Anthony Albanese (centre) vanquished Scott Morrison to become only the fourth Labor leader to win government from opposition since World War II

Australia stands at the cusp of a transformative era as Anthony Albanese ascends to power, ready to implement a series of groundbreaking policies that signal a significant shift in the nation’s direction. His victory over Scott Morrison marks him as only the fourth Labor leader since World War II to move from opposition to government.

In a compelling campaign that resonated with voters, Labor secured key wins in affluent, inner-city constituencies—some of which were previously out of reach. The promise of proactive measures on climate change and the establishment of a federal corruption watchdog played a pivotal role in swaying these electorates.

The election saw Mr. Albanese achieve a decisive win, primarily by maintaining a focused, understated approach while Mr. Morrison’s popularity waned among the electorate. Yet, despite this strategic campaign, the incoming government faces the challenge of implementing a diverse array of policies amidst soaring inflation and a national debt surpassing $1 trillion.

Among the bold initiatives are measures aimed at assisting first-time home buyers and revamping childcare subsidies, reflecting a commitment to addressing critical social issues. Additionally, there are plans to enforce transparency in company pay scales by requiring disclosures on gender pay disparities. Furthermore, the new administration intends to advocate for an increase in the minimum wage, targeting a rise above the 5.1 percent inflation rate.

This ambitious agenda suggests a period of dynamic change for Australia, driven by a leader who has captured the public’s desire for reform and responsiveness to pressing national concerns.

Anthony Albanese vanquished Scott Morrison to become only the fourth Labor leader to win government from opposition since World War II 

Perhaps the most prominent of Mr Albanese’s plans is pledge to lobby the Fair Work Commission to raise the minimum wage by more than the 5.1 per cent inflation rate

There is also a plan to force companies to reveal how much they pay men and women, and pledge to lobby the Fair Work Commission to raise the minimum wage by more than the 5.1 per cent inflation rate.

Other key policies include help free TAFE places, greener energy and introducing an indigenous voice in Parliament, in line with the Uluru Statement from the Heart.

Mr Albanese revealed the full costings of his policy plans just two days before the election, announcing his government would deliver a deficit $7.4 billion bigger than the Coalition with a raft of bigger spending policies.

‘I have shared the true principles that will drive the government that I lead,’ Mr Albanese said in his victory speech.

‘No one left behind because we should always look after the disadvantaged and the vulnerable.’

Mr Albanese’s victory over Mr Morrison and the Liberal Party means his policies will now become reality – so long as he can get them through the new Senate. 

Below, Daily Mail Australia takes a look at the prime minister-elect’s vision for the future of Australia – and the major policies he will be focusing upon.  

Labor has proposed a ‘help to buy’ scheme which would see the government take a 40 per cent stake in up to 10,000 homes a year to help people earning less than $90,000 on to the property ladder (pictured is an auction in Melbourne)

Help for first homebuyers 

Labor will introduce a ‘Help to Buy’ scheme where the government would take a 40 per cent stake in up to 10,000 homes a year to help people earning less than $90,000 on to the property ladder.

Mr Albanese will also create a $10 billion Housing Australia Future Fund to build 30,000 new social and affordable housing properties in its first five years.

Childcare changes

One of Labor’s most significant policies is to increase childcare subsidies for all families earning less than $530,000.

‘We can write universal childcare into that proud tradition,’ Mr Albanese told supporters. 

Mr Albanese would remove a cap that prevents families earning more than $189,390 from receiving more than $10,560 a year in subsidies.

A family on $189,390 that uses childcare five days a week would instead get $21,608 in subsidies, more than double the current allowance.

Lower income families would also benefit from increased subsidies. For example, a family taking home $80,000 a year would get an extra $2,389 a year for full-time care.

Labor will also launch a review into providing a 90 per cent universal childcare subsidy.

One of Labor’s most significant policies is to increase childcare subsidies for all families earning less than $530,000. The Coalition has increased the subsidy by 30 per cent for second and subsequent children

Tax cuts

Labor will implement the stage-three income tax cuts in 2024, which will create a flat rate of 30 per cent between $45,000 and $200,000.

The move mostly benefits those earning more than $120,000, who are now still taxed at 37 per cent.

Labor dropped its 2019 policy to ban negative gearing, a major tax bonus for property investors which economists say pushes up house prices. 

Mr Albanese talked about Labor as the party of opportunity, using the language of self improvement over class warfare in his speech.

‘But also no one held back: of course, we should always support aspiration and opportunity,’ he said.

