Appointment of leadership positions in the Australian Defence Force

The Australian Government is pleased to recommend to Her Excellency, the Governor General, a number of senior command changes within the Australian Defence Force (ADF). Subject to the Governor General’s consideration and approval, these changes will take effect from July 2026.

The Chief of the Navy, Vice Admiral Mark Hammond AO RAN will be appointed as the Chief of the Defence Force.

Vice Admiral Hammond has had a distinguished career, spanning 40 years, in the Royal Australian Navy serving in frigates, and extensively in and later commanding submarines and the Australian Fleet. Appointed the Chief of Navy in 2022, Vice Admiral Hammond will continue to bring valuable insight to the role of the Chief of the Defence Force – including towards Australia’s acquisition of conventionally armed, nuclear powered submarines through AUKUS, and the delivery of Navy’s future surface combatant fleet.

The Government extends its deepest gratitude and thanks to the Chief of the Defence Force, Admiral David Johnston AC RAN. Admiral Johnston will retire with the change in command in July.

Admiral Johnston has served in the ADF for over 48 years, in both Navy and joint appointments. As the Vice Chief of the Defence Force, he was instrumental to the design of Australia’s future force and the subsequent ADF implementation of the 2024 National Defence Strategy. Admiral Johnston has also provided long-term leadership to ADF operations as the Chief of Joint Operations and as the Chief of Defence Force.

He is the longest serving ADF officer at the three and four-star ranks, and we congratulate him, and his family, for this tremendous achievement.

The Chief of Joint Capabilities, Lieutenant General Susan Coyle AM CSC DSM, will be appointed as the new Chief of Army.

Enlisting as a soldier in the Army Reserves in 1987, Lieutenant General Coyle has worked at the tactical, operational and strategic levels and in command roles, including Head Information Warfare, Commander Forces Command, Commander Joint Task Force 633, Commander 6th Brigade, Commander Task Group Afghanistan and Commanding Officer 17th Signal Regiment. Lieutenant General Coyle will be the first woman in our nation’s history to command the Australian Army.

The Government extends its sincere appreciation to the retiring Chief of Army, Lieutenant General Simon Stuart AO DSC. Lieutenant General Stuart has served with great distinction and leadership across the Army – most notably as the first Chief of Army to begin his career as a soldier. Lieutenant General Stuart has been key to preparing the Army for the changes required to the force following the 2024 National Defence Strategy.

The next Chief of Joint Capabilities will be appointed in due course.

Rear Admiral Matthew Buckley AM CSC RAN will be appointed on promotion as the Chief of Navy.

Rear Admiral Buckley has served in Oberon and Collins class submarines, including commanding HMAS Collins and commanding the Submarine Force. He was the Head of Nuclear Submarine Capability at the Australian Submarine Agency, before becoming Deputy Chief of Navy in January 2025. This experience places Rear Admiral Buckley in a unique position to lead the Royal Australian Navy and its people over the coming years as it continues its vital contributions to the peace, safety and stability of the Indo Pacific region.  

These statutory appointments will be presented to the Federal Executive Council.

The Government extends its sincere gratitude to Admiral Johnston and Lieutenant General Stuart, and their families, for their longstanding commitment to the defence of Australia, their service to country and their lasting contribution to the ADF.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese:

“The Australian Defence Force is tireless in its efforts to keep Australians safe – and I am so pleased to announce these new appointments.

“From July we will have the first ever female Chief of Army in the Australian Army’s 125 year history.

“I thank the outgoing Chief of Defence Force and Chief of Army for their service, and wish them well in their retirement.”

Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles:

“It is an honour to confirm these senior appointments to lead the Australian Defence Force. I know that in these roles, each of them will continue to make an enormous contribution to the safety and security of Australia, and I look forward to working with them to do so.

“My sincere thanks and gratitude go to Admiral David Johnston who has led the Australian Defence Force for the past two years with enormous impact, implementing some of the most significant and consequential decisions in decades – including Defence’s response to the Royal Commission into Defence and Veterans’ Suicide, driving AUKUS and the transformation of our Navy, and working with international partners to build our defence relationships.

“I would also like to personally thank Lieutenant General Simon Stuart for his contributions to the Australian Army at such a consequential time, and wish him and his family all the best as he retires.” 

First Australian-made missiles test-fired

The first Australian-made Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System (GMLRS) missiles have been successfully test-fired at the Woomera Test Range in South Australia.

The successful firing expands the long-range strike capability of the Australian Army and demonstrates the Albanese Government’s commitment to building the nation’s sovereign defence industry.

The surface-to-surface missile is capable of precisely striking targets beyond traditional artillery range. It is launched from the High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) that has been acquired under the Australian Army’s long-range fires program.

Importantly, Australian-made GMLRS missiles will provide a pathway for future long‑range fires munitions – such as the Precision Strike Missile and hypersonic weapons – to be locally manufactured. 

This test-firing follows the December 2025 opening of a new dedicated facility at Port Wakefield, South Australia. 

Australian suppliers will be progressively introduced into the GMLRS supply chain thanks to the Albanese Government’s $320 million commitment to uplift local companies to manufacture GMLRS components.

