A dominant political party in politics doesn’t always mean good policy outcomes. The United States is an example of that.
The risk in Australia, as the 48th parliament commences this week, is that Labor gets lazy, knowing they have the numbers in the House of Reps, and only need the support of the Greens in the Senate.
It is an opportunity for Anthony Albanese’s team to push through a raft of legislation. First in line is a 20 per cent reduction in HECS debt for students.
Labor is also likely to move quickly on its controversial plan to increase the tax on superannuation accounts with more than $3 million, including the taxation of unrealised gains. The only roadblock to that one is that the Greens want the level reduced to $2 million.
There is also expected to be new legislation covering environmental laws, changes in childcare, gender equality and disability care, and truth in political advertising.
The concern is that legislation doesn’t receive the focus it needs, because Labor can bully it through. If that occurs, the country will be worse off.