Sector delivers verdict on government?s first 100 days
Danielle Kutchel
We speak to sector leaders and ministers to reveal where they think the government?s progress has been pleasing and what should be next on Albanese?s agenda.
The Albanese government has now passed its first 100 days in office and major announcements are coming in thick and fast. Pro Bono News approached key ministers and central figures within the for-purpose sector to reflect on the federal government?s progress so far and what should be the next steps from here.
Charities
New Assistant Minister for Competition, Charities and Treasury, Andrew Leigh, hit the ground running with a series of roundtables and community forums with charities around the country.˜ Feedback from these events will inform Treasury?s charity sector blueprint ? a key Labor election promise. Meanwhile, the hunt is on for a new head for the ACNC. Leigh told Pro Bono News he hadn?t been focused on 100 days as a target, but had been pleased to see progress on initiatives related to the sector over the government?s first 100 days. With the war on charities over, Leigh said he is turning his attention to harmonising fundraising laws ?as quickly as possible?. He?s also looking forward to working with the next head of the ACNC - but there?s no word yet on when that person will be appointed or who it might be. The assistant minister said he would also be working on his plan to double philanthropic giving by 2030, including increasing giving among high net worth individuals. Pro Bono News also spoke to David Crosbie, CEO of the Community Council for Australia, who said he is pleased to see a cultural shift in the new government towards working in partnership with charities. Noting that it is ?very early days?, Crosbie said ?the level of engagement with the sector? is unparalleled?. But what is now needed is action. ?Now [we have] to translate that engagement into meaningful change for charities and the communities we serve,? he said. He wants to see policy infrastructure connecting charities with decision-making figures within the government, as well as funding bodies and philanthropists, to help drive that change. But Crosbie cautioned that the government ?isn?t perfect? and that it would take time for charities to win the changes they are seeking. ?There?s a huge gap between what we might really desire and the reality of governments and what they?re doing. I don?t necessarily agree with everything the government says or does,? he said. ?But I also think we need to give the government time. The government?s done well. Could they do better? Certainly. But I think the process of achieving sustainable change that benefits charities and the community is not a short term process.?First Nations
The federal government came to power promising a referendum on an Indigenous Voice to Parliament.˜ Minister for Indigenous Australians, Linda Burney told Pro Bono News in a statement the government had ?hit the ground running?. ?A constitutionally enshrined Voice to Parliament is about improving the lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people across the country.˜ It?s about making sure First Nations people have a say on the issues and policies that affect them,? she said. ?It?s about drawing a line on the poor outcomes from the long legacy of failed programs and broken policies and about recognising the glaring omission of First Peoples in Australia?s birth certificate.? She listed a number of achievements alongside the progress on the Voice, including:- introducing support for victims of the Youpla funeral insurance company collapse˜
- beginning the process of scrapping and replacing the Community Development program
- progressing training for 500 new First Nations health workers at the Joint Council on Closing the Gap.