This is the third live-fire conducted by Australian HIMARS since their delivery in March 2025, demonstrating the accelerated delivery and training systems in place to achieve initial operational capability.

Minister for Defence Industry, Pat Conroy:

“Making missiles in Australia is central to Australia’s national defence resilience.

“Australia is now the only country outside the United States to make the GMLRS missile, providing opportunities for Australian industry to enter into global supply chains.

“This successful test-firing is a major milestone for Australia’s sovereign guided weapons capability, demonstrating concrete progress in strengthening our national self‑reliance and delivering a defence future made in Australia.”

Labor’s housing cost blowouts expose cover-ups and privatisation of public housing

The Victorian Greens say that new revelations showing the Allan Labor Government chose to cut public housing to plug cost blowouts on the Big Housing Build expose a troubling pattern of secrecy around Labor’s Big Build and the privatisation of public land and housing.

FOI documents reveal that the Allan Labor Government’s Big Housing Build was facing a $1 billion blowout due to construction costs. Labor quietly decided to reduce the number of public homes that would be built overall, instead shifting more into the hands of private community housing companies.

The Victorian Greens say that savings could have instead been made by refurbishing public housing instead of demolishing it – a plan that experts have repeatedly stated would be faster, less disruptive to residents and much cheaper, especially as building costs escalate.

The shift away from public housing is already clear. At the first two tower sites slated for demolition in Flemington and North Melbourne, there will be no public housing delivered – and Labor has refused to confirm whether any of the 44 sites remaining will include public housing at all.

Although the number of social (public and community) homes has grown since 2020, the number of bedrooms actually fell by 423 between June 2020 to June 2024, and the number of households on the Victorian Housing Register continues to grow.

The Victorian Greens say this exposes a government managing a cost blowout by cutting public housing behind closed doors and handing more control to property developers and private housing providers.

Victorian Greens housing spokesperson, Gabrielle de Vietri:

“Labor has been caught red-handed covering up a billion-dollar blowout and quietly cutting public housing to make the numbers work.

“We could be saving money and building more public homes if Labor wasn’t hell bent on their plan to demolish all of Victoria’s public housing.

“Experts have been clear that refurbishment would be cheaper, faster and less disruptive. Instead, Labor is ignoring that advice and pushing ahead with a slow-motion sell-off of public housing in the middle of a housing crisis.

“Labor has been moving more public homes off the public balance sheet and selling off public land to private property developers for years and refusing to be up front about it. This is just more proof of Labor’s privatisation by stealth and Victorians being kept in the dark about it.”

Melbourne Renters could have saved $39,000 with Greens’ rent controls

Renters in Melbourne could have saved $39,000 if rent controls had been permanently introduced 5 years ago, according to a new costing from the Parliamentary Budget Office. 

The costing, commissioned by the Greens, found that the average renter in Melbourne could have saved over $19,000 over the last 5 years, the average regional Victorian renter could have saved over $14,000 and the average renter living in the City of Melbourne could have saved a whopping $39,000, enough to put a large dent in a first home deposit.

The Greens say these savings could have been life changing for Victorians who rent and could have been the difference between affording a house deposit or not.

The Greens have this week launched an online rent calculator allowing renters in Victoria to calculate how much they would save with rent controls. The rent calculator can be accessed at greensrentcalculator.com

Rent controls are a key pillar of the Victorian Greens election policy plan leading up to the 2026 Victorian State election, where the Greens are tipped to win more seats from both Labor and the Liberals. The Greens policy includes:

  • an initial 2-year rent freeze to give wages the chance to catch up to rents followed by a cap on rent increases to go up no more than the wage price index or CPI, whichever is lowest, in any one year. 
  • Tie rent increases to the property, not the tenant – so renters can’t be kicked out for a landlord to put the rent up. 
  • A two-year ban on rent increases at the start of every tenancy, to give renters security when they move house.

Victorian Greens spokesperson for Renting, Gabrielle de Vietri:

“If we had capped rent increases, renters would be living in their own homes by now instead of funnelling more and more of their income every year into their landlord’s pockets. Enough unfair, unpredictable rent hikes – it’s time for rent controls.”

“The rental crisis is a political choice. Labor lets property investors profit at the expense of people who just need a roof over their head. Hundreds of thousands of people are living in rental stress – another rent hike could push them into homelessness. It doesn’t have to be this way.”

“The Greens have a vision for the future where you can actually afford the home you live in. It starts with rent controls.”

Leader of the Victorian Greens, Ellen Sandell. 

“My message to renters is, Labor doesn’t care about you, if they did, we would have rent controls. Labor has made their priorities very clear: property investors and their billionaire donors come before you.”

Leader of the Opposition’s address to the Menzies Research Centre

Well thank you Brian, thank you Dave – thank you to the Menzies Research Centre for putting this on.

Thank you for the enormously important work you do in this day and age. We need good thinking. We need people who are doing that policy work that is all important for this great nation, so we appreciate that. It is good to be here with the former Prime Minister John Howard, who of course is a great advocate of good immigration policy, which I will be talking about today.

