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Yes Minister (Read 950 times)
Vic
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Re: Yes Minister
Reply #15 - Oct 30th, 2025 at 2:35pm
 
It’s far cheaper than the conalition paid for the 4 in Cambodia.  Well negotiated
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Football, Meat Pies, Kangaroos and Liberal Lies
Football, Meat Pies, Kangaroos and Liberal Lies
 
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Re: Yes Minister
Reply #16 - Oct 31st, 2025 at 10:59am
 
Spoken like a true "rusted-on".  Wink
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The 2025 election WAS a shocker.
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Captain Nemo
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Re: Yes Minister
Reply #17 - Nov 17th, 2025 at 3:49pm
 
Anthony Albanese writes to states, telling them to rein in public hospital spending

Exclusive by national health reporter Stephanie Dalzell

...
Anthony Albanese has written to state premiers to say they must cut growth if they want a public hospital funding commitment implemented. (ABC News: Ian Cutmore)

In short

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese wrote to the states and territories in September saying they must rein in public hospital spending if they wanted a deal honoured.

States have reacted angrily, declaring the request "almost beyond belief".

The federal government says it has made "significant commitments" for public hospitals and will continue negotiations to get a deal done.


The states and territories are on a collision course with the Commonwealth over public hospital funding, with health ministers expressing white-hot anger over a letter from the prime minister demanding they rein in spending if they want a funding deal honoured.

Anthony Albanese made the request in September, writing to state and territory leaders saying they must slash growth if they want a public hospital funding commitment implemented.

"For states and territories to realise a Commonwealth contribution of 42.5 per cent of public hospital costs by 2030-31, under the capped glide path model, it will be necessary for your government to work to reduce growth in hospital activity and costs to more sustainable levels," the letter states, according to two separate sources.

The intervention has prompted an angry response from states including Queensland, which said the prime minister was trying to "pass the buck".

"Upon reading the letter, my immediate response was that it was almost beyond belief that the prime minister would write to us saying we have to work to reduce growth in hospital activity," Queensland Health Minister Tim Nicholls told the ABC.

"Does he want us to go out there and close the front door to our emergency departments or stop taking ambulances delivering sick patients to our emergency wards?


"Demand is growing with an older and growing population with more severe acuity and presentations, it's just unrealistic to expect the states to say, 'oh, well, we can control demand.''"

Other health ministers, who did not want to be identified for fear of retribution, said the letter went down like a lead balloon.

"To say they were frustrated is underselling it … they were exercised,"
  one said.

In 2023, national cabinet agreed to a new funding deal for public hospitals, which are run by the states and territories but partly funded by the Commonwealth.

The deal promised the federal government would increase its share of funding to 42.5 per cent by 2030, and 45 per cent by 2035.

In exchange, the states and territories would co-fund some new disability services outside the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) to ease some of the pressure on the rapidly growing scheme.

But negotiations have stalled, with state and territory leaders last month releasing a scathing statement suggesting the government had walked back its initial commitment.

The federal government has repeatedly insisted it wants a deal done by the end of the year, but federal Health Minister Mark Butler now faces an uphill battle to get the agreement over the line, as tensions with the states and territories continue to rise.

Tasmanian Health Minister Bridget Archer said for an agreement to happen soon, the Commonwealth would need to "come to the party".

"If there's to be a deal by the end of the year, the federal government is really going to have to step up their negotiations and have to sharpen their pencil … is the bottom line," she said.

"We have been collectively very loud and clear that we want a new hospital agreement, but we want one that does what the federal government says they want it to do, too."

South Australian Health Minister Chris Picton said while the states wanted certainty around public hospital funding, the "devil was in the detail" of the negotiations.

"Over many, many years, we've seen the federal government's share of funding those public hospitals going down and states and territories just can't agree to a deal which would see that continue to decline, particularly as we face increasing demands and increasing aging of the population," he said.

NSW Health Minister Ryan Park said while he was determined to negotiate with the federal government, it was imperative the Commonwealth paid "its fair share".

"The Commonwealth has deeper pockets than the states," he said.

"Unless the Commonwealth honours its commitments, hospitals will be left underfunded and overstretched. Families in NSW deserve timely, quality health care, and that requires both levels of government pulling their weight."

