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Opposition Claims Labor Hypocrisy on NDIS


28 June 2012 at 11:13 am
Staff Reporter
The Federal Opposition claims the Labor Party and the Greens have struck a blow against a bipartisan and cross-party approach to the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS).

Staff Reporter | 28 June 2012 at 11:13 am


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Opposition Claims Labor Hypocrisy on NDIS
28 June 2012 at 11:13 am

The Federal Opposition claims the Labor Party and the Greens have struck a blow against a bipartisan and cross-party approach to the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS).

The Opposition said it moved a motion in the Senate to establish a Joint Parliamentary Committee to be chaired by both sides of politics to oversee the implementation of an NDIS and a similar motion was listed for a vote in the House of Representatives.

However, the Shadow Minister for Disabilities, carers and the voluntary sector, Senator Mitch Fifield said disappointingly, the Labor Party and the Greens in the Senate voted against the establishment of the NDIS Parliamentary Committee.

“While the Government parties did support a separate Coalition motion declaring the Senate’s cross -party support for an NDIS, in an act of hypocrisy they opposed the establishment of the committee that would have given expression and meaning to that support,” Senator Fifield said.

“The introduction of an NDIS will span several parliaments. There needs to be a mechanism to elevate the implementation of this historic social reform above partisan politics.”

Senator Fifield said the Leader of the Opposition Tony Abbott had written to Prime Minister Gillard three times offering bipartisanship and proposing a joint parliamentary oversight committee.

“The Prime Minister has rejected the offer. Rather than engage constructively with the Coalition to see an NDIS become a reality, the Government has demonstrated that its words about working co-operatively and in a cross-party way to introduce an NDIS are meaningless platitudes,” he said.

“Australians with disability are becoming increasingly frustrated with the lack of information and consultation about the design and implementation of the NDIS.

“A parliamentary committee would have provided a forum to ask the legitimate questions Australians with disability want asked.

“The NDIS should be owned by the Parliament as a whole, not by any political party.” 






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