To my Federal colleagues here today, Jonno Duniam of course, Shadow for Home Affairs, who’s been out in the media this morning with me. Sarah, Jess, and Dave. Dave who is in the immigration portfolio, of course, and also important to what I’m talking about today.

Great to have all of you here. And thank you to all of you who are here as well. It’s wonderful to have this audience at such short notice, standing room only at the back, so I do appreciate you being here.

FIVE OBSERVATIONS 

Now today, I’m here to announce the first part of the Coalition’s Australian Values Migration Plan, and to talk about the upcoming budget and some of the economic issues we face there.

But before I turn to that, it’s important to set some context, because this goes to the heart of protecting our way of life and restoring the standard of living that Australians have worked so hard to build over such a long period of time.

I want to make five observations about recent decades which are shaping our thinking about the key issues our country faces.

I make these observations not to criticise past Australian governments of either colour – including past Coalition governments to which I belonged. 

After all, governments are a product of their times.

They act and respond to their circumstances in front of them.

Australian governments of recent decades all made policies for a very different world – a more benign world than we face today.

And in the main, they delivered prosperity for Australians.

Of course, they didn’t get everything right.

And the frustration of many Australians today about some past decisions is both understandable and reasonable. 

To paraphrase a Danish philosopher, we live forwards but we understand backwards.

So, I make these observations with humility, with the wisdom afforded by hindsight, and with a view to our present predicaments, and with a resolve to course-correct.

Observation one:

Past governments welcomed the benefits of globalisation, but they were less attuned to the risks.

Today’s fuel crisis reinforces the fragility of global supply chains – and the folly of allowing our sovereign industries to be hollowed out where those industries are of strategic importance. 

The obvious example is liquid fuels.

And that’s why when I was Energy Minister, we established  a Minimum Stockholding Obligation and saved our last two refineries from closing. Perhaps we should never have got to that point, but that’s what we did achieve at the end of the last government.

Observation two:

Past governments rested comfortably behind the security conferred by American predominance.

Today, in a different age where events are being shaped much more by the sword and shield – in a time when we can’t just free ride off the generosity of our friends – Australia finds itself poorly equipped to defend and deter.

Observation three:

Past governments blindly repeated mantras about Australia being the world’s most successful multicultural society – and diversity being our strength.

Such doctrines saw us open our borders to people who – far from wanting to join and contribute to Australia – have wanted to take from Australia and even change Australia to suit them.

Observation four:

Past governments moved away from energy pragmatism and embraced energy ideology.

Consequently, power prices have surged – and costs across the economy have skyrocketed.

Labor’s net zero obsession is one of the most economically destructive ideas foisted upon the Australian people – and that is why we have rejected it.

Observation five:

The pandemic required a national response.

Yet National Cabinet became a means for some state governments to normalise heavy-handed intervention.

Moreover, with many Australians reliant on government in that crisis, we inadvertently animated a belief that bigger government is the solution to every problem.

That belief was seized upon by Anthony Albanese and helped propel Labor to power – a point I’ll return to shortly.

In making these five observations, I want to send a message of reassurance to Australians.

The Liberal Party – and the Coalition – has learned from history.

Under my leadership, we will change for the better.

We will deliver policies for the change our nation needs – because our country must change for the better.

A LABOR GOVERNMENT INCAPABLE OF CHANGE

However, after almost four years of governing, it’s clear the Albanese Government is incapable of delivering the change that’s needed for our country.

Labor has no long-term plan for our fuel security.

Labor is ideologically opposed to unlocking our natural resources and building our sovereign capabilities.

Labor’s devotion to net zero and economy-crippling carbon taxes – on vehicles, on manufacturing, on electricity – is driving industries offshore.

Despite today’s announcement, Labor has done little to properly fund and build missiles and drones at speed and scale – which is absolutely critical for our defence. Nor has it increased defence spending as a share of the economy.

Labor has also opened the migration floodgates – bringing in a record 1.4 million people in just three-and-a-half years – putting extreme pressure on housing, infrastructure, and services.

ECONOMIC REVIVAL – BETTER GOVERNMENT, NOT BIGGER GOVERNMENT

Now here’s the truth:

Bigger government and a Big Australia hasn’t meant a better Australia – or Australians being better off.

Australians have experienced the biggest fall in living standards in the developed world since Labor came to power.

Our inflation is worse than every other major advanced economy.

Jim Chalmers blames everyone but himself for Australia’s inflation and high interest rates.

But Australians aren’t mugs. 

They know our inflationary and high interest rates is stubborn and increasing before the conflict in the Middle East.

They know Labor has a dangerous addiction to spending which, as a proportion of the economy, is at a 40-year high outside the pandemic.

Moreover, government debt will soon exceed $1 trillion for the first time.

Growth in the economy is an illusion.

Every single dollar of growth under the Albanese Government has been due to population growth – mostly immigration.

From my first day as leader, I set two priorities: 

To restore Australians’ standard of living.

To protect our way of life. 

That means shifting away from Labor’s government-directed economy back to a free-enterprise economy.

Big government is not the solution for Australia.

We need a better government that gets the big things right.

Better government that gets off Australians’ backs and puts its faith back in Australians.

The Coalition I lead has a freedom agenda at its core.

