the

difficult problem of Native Title. You know the value to Queensland

of the jobs and investment that will be involved in settling the

difficulties involved in that legislation. You also understand the

importance of small business in the life of Queensland and you also

understand that in the 1990s government, in the 1990s the kind of

society we want could only ever be created through a shared endeavour

which involves a partnership between the government, the community

and the individual. The Government can't do everything on its

own. But it's got to help and it's got to provide leadership

and it's got to provide facilitation and this project really

does epitomise that and epitomise it very well.

So I congratulate you, Mr Premier and Deputy Premier

and I congratulate the Government of Queensland on this visionary

project. I'm delighted to associate my Government with it in

a practical way. And that, of course, won't be the end of federation

funding support for the State of Queensland.

This project was number one on the priority list

given to me by the Premier of Queensland. There are other projects

and of that more will be said at an appropriate time. But we are

working very closely with the Government of Queensland. We share

a vision about the future of this State and, of course, as part

of that, a vision about the future of the entire country.

But can I just diverge from the project and just

say one other thing. And I think it is important that I say it as

the very proud patron of the great St George Rugby League Club.

Can I say how delighted I am that the, at times vigorous and spirited

but I think at all times rather tragic tribal war that racked the

great game of rugby league, now appears to have come to an end.

The armistice will be consummated at Lang Park tonight and appropriately

enough between Manly and the Brisbane Broncos. And given my loyalties

and given the fact that I am a leader for all of the Australian

people, I shall not choose, I shall not gain to express a preference

for the outcome. But the real winner of that clash tonight will

be the followers and lovers of rugby league and the many Australians,

whether here in Queensland or in Sydney or elsewhere, were devastated

by the tribal war that went on for a number of years. I think it

is a wonderful thing and it's been settled in, I hope, a lasting

fashion. I wish the game well and I hope it is well supported.

But, ladies and gentlemen, again, my congratulations

to the Premier of Queensland, to his Government for their vision

and their foresight and their commitment to the development of Brisbane

and the development of the State of Queensland. And I'm delighted

to lend my Government's support to the tune of $65 million

out of the Federation Fund. We look forward to further cooperative

endeavour in the months ahead. Thank you.

[Ends]

10895