Labor will provide 465,000 free TAFE places and 20,000 extra university places under a $1.2 billion plan (pictured is a Sydney campus)

Education

Labor will provide 465,000 free TAFE places and 20,000 extra university places under a $1.2 billion plan.

The free TAFE places will be for courses in industries with a skills shortages such as trades and construction, resources, digital and cyber security, new energy, and advanced manufacturing.

Labor has no plans to reduce university fees after the Coalition hiked prices for humanities courses.

Access to GPs

Mr Albanese has pledged to build 50 first-aid clinics across the country.

The clinics will treat non-life threatening injuries such as broken bones, minor burns, cuts and animal stings and be open every day between 8am to 10pm.

Anthony Albanese has pledged 50 first-aid clinics across the country if he wins the election

He also promised to spend $750 million over four years to improve access to GPs including outside business hours.

Labor will increase government subsidies for medicines on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme by reducing the maximum cost for the patient from $42.50 to $30 per script.

Defence and borders 

Labor is backing the AUKUS alliance and obtaining nuclear-powered submarines to counter the rise of China.

Labor supports boat turn-backs and offshore processing but would scrap temporary protection visas. This would allow thousands of refugees already living in Australia to stay permanently. 

The Coalition argued such a move would encourage people smugglers to start sending boats here again. 

One of Labor’s most significant policies is to increase childcare subsidies for all families earning less than $530,000 (pictured is a childcare centre at Helensburgh south of Sydney)

Climate change 

Labor is committed to net zero emissions by 2050 with a target of 43 per cent reduction by 2030 – more than the Coalition’s 26-28 per cent. 

Together, we can take advantage of the opportunity for Australia to be a renewable energy superpower,’ Mr Albanese declared in his victory speech.

Labor will spend $20 billion to upgrade the electricity grid to improve transmission, roll out 85 solar banks and 400 community batteries and invest in 10,000 ‘new energy apprentices’ alongside a $10 million new energy skills program.

Mr Albanese said the plan would allow cheaper renewable sources to supply 82 per cent of electricity by 2030.

The plan is projected to create 604,000 jobs and slash average household energy prices by $275 a year by 2025 and $378 by 2035.

The new Labor government will also spend $3 billion on renewables manufacturing and deploying low-emissions technologies – as well as remove taxes on electric cars to make them cheaper.

Labor has announced a target to reduce emissions by 43 per cent by 2030. Pictured: Mr Albanese with a hydrogen car

Aged care changes

Mr Albanese outlined plans to improve aged care after a Royal Commission reported shocking incidences of neglect.

Labor sparked controversy by announcing it would require aged care homes to have a nurse on site 24 hours a day, seven days a week, from July 2023, a year before the Commission recommended.

The ALP will also make a submission to the Fair Work Commission to support a pay rise for aged care workers.

‘Together, we can fix the crisis in aged care,’ Mr Albanese said.

Addressing the gender pay gap

Anthony Albanese has vowed to introduce a law forcing companies to reveal how much they pay men and women if he becomes prime minister. 

Manufacturing

Labor will set up a $15 billion National Reconstruction Fund to fund major manufacturing projects across the nation.

The fund will provide loans, guarantees and equity to support projects in resources, transport, agriculture, medicine, energy, and defence.

Labor will set up a $15 billion National Reconstruction Fund to fund major manufacturing projects across the nation

Labor said the policy would ‘secure well-paid jobs, drive regional development, and invest in our national sovereign capability, broadening and diversifying Australia’s economy’.

Trains, trams, and ferries will be made in Australia instead of overseas and a fast rail line between Sydney and Newcastle will be built.

Corruption watchdog

Labor will set up a federal integrity commission which the Morrison Government promised in 2019 then failed to deliver.

The Coalition’s proposed model cannot hold its own independent inquiries, public inquiries or investigate past scandals but Labor’s would be able to do all these things.

Industrial relations 

Labor will implement a series of industrial relations reforms to re-define casual work and give Australians more chance at securing permanent jobs. 

In March 2021 the government defined casual work for the first time as a situation where a worker has ‘no firm advance commitment to continuing and indefinite work according to an agreed pattern of work’.

There are around 2.6million casual workers in Australia. They are most commonly in the hospitality, retail (pictured), health, education and construction industries

But Labor will change this so employment status is determined by workers’ shift patterns.

If an employee has regular shifts for a defined time period then they would be permanent not casual, such as a coal miner who has a 12 month fixed roster. 

Mr Albanese will improve the rights of so-called gig workers such as Uber drivers and Deliveroo drivers.