I want workers to be freer – paying less tax.

I want businesses to be freer – liberated from the reams of government paperwork that turn ambition into anxiety.

I want industries to be freer – unencumbered by roadblocks – so that we can make more onshore, instead of seeing manufacturing going offshore.

I want Australians to be freer – by eradicating the nanny state and giving Australians more choice.

It’s this freedom that will revive the conditions, the confidence, the choices, and the investment needed for a new era of prosperity in Australia.

There’s been lots of talk in recent times about protection, but let me tell you the best way to protect businesses and industries isn’t with bailouts and handouts – they’re nothing more than band-aids.

The best way to protect businesses and industries is getting government out of the way.

The best way to revitalise and reindustrialise our economy is getting the big things right.

By removing crippling taxes.

By reducing choking regulation.

And by restoring cheaper power.

It’s these three things that will make everything across the economy cheaper to grow, to make, to build, to fix, and to service.

It’s these three things that are central to the Coalition’s economic agenda.

IMMIGRATION CONCERNS

Restoring our standard of living and protecting our way of life is also about immigration.

And for the remainder of my speech, I want to focus on this important topic – an issue of deep and growing concern to Australians.

We have an incredibly proud history of welcoming migrants from across the world to Australia..

People who have assimilated, worked hard, built families, helped build our nation, and become cherished and loyal citizens.

My grandfather, William Hudson, was the commissioner and chief engineer of the Snowy Mountains Hydro Scheme from the late 50’s through to close to completion.

He saw first-hand the success of migrants who came to this country, who embraced its values, and who were committed to building a great Australia.

Growing up near Cooma in the 1970s, I witnessed this extraordinary success story first-hand. 

We need to preserve this ethos that underpins our immigration program and a great Australia. 

And something, unfortunately, has changed in recent times.

Immigration numbers are too high. 

And consequently, Australians can see the country they love changing for the worse.

There is a fact about immigration as old as history that we seldom speak about.

When a country brings in too many people – and the people with the wrong motivations – it’s inevitable that the character of that country changes.

Parts of the UK and Europe are now wrestling with this reality after a period of sustained mass immigration that started in 2015.

Here in Australia, a YouGov poll in January found that 64 per cent of Australians want lower immigration.

Moreover, a Fox and Hedgehog poll in February found that 59 per cent of first-generation migrants want immigration to be cut back.

Just think about that for a moment.

There is a strong backlash to immigration even amongst those from migrant backgrounds.

Broadly speaking, migrants fall into two categories.

There’s those of noble and patriotic intent. 

Someone who wants to become Australian, embrace Australia, and contribute to Australia.

Overwhelmingly, the vast majority of people who come to Australia fall into that category.

And then there’s the migrant of subversive intent.

Someone who rejects our way of life – who does not want to change for Australia, but wants Australia to change for them. Who is here for transactional reasons, with transactional intent. 

Worse, declining immigration standards have seen our door opened to migrants of subversive intent.

Consider what we’ve seen in recent years:

The Bondi Beach terrorist attack.

Radical Islamic preachers espousing hate with impunity.

Genocidal marches in major cities.

Antisemitism across Australian communities.

These are the ramifications of an immigration system where standards have eroded.

Indeed, just this month, Labor deported one Islamic hate preacher – and cancelled the visa of another offshore – having granted visas to both.

Australians are rightly concerned.

But not only about our door being opened to the purveyors of hate and violence.

Our door has also been opened to people who, while rejecting hate and violence, nevertheless still reject our core values.

People who don’t believe in equal rights for men and women.

People who don’t believe in the rule of law and want to establish parallel legal systems.

People who don’t believe in freedom of speech, association, and religion.

In recent times of course that has included Islamist extremists. 

For too long, we’ve turned a blind eye to a reality of immigration and integration:

Those who migrate from liberal democracies have a greater likelihood of subscribing to Australian values compared to those migrating from places ruled by fundamentalists, extremists, and dictators.

In that vein, the Gazan cohort of 1,700 people here on visas presents a high-risk to our nation.

That cohort must be re-assessed entirely with far greater scrutiny.

The Director-General of Security has also been upfront about the growing threat of foreign interference in Australia.

Our door has been opened to people who – far from having an allegiance to Australia – are actively working against our nation.

People intimidating migrant communities. 

People trying to undermine our democracy. 

People sowing social discord.

All this stems from an immigration system where standards have eroded.

AUSTRALIAN VALUES MIGRATION PLAN

So, ladies and gentlemen:

Australia has a non-discriminatory immigration program.

We do not discriminate based on nationality, race, gender, or faith.

But for an immigration program to work in the national interest it must discriminate based on values.

We must dispense with the naïve thinking that has dominated our immigration policy for too long.

Our nation has paid the price for believing that anyone, from anywhere, will embrace our way of life.

Not everyone wanting to migrate to Australia has a noble intent.

Not everyone wanting to migrate to Australia will be a net benefit to Australia – indeed, some will be a net drain.

Not everyone wanting to migrate to Australia will integrate with the rest of our great country.

Just as energy policy under Labor is dominated by the ideology of net zero, immigration policy under Labor is dominated by the ideology of cultural relativism.

