Australia politics live: Aly says further gambling reforms a possibility; minister defends automated aged care assessment tool | Australian politics

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Australia politics live:


‘There is always more that we can do’: Anne Aly says further gambling reforms a possibility

Anne Aly – who doesn’t gamble – says it’s Australian to want to have a “flutter” or gamble, it’s a part of the culture, which makes reform difficult.

Speaking to ABC News Breakfast earlier, the minister for small business said while she doesn’t believe it’s inevitable the government will have to make some serious adjustments to its reforms to get the Coalition or Greens over the line, there could be more changes to it down the track.

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(I’ll also note here that the reforms don’t impact your ability to have a “flutter”, they just restrict companies being able to advertise that to you.)

Asked if she’s comfortable with kids still being able to regularly seeing ads, Aly says Labor is undertaking “the biggest sweep of gambling reforms that any government has ever taken”.

double quotation markThere is always more that we can do. We are not a government that sits still. We are a government that undertakes action and that keeps on moving, whether it’s in terms of raising wages for minimum wage workers that we [have] done ever since we’ve come into office in 2022, whether it’s tax cuts for Australians that we’ve consecutively delivered in 2022, whether it’s gambling reform, but there is always more to do.

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The minister for small business, international development and multicultural affairs, Dr Anne Aly, speaks in the House of Representatives on Wednesday.
The minister for small business, international development and multicultural affairs, Dr Anne Aly, speaks in the House of Representatives on Wednesday. Photograph: Hilary Wardhaugh/Getty Images
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‘Labor has failed older Australians’ opposition and crossbench pile pressure on government over aged care tool

Over in the Senate this morning, the bill I mentioned earlier being put up by the Coalition, Greens and David Pocock is being debated – which would add a human override function to the aged care integrated assessment tool.

The bill certainly makes the timing of the government’s announcement – that it will make minor changes to the tool and allow human override in “complex circumstances” – interesting. I’ll let you decide if it’s a coincidence.

The bill states that the IAT must operate to “support, not replace, professional judgement of approved needs assessors”, and allows a right to reassessment for all older Australians assessed by the tool since the Act’s commencement on 1 November.

Shadow health and NDIS minister, Anne Ruston tells the Senate:

double quotation markThis bill restores a simple principle, decisions about care should be made by a qualified person, a qualified professional, not a computer algorithm with no human capacity …

Minister [Sam] Rae’s rapid view is a damning admission. That the tool is failing, yet he has ruled out reinstating human override while only tinkering around the edges. Labor has failed older Australians on every single turn.

Their reckless algorithm’s first approach is driving assessors out of the sector in droves, and leaving older Australians worse off than they have previously been.

Labor senator Nita Green tells the chamber that while the government “shares the intent of this private senator’s bill”, it won’t support the legislation, because they claim the provisions in it will be “counterproductive and may not achieve what they set out to do.”

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