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Bandt says government should prepare a ‘green book’ in anticipation of hung parliament

Dan Jervis-Bardy

The Greens leader, Adam Bandt, is now in the hot seat on ABC’s Insiders.

The party this morning revealed Bandt had written to the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet asking it to prepare a “green book” to help prepare for a hung parliament.

For some background, ahead of each election, public servants prepare “red books” (for a potential Labor government) and “blue books” (for a potential Coalition government) detailing the parties’ respective policies and how they could be implemented.

Bandt is asked about the Greens’ push to wind back negative gearing and capital gains tax concessions and whether it would curtail supply.

So what we’re saying is that we need to ensure that younger generations have the same chance at owning a home as previous generations have.

How would we do it? We’ve got to really, I guess, defuse this timebomb in a way that is fair because there would be a lot of people who have one investment property.

Leader of the Australian Greens, Adam Bandt.
Leader of the Australian Greens, Adam Bandt. Photograph: Jason O’Brien/AAP
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PM tells podcast he’s trying to ‘bring people together’

Anthony Albanese says that he has “consciously tried to bring people together and to reduce conflict” while Peter Dutton has tried to “undermine” and fit into a zeitgeist of strength.

Speaking on podcast The Rest is Politics, the PM said that criticisms he faced of being “weak” were in the style of his opponent. Without naming Donald Trump, he alluded to a new and alienating “machismo” in world politics:

“In part, that’s the style of Peter Dutton with his cheer squad in the media, as well, will repeat those comments in order to try to undermine and to try to fit into what Peter Dutton thought was the zeitgeist, if you like, of strength, channelling some other world leaders … bringing a machismo, essentially, to politics, and that is something that I think alienates the center,” he said.

In the conversation recorded on Saturday evening – which has received some local attention – Albanese told hosts Alastair Campbell and Rory Stewart that politics in Australia was “different”.

“We have compulsory voting, and people do go and vote, and there’s record numbers on the electoral roll. You win elections from either the center left or the center right … We’ll see how it plays out over the next couple of weeks, but certainly Peter Dutton has gone out of his way to appeal to a right-wing base, and there isn’t too much that is there for the center,” Albanese said.

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