For Labor, all immigration is good immigration.

But that’s simply not true.

It’s not what Australians are seeing with their own eyes.

And Australians are fed-up with politically correct preaching on immigration.

Looking to parts of the UK and Europe, Australians see the erosion of national culture and the Balkanisation of communities that has come from immigration policies that have not prioritised values.

Indeed, Australians are worried we’re on the same disastrous road as those parts of the world, and they want change.

And the Coalition is determined to deliver change for the better.

Today, I’m pleased to announce the first part of the Coalition’s immigration policy.

I’m going to focus on our Australian values migration plan which is just one part of a broader agenda which will include bringing the numbers down to a sustainable level.

But today, we’re proudly going to put Australian values at the heart of immigration policy.

There are three key pillars of our policy to lift immigration standards.

First, putting Australian values first.

Second, shutting the door to people who abuse our immigration system.

And third, showing a red light to radicals.

I’ll discuss each pillar in turn.

PUTTING AUSTRALIAN VALUES FIRST

At present, people applying for a visa must sign the Australian Values Statement.

The values include respecting freedom of speech, association and faith; a commitment to the rule of law and democracy; acting with tolerance; and upholding equal opportunity. 

Yet we’ve seen too many instances of visa holders flouting these values.

Visa holders who have broken the law – instead of abiding by it.

Visa holders who have peddled intolerance and intimidated others – instead of respecting individual freedom.

For some visa applicants, signing the Australian Values Statement has become a tick-box exercise without any intent to comply with those values.

They are taking us for a ride.

The Coalition will make the Australian Values Statement a legally binding and enforceable visa condition for all temporary and permanent visa holders.

With this stronger rulebook, there will be no more ambiguity in courts and tribunals.

In short, if a visa holder undermines our democratic values, doesn’t respect the law, or demonstrates they don’t respect our core values, they will be booted out of Australia.

Furthermore, there have been instances where long-standing non-citizens have been allowed to stay in Australia despite committing offences that warrant visa cancellation.

They have been permitted to stay because of their period of residency or other reasons.

But time and ties are no testament to loyalty to Australia. 

We’re going to close this leniency loophole.

If a longstanding non-citizen hasn’t demonstrated Australian values, they too will be booted out of Australia.

A centrepiece of the Australian Values Statement is that English is our national language.

English is necessary to live, work, and integrate into Australian society. And I talked earlier about the Snowy Scheme, Cooma, after the war, people who came to the country at that time, they learnt English.

The Coalition will make learning English an obligation for permanent visa holders – not an option.

Central to these values is that citizenship is a privilege – it’s not a handout.

And permanent residency must reflect that same expectation, a genuine commitment to Australia, demonstrated through contribution, integration, and respect for our values.

That principle must also extend to how we allocate taxpayer-funded support.

And that’s why I’m appalled by revelations that nearly 50,000 non-citizens have used Labor’s first home buyer 5 per cent Deposit Scheme.

Labor opened this scheme to permanent residents in 2023.

But such a loan scheme – financed by the Australian taxpayer – should be reserved for Australian citizens.

The Coalition will close this scheme to anyone but Australian citizens.

And this is just the start, we will look at further measures to reserve key social and economic entitlements for Australian citizens, and we’ll have more to say about that in due course.

SHUTTING THE DOOR

Let me turn to the second pillar of our policy:

Shutting the door to people who abuse our immigration system.

On Labor’s watch, we’ve seen an explosion in the number of unlawful non-citizens on our soil.

Some 65,000 people remain here despite their student or protection visas being cancelled and despite having exhausted all avenues for appeal.

Our immigration system is being exploited by people using the pretext of needing protection to stay here for economic reasons.

The Coalition will crack down on overstayers with several measures.

First, we will create a Safe Country List to end frivolous protection claims.

Countries on this list would be those deemed generally free from persecution.

If a citizen of a safe country applies for a refugee and humanitarian visa from outside Australia, it will be assumed to be inadmissible.

And if a citizen of a safe country is in Australia and makes a protection claim, their application  can expect to be refused – and their deportation fast-tracked.

To those who say we will be in breach of the Refugee Convention, we will decide who deserves protection and the circumstances in which that protection is granted.

It’s time to take back control from the technocrats, the bureaucrats and the activists.

To stop the abuse of our immigration system, the Coalition will also restore Temporary Protection Visas to their previous role.

These visas were a successful deterrence measure introduced by the Coalition that curtailed cheating of our immigration system.

Temporary Protection Visas should never have been scaled back by Labor.

The prospect of permanent protection encourages abuse of the system.

By incinerating that incentive, we will send a clear message that bogus claims of persecution will never be a pathway to permanency.

We’re also going to oust the overstayers.

We will establish a Joint Agency Taskforce to kick unlawful overstayers out of the country.

They are not welcome if they have seen all the avenues to appeal exhausted and they no longer have a visa.

Our objective is very simple.

If you do the wrong thing, we’ll keep you out, or we will kick you out. You will be deported.

We’re not going to tolerate overstayers who refuse to hop off the appeals merry-go-round despite being told they have no legal right to stay in Australia.

