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‘Egregious lie’: Dutton’s ruthless Albo rant

Peter Dutton has not minced his words as he reveals his party’s position on Labor’s revamped income tax cuts.

‘We’ve seen nothing’: Newspoll shows 62 per cent of Aussies support Labor’s tax changes

Peter Dutton has slammed Anthony Albanese as the “the liar in the Lodge” as he announced the Liberals will not stand in the way of bigger tax cuts for Australian workers.

The Liberal leader emerged from talks with colleagues on Tuesday declaring Australians can’t wait for cost of living relief.

“The Coalition will not stand in the way of providing support to Australians doing it tough,” he said.

“The prime minister has made this change for his own political survival. We are supporting this change not to support the Prime Minister’s lie but to support those families who need help now.”

Mr Dutton said there was however no doubt that the Prime Minister had lied when he promised not to alter the tax cuts before the election.

“(This) has been an egregious lie by the Prime Minister,” Mr Dutton said.

“I think again Australians have been shocked to know they have a liar in The Lodge and a Prime Minister who looks the Australian public in the eye and is prepared to lie to them.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. Picture: Martin Ollman/NCA NewsWire
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. Picture: Martin Ollman/NCA NewsWire

“He promised on 97 occasions that power prices would come down. He has never mentioned that figure since the election.

“The Prime Minister deliberately deceived the Australian public on the Voice, deceived the public in relation to bringing down energy costs and deceived the public in relation to the tax cuts which were promised on more than 100 occasions.

“He has taken the money away from the proposed stage 3 tax cuts which have been legislated, robbed that money and put it into the proposal he has on the table at the moment.”

Earlier, the Prime Minister accused the Coalition of tying themselves in knots when it comes to their response to the reformed stage 3 tax package.

Asked if Australians can trust him after changing his word on stage 3 tax cuts, Mr Albanese said he clearly told the National Press Club last week the government had changed its position because of cost of living pressures.

“I was quite clear about us changing our position and why we were doing it,” he said.

“They’ve been tightening the screws on themselves as they tie themselves in knots.

“First they said they’d fight it. Then they said they’d roll it back. Now they say they’ll have a different position completely.

“Our option is to give every taxpayer a tax cut. It is to overwhelmingly benefit low and middle income Australians. It is firmly targeted at middle Australia, as well as providing economic benefits. It’s the right decision done for the right reasons at the right time. And that’s what we’ll be advocating in the Parliament.”

Dutton finalising his position

This comes as it was revealed Mr Dutton will execute the time-honoured “b**ch and fold” strategy over Labor’s revamped income tax cuts, ensuring cost of living relief is locked and loaded for July 1.

The blunt phrase being echoed around Canberra refers to the Liberal party’s decision to run up the white flag on Labor’s broken promise despite days of heavy criticism.

The move is good news for millions of workers.

For a person on the average wage of $73,000, their original tax cut will double to $1500 a year.

A full-time worker earning $100,000 a year will get an extra $800, taking their tax cut to more than $2100.

A family on the average household income of about $130,000 – with one partner earning $80,000 and the other $50,000 – will receive a combined cut of over $2600, more than double what they would have received under the old plan.

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton. Picture: Richard Dobson
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton. Picture: Richard Dobson

The Liberal leader is finalising his position after confirming on Friday that he would not stand in the way of the vast majority of Australian workers scoring a bigger tax cut.

But he is promising to hammer the theme that there is a “liar in the Lodge” over the Prime Minister’s broken promise not to stiff high income earners who have been waiting for a big tax cut for half a decade.

The Liberal Party is expected to announce on Tuesday that the Coalition will not block Anthony Albanese’s revamped stage three tax cuts.

But Mr Dutton will warn that following the Prime Minister’s decision to dump the election promise, nothing is safe – whether it is negative gearing tax breaks for investors, or other previously ruled out reforms.

The decision sets the scene for the Liberal Party to abandon Scott Morrison’s legislated plan for a flat marginal rate of 30 per cent for every dollar earned between $45,000 and $200,000.

Instead, the money will be redirected at delivering bigger tax cuts for those earning under $150,000 a year.

Mr Morrison announced he was quitting politics earlier this year after championing the tax cuts for years.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers. Picture: John Gass/NCA NewsWire
Treasurer Jim Chalmers. Picture: John Gass/NCA NewsWire

Treasurer Jim Chalmers told ABC News Breakfast on Monday that the Coalition had “no more excuses” to delay.

“I say to the Coalition, and I say to the Greens, don’t stand in the way of a bigger tax cut for more workers to help with the cost of living,’’ he said.

“No more stumbling around and stuffing around, it’s time for the Coalition, in particular, but also the other crossbench members, to come to a position.

“There are no more excuses.”

Treasury officials conceded on Monday that they didn’t know how many Australians would be paying more tax over the decade as a result of the revamped stage three package.

Treasury and Finance officials also confirmed they were working on plans to dump legislated tax cuts as far back as December – as the Prime Minister and Treasurer insisted they had “no plans” to do so.

The admission emerged during a Senate inquiry on Monday, as Liberal frontbencher Jane Hume grilled officials over how and when the government decided to break a promise not to tinker with the tax cuts for high income earners.

But public servants insisted they had not been “complicit in a lie” and had instead been preparing options for the government in the normal way.

“So when the Prime Minister said on the 21st of December, ‘We are not reconsidering our position,’ you actually were reconsidering?’’ Senator Hume asked.

But Department of Finance First Assistant Secretary Anna Harmer said it wasn’t clear until January that the government was preparing to move.

“It was clear to us the government may not even consider our advice or entertain our advice,” she said.

Newspoll confirms that a majority of voters have backed Mr Albanese’s decision to scrap the legislated stage three tax cuts and redirect relief from higher to lower income workers.

Read related topics:Anthony AlbanesePeter Dutton

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/finance/economy/australian-economy/peter-dutton-finalising-his-position-on-pms-broken-tax-cut-promise/news-story/22ece792820a4e4e191c224db3822caf