'Their maths doesn't make sense to us'


The states and territories have an agreement with the Commonwealth in which public hospitals are funded based on how many and what type of patients they treat, which is then adjusted for cost increases.

But to put the brakes on spending, the Commonwealth caps annual funding growth at 6.5 per cent on the previous year.

As part of the 2023 deal, national cabinet agreed to replace that cap on funding growth with a more "generous approach"

... ABC
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Captain Nemo
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Re: Yes Minister
Reply #18 - Nov 27th, 2025 at 8:25am
 
Labor to squeeze public service, sparking warnings of job losses

By political reporter Tom Crowley

...
Katy Gallagher confirmed Labor was conducting an "exercise in discipline" by asking government departments to find large savings. (ABC News: Matt Roberts)

In short:

Finance Minister Katy Gallagher has confirmed Labor has asked federal departments and agencies to find further efficiencies and find "things we don't need to continue doing".

Senator Gallagher denied this amounted to a cut, but did not dispute a report in the AFR that the public service would need to find savings of as much as 5 per cent in a year.


It comes after Labor campaigned against Peter Dutton's pledge to wind back the 41,000 extra public service jobs created in Labor's last term.

Katy Gallagher and Jim Chalmers have put the squeeze on the federal public service to avoid a budget blowout, asking departments and agencies to save as much as 5 per cent of their costs in a move that has sparked warnings of further public service job losses.

The finance minister confirmed a report in the Australian Financial Review that she had asked senior bureaucrats to search for "things we don't need to continue doing".

"It's an exercise in discipline," she told ABC Canberra.

"The budget is in deficit. We have a lot of pressures on it. We can't just keep adding on to everything."

Asked about the reported 5 per cent figure, Senator Gallagher said it was a "re-prioritisation" rather than a "cut"
but did not dispute the magnitude. Re-prioritisations balance out other new spending, rather than reducing funding in absolute terms.

...

But that still leaves agencies needing to find 5 per cent of their current activities to discontinue.

"We've asked agencies to think about all the things they're doing and make room for re-prioritisation within budget," the minister said.

...

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-11-25/labor-to-squeeeze-public-service/10605066...
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The 2025 election WAS a shocker.
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Captain Nemo
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Re: Yes Minister
Reply #19 - Dec 3rd, 2025 at 8:48am
 
Anika Wells hits taxpayers with $100k airfare bill


Wells spent almost $100k of taxpayers’ money on flights to New York for her and two staff, Senate estimates has revealed, as the triple-zero crisis unfolded back in Australia.

...

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Daves2017
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Re: Yes Minister
Reply #20 - Dec 5th, 2025 at 2:30pm
 
A 100k to deliver a six minute speech written by someone else is completely ridiculous.

Cost of living?

Not something Anika needs to worry about as we the taxpayers fund her lavish lifestyle and first class travel?
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I don’t care about Australians who are living in poverty or their businesses have gone bankrupt or those working hard and still struggling to survive.

BAN THE BURKA!

That’s fair more important!

Ffs
 
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Daves2017
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Re: Yes Minister
Reply #21 - Dec 5th, 2025 at 2:34pm
 
https://www.afr.com/politics/federal/wells-billed-taxpayers-3681-for-trip-that-i...

“ Wells billed taxpayers $3681 for trip that included friend’s birthday”

She needs to explain herself  and pay the money she has stolen from taxpayers back!
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I don’t care about Australians who are living in poverty or their businesses have gone bankrupt or those working hard and still struggling to survive.

BAN THE BURKA!

That’s fair more important!

Ffs
 
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LNP never again
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Re: Yes Minister
Reply #22 - Dec 5th, 2025 at 8:53pm
 
Laughs in 94 seats
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Labor win majority government ... again
 
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Bobby.
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Re: Yes Minister
Reply #23 - Dec 5th, 2025 at 9:40pm
 
Daves2017 wrote on Dec 5th, 2025 at 2:30pm:
A 100k to deliver a six minute speech written by someone else is completely ridiculous.

Cost of living?

Not something Anika needs to worry about as we the taxpayers fund her lavish lifestyle and first class travel?



Nice work if you can get it – all taxpayers hard earned money.

They should be sent economy class, stay in 3 star hotels and
take Uber taxis.
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