And in that vein, we’re going to stop non-citizens from accessing and using taxpayer funded aid as well.

A RED LIGHT TO RADICALS

Now, let me turn to the third pillar of our policy, showing a red light to radicals.

The Coalition will establish an Enhanced Security Screening Centre.

Using the full suite of intelligence, screening, and enforcement capabilities, the centre will stop radicals, extremists, and terrorists from entering our country.

As part of the enhanced screening process, all visa applicants will be required to provide social media accounts when applying for a visa.

The Coalition’s resolve is clear:

The door will be shut to people who want to import the hatred and violence of other places to Australia.

There must never be another tragedy like we saw at Bondi Beach.

CONCLUSION

Ladies and gentlemen:

Putting Australian values at the heart of immigration policy is crucial to protecting our way of life.

But to protect our way of life – and to restore Australians’ standard of living – we also need to reduce immigration numbers drastically.

That’s something Labor will never do and we will.

But the starting point is building our migration on a foundation of Australian values and higher standards.

This is worth fighting for because Australia is worth fighting for.

Thank you very much.

Community united on need to protect Southern Beaches

More than 2,200 people have had their say on how City of Newcastle should respond to threats to the coastline between Bar Beach and Merewether, demonstrating strong community interest in the future of the Southern Beaches.

A consultation report, released today, outlines feedback on a range of proposed management options including mass sand nourishment, protection structures like seawalls and managed retreat.

The results show that while the community holds diverse opinions on how risks such as erosion and sea level rise should be managed, there is clear recognition of the challenges facing this stretch of coastline and broad agreement that action is needed.

No single management option attracted overwhelming support.

However, City of Newcastle’s Liveable Cities Strategic Advisory Committee Chair Cr Joel Pringle said it was encouraging the consultation gave the participants an opportunity to hear and understand the seriousness of the risks and the complexity of responding to them.

“Newcastle is known for its sandy beaches, world-renowned surf breaks and magnificent coastline,” Cr Pringle said.

“Our community values these places deeply and the consultation shows they recognise impacts that climate change is already having on our coastline, and that this will intensify into the future.

“The feedback shows that managing coastal risk isn’t simple. Especially where significant interventions might be required.

“It involves balancing community values and expectations with technical feasibility, environmental responsibility, economic sustainability and broader social impacts for current and future generations. And also, as this piece of work does, bringing local residents on the journey of understanding with us.”

City of Newcastle is developing a long-term Coastal Management Program (CMP) for the area between Nobbys Headland and Glenrock Lagoon, collectively known as the Southern Beaches.

As part of this process, community members were asked to consider potential management options for the area between Bar Beach and Merewether, which is considered at most immediate risk from coastal erosion and other coastal hazards.

Engagement was strong across Newcastle, with more than 800 people participating in nine in-person consultation events. Online engagement included around 430 responses to an online poll and almost 1000 responses to the online survey, along with seven detailed submissions from key stakeholders and community members.

The feedback highlighted a wide spectrum of perspectives. Mass sand nourishment was the least favoured option overall, with participants raising concerns about cost, effectiveness, environmental impacts, longevity and ongoing maintenance requirements. 

Protection structures such as seawalls were supported by some respondents for their perceived ability to retain existing assets, access and amenity.

Where managed retreat was supported, it was often promoted as a more sustainable, adaptive and environmentally responsible long‑term response to coastal hazards, particularly in the context of a changing climate.

City of Newcastle Executive Manager Environment & Sustainability Marnie Kikken said the consultation reinforced there is no single management option that will meet all expectations.

“This consultation has shown that while there is strong alignment around the need to protect our coastline, people prioritise different options to do so,” Ms Kikken said.

“Comments reflected a wide range of sometimes competing views about infrastructure retention, environmental protection, traffic impacts, governance, cost, and the role of expert advice versus community input.

“That diversity of views is an important part of community engagement and we’re pleased to see that most participants are highly aware of the complex issues facing our Southern Beaches. 

“Our role is to carefully consider all of this feedback alongside rigorous technical, environmental and economic assessments, as well as the State Government requirements we must meet, to ensure decisions are responsible, defensible and in the best long-term interests of the whole community.”

City of Newcastle will continue working through the feedback in developing the Southern Beaches Coastal Management Program.. 

Visit City of Newcastle’s Have Your Say page to find out more and read the detailed consultation report.

Big John awarded big honour for charity efforts

Almost 50 years of raising money, toys and awareness for families in need has earned Big John Young Newcastle’s greatest acknowledgement after being named a Freeman of the City today.

Since coordinating the first Bikers for Kids Newcastle Toy Run in 1978, Big John has dedicated decades of his life to helping the event grow into one of the region’s most well-known and largest charity drives, with more than 13,000 motorcycle riders turning out in support in 2025.

New Freeman of the City Big John Young with Cr Declan Clausen.New Freeman of the City Big John Young with Cr Declan Clausen.Councillor Declan Clausen presented Big John Young with the honour at a special event at City Hall, surrounded by family, friends and fellow Freemen.

Cr Clausen said Big John’s contribution to charity and community across the region has been remarkable, touching the lives of thousands of people.