Labor will extend the powers of the Fair Work Commission to include ’employee-like’ forms of work, meaning they would need to receive minimum wage.

The ALP will also bring in new laws to make sure workers who do the same job are paid the same if they are employed directly or through labour hire firms. 

And pay secrecy clauses in employment contracts designed to stop workers talking about their pay-packets will be banned.

Labor wants to improve working conditions for casuals and gig workers such as Uber drivers, food delivery workers, hospitality, and retail staff 

What Australia’s new PM promised in his victory speech

The new PM vowed to be a leader more focused on women’s empowerment, after five male Liberal Party MPs in Melbourne and Sydney – Treasurer Josh Frydenberg, Tim Wilson, Dave Sharma, Trent Zimmerman and Jason Falinski – lost to female climate independents.

‘Together, we can make equal opportunity for women a national, economic and social priority,’ Mr Albanese said.

The Labor leader is also vowing to have indigenous Australians recognised in the Constitution under incoming indigenous affairs minister Linda Burney – the first Aboriginal woman elected to federal Parliament’s House of Representatives.

‘Together, we can embrace the Uluru statement from the heart,’ he said.

‘All of us ought to be proud that amongst our great, multicultural society, we count the oldest, living, continuous culture in the world.’

With inflation in the year to March surging by 5.1 per cent – more than double the 2.4 per cent increase in the wage price index – Mr Albanese doubled down on his call for the Fair Work Commission to give minimum wage earners a pay rise in line with inflation.

‘Together, we can as a country, say that all of us – if the Fair Work Commission don’t cut the wage of minimum-wage workers – we can say, “Well we welcome that – absolutely”.’

Treasury is expecting Australia’s gross government debt to surpass the $1 trillion mark in 2023-24 for the first time ever, and make up 44.6 per cent of Australia’s gross domestic product – a level unseen since the 1950s after the war.

Without a clear majority yet – having just 73 seats confirmed on election night out of 151 electorates in the House of Representatives – Labor would need to keep its election promises to stand a chance of being re-elected in 2025.

Cost-of-living pressures are set to intensify in the coming year as the Reserve Bank of Australia prepares to raise interest rates, possibly seven more times.

Labor supporters celebrate during the Labor Party election night event at Canterbury-Hurlstone Park RSL Club

Labor supporters celebrate during the Labor Party election night event at Canterbury-Hurlstone Park RSL Club

The RBA forecasts an inflation rate of six per cent by the end of 2022 – a level well above its two to three per cent target which makes government spending an issue if handouts to Australians helps drive up inflation.

While using the rhetoric of helping the disadvantaged, Labor triumphed in wealthy inner-city seats where climate change is the bigger issue, with Mr Albanese winning Boothby in Adelaide at an election for the first time since 1946.

The ALP also won, for the first time ever, the Melbourne inner-east seat of Higgins, previously held by former treasurer Peter Costello and Liberal prime ministers Harold Holt and John Gorton.

Labor also won back the richer, inner-city seats of Reid in Sydney, Brisbane, Chisholm in Melbourne and Swan in Perth, which means it has to satisfy its growing middle class support base.

How Anthony Albanese made history with his election win 

By Stephen Johnson for Daily Mail Australia 

The man raised by a single mother in housing commission will be Australia’s first PM to have gone through a marriage break-up, with his girlfriend Jodie Haydon and his estranged wife, former NSW deputy premier Carmel Tebbutt, both joining him in celebrating victory at an RSL club with their son Nathan.

Australia has rejected at eight elections Opposition leaders who have divorced and remarried: on the Liberal Party side Andrew Peacock (1984 and 1990) and John Hewson (1993), and on the Labor side Kim Beazley (1998 and 2001), Mark Latham (2004) and Bill Shorten (2016 and 2019) 

He is also the first modern Labor leader from the party’s more radical Left faction to win from opposition.

This signaled to supporters on election night he will be socially progressive on women’s and indigenous issues and make Australia a ‘renewable energy superpower’.

He is the first prime minister to be raised in public housing and the seventh Catholic PM who also supports the South Sydney Rabbitohs.

Mr Albanese paid tribute to his mother Maryanne who raised him in public housing in Camperdown.

‘I hope there are families in public housing watching this tonight because I want every parent to be able to tell their child, no matter where you live or where you come from, in Australia, the doors of opportunity are open to us all,’ he said.

‘I want Australia to continue to be a country that no matter where you live, who you worship, who you love, or what your last name is, that places no restrictions on your journey in life.’

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