Friday 14 June 2013

Senator Penny Wong Topics: LABOUR FORCE DATA, NATIONAL PLAN FOR SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT, POLITICAL CULTURE



SENATOR THE HON PENNY WONG

MINISTER FOR FINANCE AND DEREGULATION

TRANSCRIPT


ABC NEWSRADIO WITH MARIUS BENSON


E&OE - PROOF ONLY

BENSON: Penny Wong, good morning.
WONG: Good morning, Marius. Good to be with you again.
BENSON:  Thanks indeed for joining us. Now, these unemployment figures, they come out monthly but they’re notoriously hard to pick and the expectation was there would be a tick up – in fact there was an official adjustment up and then a tick down. How would you characterise the economy? Because the background hum according to some of the reports this morning is that it’s very soft, with the hours being cut in particular.
WONG: Well, certainly the labour force figures were better than the market expected and that’s a welcome thing, to see a slight drop in the official unemployment rate, and that adds to over 950,000 jobs, as you know, that have been created since the Government came to office.
But, there’s no doubt that global volatility and the challenges of the global economy, as well as the high dollar – although that’s come off a bit, have created some challenges for different parts of the economy.
BENSON: The Prime Minister is visiting Adelaide today and she’s expected to announce a deal with the State Government on the Gonski funding for school education, but that’s the easy bit, isn’t it, really – doing a deal with a Labor Government? The hard bit is Queensland and WA. Do you expect you can get a result there by the end of the month?
WONG: Well, I think it wasn’t necessarily easy getting New South Wales, but I commend Barry O’Farrell, a Liberal Premier who’s prepared to put the children of his state above politics and New South Wales schools will benefit as a result.
This is a reform that is all about ensuring we are a first rate economy in the decades ahead. If you want to be competitive in the global economy in the years ahead we know we have to have a first rate schooling system. Regrettably, our schooling system has declined by world standards over the last decade. We’ve got to reverse that if we’re serious about making sure our children enjoy at least as good and better opportunities than we’ve had.
BENSON: The Prime Minister yesterday was in Perth, she was on radio, and she was asked personal questions including whether her partner was gay. The presenter, Howard Sattler, who asked those questions was suspended. Are you surprised the Prime Minister should face questions like that?
WONG: I think most Australians would be surprised that someone holding the office of the Prime Minister would get those sorts of questions. There are far better things to talk about.
BENSON: Is it part of a pattern? Because there was criticism from the Prime Minister and the Prime Minister’s staff when, in the past, Alan Jones, a Sydney radio presenter, asked her about being called ‘Juliar’, and there’s been seen a personal element in questioning of the Prime Minister that hasn’t been directed at previous Prime Minsters. Is that a fair assessment?
WONG: I think it is, but I’d also say I don’t think that those presenters are reflecting what Australians want to hear about. As I move around the country and talk to people, what are people worried about? They’re concerned about making sure their children have the best opportunities they can. They want to make sure that the economy continues to grow and that they have secure jobs. These are far more important issues than the sort of personal attempt at gossip that we see from some radio interviewers.
BENSON: But what’s the logic? Why would the Prime Minister be uniquely singled out in this way do you think?
WONG: Well, I’ll leave it to others to involve themselves in that commentary. I just don’t think it’s an appropriate way for the office of the Prime Minister to be treated, to be engaged in these sorts of personal discussions.
BENSON: Next week Parliament is back. There are plenty of newspaper reports and generally reports of pressure on Julia Gillard’s leadership. Kevin Rudd is very prominently on the campaign trail at the moment and being received in a ‘rock star welcome’. Will there be a move on Julia Gillard’s leadership next week?
WONG: No. And I would say that people really should take a leaf out of the Prime Minister’s book and not waste their breath on this sort of gossip. I have to say, I think it’s a good thing that everybody’s out there campaigning for Labor and that’s what Kevin is doing. It’s certainly a much better position to have everybody out there campaigning than the other way around.
BENSON: The difficulty with leadership is that you dismiss it there as gossip, but whether it’s true or not, everyone, whether they want a leadership change or oppose a leadership change, always dismisses it until it goes public…
WONG: Well, Marius that’s one of those questions where I’m not sure how you would like me to answer it – I’ve given you my view. I think there are more important things to be talking about and certainly that’s the way the Prime Minister is approaching it, and the way I’m approaching it.
For example, in your report in the lead up to this interview you pointed out that the Vice President of Indonesia dismissed the Opposition’s plan to turn the boats back. What the Vice President of Indonesia has said effectively is that Tony Abbott’s plan won’t succeed.
BENSON: Well, that’s a perfect segway Finance Minister, because that’s our next story so I might leave it there and thanks very much for your time this morning.
ENDS

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