“We take it as a given that once a year, our streets are filled by thousands of motorcycles in the name of raising money, but it wouldn’t have ever happened without Big John,” Cr Clausen said.

“His commitment to bringing the community together to ensure disadvantaged children and families have a present under the Christmas tree to unwrap or the extra support they need has been monumental.

“Big John has become an advocate for dozens of charities and organisations across Newcastle and the builder of a vast community fundraising network across motorcycle clubs, businesses, charities, and volunteers.”

Big John’s charity efforts, which earned him a Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) in the 2015 Queen’s Birthday Honours, have also included raising money for organisations such as the Salvation Army, John Hunter Children’s Hospital, Camp Quality, Ronald McDonald House, Westpac Rescue Helicopter, and the NBN 3 Newcastle Telethon.

With a heart as big as his impressive six foot seven stature, Big John said he was honoured and humbled to be named Newcastle’s newest Freeman.

“I’m proud to have been able to use my presence and reputation to bring the community together, raise awareness and funds for charities, and most importantly, support families and children that have needed a little extra help,” Big John said.

“The Newcastle Toy Run is my greatest legacy. We started with about 30 participants in the late 1970s, and last year in 2025 had 13,000 motorcycles with thousands more lining the streets to raise money and awareness for disadvantaged families and children across the region.

“Newcastle and its people have shaped the person that I am today, and this city taught me the value of looking out for one another and believing that acts of kindness can make a big difference in the lives of others.

“Our motto is that every child deserves to smile, and a child’s smile will light the world. I’m proud to have helped make our world a brighter place.”

The Freeman of the City award is Newcastle’s highest honour, conferred upon Novocastrians for outstanding achievement and service to the city or to humanity.

Big John joins an esteemed list of 21 other Novocastrians to be named Freeman of the City, including civic leader Carol Duncan OAM, Surfest co-founder Warren Smith, and scientist and researcher Laureate Professor Roger Smith.

Free mental health support for kids in the Illawarra

Families in the Illawarra now have access to free mental health and wellbeing support for their children at the Medicare Mental Health Kids Hub in Fairy Meadow.

Labor is delivering on its commitment to universal, free healthcare by building a network of more than 33 Medicare Mental Health Centres in New South Wales and four Medicare Mental Health Kids Hubs. 

This network puts mental health support close by and takes pressure off families by saving time and money. 

Kids Hubs provide free mental health and wellbeing services for children aged 0-12 who may be experiencing mild to moderate developmental, emotional, social or behavioural challenges.

Today marks the official opening of the Illawarra site to support children’s mental health.

The Illawarra location is one of four Kids Hubs being rolled out across NSW as part of a $50.8 million joint investment of $25.4 million from each of the Australian and NSW Governments to support children’s mental health.

The refurbished building in Fairy Meadow has been purposely designed to make children and families feel welcome, with a range of dedicated treatment spaces. 

The Illawarra Kids Hub will also provide outreach services to Warilla, Kiama and Nowra through Community Health Centres, ensuring families across the region can access support.

Mental health clinicians, allied health professionals, care navigators at the service will tailor care to the needs of each child and family who visits.

Minister for Health Ryan Park:

“This is a significant investment in the wellbeing of children across the Illawarra. Early intervention changes lives, and this Kids Hub will help families get support when it matters most.

“Having a dedicated, purpose-built space here in the Illawarra means families can access high quality mental health care without travelling or paying out of pocket.

NSW Minister for Mental Health Rose Jackson:

“Free, accessible healthcare is a cornerstone of a strong public health system, and every family deserves access to quality mental health care, regardless of their circumstances.

“This service ensure children and parents in the Illawarra can get the support they need, when they need it, without cost being a barrier.

“People across the Illawarra have been calling for easier access to mental health support for young people and this is a great example of how the Minns and Albanese Labor Government are working together to ensure this care is delivered.”

Assistant Minister McBride: 

“The Albanese Labor Government is putting mental health at the heart of Medicare and services in the centre of communities. 

“The new Medicare Mental Health Kids Hub will provide a safe and welcoming place for Illawarra children and their parents, carers and kin. 

“We know that early intervention is crucial, and that’s why we’re removing barriers to accessing support. 

“We’re proud to partner with the NSW Government to deliver more mental health services, like Medicare Mental Health Kids Hubs, across the state.”

Alison Byrnes, Member for Cunningham: 

“Accessing services and support before behavioural and mental health challenges escalate ensures better outcomes for children and families. 

“I’m delighted that this free local hub will make it easier and more affordable for Illawarra families to access help early, freeing up specialist services for those who need it most.”

Member for Wollongong Paul Scully:

“This is a welcome expansion in local mental health services. Opening the Illawarra Kids Hub not only provides a central location for services but also a series of outreach services to provide accessible services across the region.

“The Illawarra Kids Hub at Fairy Meadow is well-located with a mix of transport options available for people to get to it and get the support they need, whether it’s getting advice or accessing health professionals.” 

First look at new public primary school and preschool for Worrigee

Families in Worrigee have had a first look at their new public primary school and preschool, with the Minns Labor Government releasing designs as planning progresses.

