Politics with Michelle Grattan
News:Politics
With the budget’s expected eye-watering debt and deficit numbers, the question remains whether the huge spending will be enough to fight the coronavirus slump.
Minister for Finance Mathias Cormann and Shadow Minister Katy Gallagher joined the podcast to discuss the budget’s entrails.
The government has faced criticism for benchmarking the much vaunted tax cuts against 2017-18, making them appear larger. Cormann said 2017-18 is the appropriate benchmark, and wouldn’t be drawn on giving further detail.
“The costing has been done on the basis that we’ve published it.”
Gallagher declared the budget expressed Scott Morrison’s choice to leave some people without support.
In particular, the decision to leave those on JobSeeker hanging was described by Gallagher as “frankly, just plain mean.”
Arthur Sinodinos on the government’s headwinds
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Nick Xenophon on working the new parliament
Josh Frydenberg on climate change and the 2017 review
Jenny Macklin on Labor’s approach to welfare
Barnaby Joyce on the state of the National Party
Rory Medcalf on the security implications of Donald Trump’s presidency
Julian Leeser on section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act
Kim Beazley on the US election
John Blaxland on The Secret Cold War - The Official History of ASIO
Stirling Griff and Skye Kakoschke-Moore on life in the Senate
Tanya Plibersek on marriage equality and education funding
Mark Dreyfus on George Brandis’ solicitor-general controversy
Simon Birmingham on the new VET loan scheme
Scott Ryan on the same-sex marriage plebiscite and political donations
Politics podcast: Peter Jennings on Turnbull’s trip to the US
Don Watson on the rise of Trump
Eric Abetz on the conservatives in the Liberal Party
Fred Smith on The Dust of Uruzgan
Bob Brown on Malcolm Turnbull and the same-sex marriage plebiscite
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