The new public primary school will ensure families in the rapidly developing suburbs of Worrigee and South Nowra can access a world-class public education close to home.

The primary school will have 24 modern classrooms, three support learning classrooms, a multipurpose hall with a covered outdoor learning area (COLA), library and special programs rooms, a sports field and multipurpose sports court.

The co-located preschool, one of 100 new public preschools the Minns Labor Government is opening in 2027, will have capacity for up to 120 children every week, ensuring the community will have access to high-quality early education.

It is one of four new public preschools being delivered in the Shoalhaven area, with others being built at Bomaderry Public School, Greenwell Point Public School and Sanctuary Point Public School. In contrast the former Liberal and National government did not build a single new public preschool during 12 years in office.

The new Worrigee public preschool is scheduled to open in 2027, while the new primary school is set to welcome students in 2028. The planning application for the public preschool is currently open via the NSW Planning Portal.

The new school and preschool will cater for local families amid significant growth in South Nowra, which has seen a 150 per cent increase in new dwellings over the past decade.

The new public school at Worrigee will alleviate pressure on Nowra Public School and Nowra East Public School while also easing traffic in the broader area by reducing the number of students and parents having to travel across suburbs.

The Minns Labor Government has committed $2.9 billion to upgrade and build new schools in regional areas as part of its commitment to rebuild public education across the state.

Deputy Premier and Minister for Education and Early Learning Prue Car said:

“The Minns Labor Government is dedicated to enhancing educational opportunities and building a brighter future for our children. This new school and public preschool will play a vital role in supporting the educational needs of families in the Worrigee and South Nowra areas.

“The new Worrigee public school and public preschool has been long time coming for the families across South Nowra, who were neglected by the former Liberal National Government.

“We are committed to providing students with a high-quality, state-of-the-art learning environment that meets the demands of a growing population, such as South Nowra and Worrigee.”

Member for South Coast Liza Butler said:

“I’m thrilled the artist impressions have now been shared with the community to see an indication of how the new primary and public preschool in Worrigee might look.

“The Nowra community continues to grow, and it is vital we continue to invest in these areas so every child can access high-quality public schools close to home.

“Investing in our public schools is essential to ensure all students across NSW can access the best possible education.”

Digital skills boost through Meadowbank TAFE Centre of Excellence

More than 50,000 Australians each year will gain the benefits of industry-led digital training with a new TAFE Centre of Excellence opening at the Institute of Applied Technology – Digital at TAFE NSW Meadowbank. 

In a joint initiative, the Albanese and Minns Labor Governments are investing $11 million into the Centre to strengthen Australia’s digital and technology capability, providing practical digital skills training to students shaped by industry needs and helping employers access a pipeline of digitally skilled workers. 

Building on the success of TAFE NSW’s Institute of Applied Technology – Digital pilot, the Centre will:

  • upskill and reskill students and workers in cybersecurity, AI, big data, cloud computing, and software;
  • expand the skills pipeline by supporting priority cohorts including women, culturally and linguistically diverse learners and First Nations students;
  • offer flexible delivery including on-site and online training to support regional and remote cohorts across the state and the country;
  • work with industry, universities and small and medium-sized businesses to deliver applied research and practical solutions to real world digital workforce challenges; and
  • deliver microskills, microcredentials, vendor certifications, and accredited qualifications across the digital skills domain. 

This investment is part of the Albanese Government’s $325 million in funding to establish a national network of up to 20 TAFE Centres of Excellence under the National Skills Agreement with states and territories. 

This builds on the Minns Labor Government’s record $3.4 billion investment in TAFE and skills, ensuring the state’s training system continues to deliver modern, industry-aligned training in critical skills areas.  

More information on TAFE Centres of Excellence is available on the Department of Employment and Workplace Relations website.  

Federal Minister for Skills and Training, Andrew Giles: 

“TAFE Centres of Excellence are designed to ensure Australians can get the skills they need for good secure work into the future. 

“Australia’s vocational education and training system must remain agile and keep pace with technological change and evolving job roles – work that our Government is doing with industry, training providers and others in the sector. 

“By working closely with the Minns Government in backing this project, our new TAFE Centre of Excellence here at Meadowbank will strengthen Australia’s digital capability and boost pathways into skilled digital jobs.” 

NSW Minister for Skills, TAFE and Tertiary Education, Steve Whan: 

“This investment reinforces the role of TAFE NSW as a leader in delivering innovative, industry-focused training, in high-demand skills areas. 

“The Institute of Applied Technology Digital – National Centre of Excellence builds on a proven skills delivery model, providing opportunities for students and workers to gain the digital skills that work for communities and industries.  

“By working closely with industry and university partners, we are ensuring training keeps pace with technological change delivering job-ready graduates.” 

Member for Bennelong, Jerome Laxale: 

“It’s an exciting day for our local community. Playing host to this new, national TAFE Centre of Excellence will supercharge the work already being done by TAFE NSW Meadowbank to ensure students here and across the state get the skills they need for the future. 

“Over the coming years and decades the global demand for technology skills will skyrocket – the Albanese Labor Government is ensuring that students can remain ahead of the pack by benefitting from the best of digital and AI skills training, right here in our community.”