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Speeches and Transcripts
The Human Face of the Economic Crisis in the Pacific - Port Vila, Vanuatu (More)
(Check Against Delivery)
Acknowledgements
Thank you for the invitation to speak at this meeting.
Economic crises are not new – they come and go. It’s how we respond, the policy choices we make and that we become more resilient with each new experience that matter.
Today I want to touch on a few themes that relate to the human face of the economic crisis.
I want to talk about the important issue of labour mobility and skill flow in the context of the development of people and economies.
I want to look at the economic progress that has been made in the Pacific.
And I will also touch on how small states can work more closely together to influence ways in which the international community approaches poverty reduction.
As this conference acknowledges, the past year or so has been tough on the Pacific – first with the high oil prices of 2008, then the global recession, followed by the tsunami in Samoa and Tonga.
These have combined to slow economic growth and progress towards the MDGs.
I congratulate Pacific island countries for resisting the temptation to pull back from integration with the global economy.
That would have been the worst thing countries could have done in responding to the crisis.
Countries that have done this have historically not fared well
It’s important that we take a long term view of what has happened.
Looking at the bigger picture, there have been some significant achievements over the past ten years.
Ten years ago hardly anyone in the Pacific had a mobile phone or internet access.
Now, mobile phones are widespread.
Here in Vanuatu over the past two years the proportion of the population with mobile phone access in Vanuatu increased from about one-quarter to three-quarters.
Another achievement has been a big decrease in the incidence of malaria in Vanuatu and Solomon Islands.
And reforms are making it easier to do business in several countries in the region.
These improvements not only contribute to greater economic development in general, they give people greater freedom to make choices and take advantage of opportunities that improve their lives.
They are necessary but not sufficient.
We need to take into account broader questions of history and geography.
Despite all the development assistance over recent decades, there can be no doubt that where we are born is the main thing that will determine our material well-being.
We can work and try as hard as we like but for most of us, where we live will have the greatest bearing on our individual economic prospects.
This is not an advocacy of despair or futility.
It is merely an insight into some further steps we need to consider to build resilience in the face of inevitable future economic challenges.
Because it is people who develop, not places.
Individuals develop when they receive an education and health services. We all develop when we have an income. And we develop when we have the freedom to use our skills and knowledge where opportunities present themselves.
More than ever, this century will be one of enormous movement of people and of skill flow.
We will be able to work in new and quite different ways.
Some of us may choose to live and work in another country permanently. Or we might find ourselves living in one country but working in another for set periods, or even working remotely.
People from the Pacific taking part in seasonal worker schemes have the advantage of working in Australia and New Zealand part of the year and being in their own country the remainder of the time.
This is exciting –we are lucky to be living in an age where transport and communications give us such flexibility.
To some extent these new ways of working should stop accusations of ‘brain drain’.
The term ‘brain drain’ has negative connotations and should be dropped.
It is far too simplistic to say that if an educated and skilled person leaves a country, the country is in some way dragged down by that loss.
The philosophical and economic arguments relating to the term ‘brain drain’ are complex and this is not the time or place to go into them in any depth.
However there are a few points that can be made.
The first is that many skilled people serve in their own countries for years before they emigrate.
The second is that if we limit or eliminate the chance for migration, we might also see a reduced investment and interest in education.
People’s education decisions are often shaped by opportunities for migration, even if not everyone ends up taking up that opportunity.
The Philippines is a good example. It has one of the world’s highest tertiary enrolment rates.
One reason is that a lot of people study nursing because nursing is a profession where they can get jobs in wealthier countries.
As it happens many nurses in the Philippines don’t end up emigrating – it’s the idea that they can that seems to motivate them to do tertiary education.
A third benefit is that when skilled people emigrate from one country to another there is more trade between the two countries.
And when skilled emigrants from poor countries go back home, they take back with them skills, savings and raised expectations along with an awareness of better functioning systems of government and service delivery.
Here in the Pacific we are all too well aware of the benefits which flow to countries of origin through remittances from temporary and permanent migrants.
Of course, migration is not the be all and end all to advancing development.
But greater mobility for workers across borders has the potential to massively increase people’s living standards.
Traditional thinking about poverty reduction does not generally link immigration with development policy.
It has tended to focus on aid, trade and removing international barriers on things that raise the productivity and living standards of people in lower income countries.
But there is a case for more debate about the role of immigration as a development tool - Australia is already taking small steps with the pilot seasonal workers program and by helping young people in the Pacific gain skills that might lead to jobs in other countries.
Young students from Kiribati are studying nursing in Australia. By next year about three thousand people will have trained at the Australia Pacific Technical College in areas where they are likely to find jobs in their own countries or abroad.
This increased emphasis on skills ties in nicely with the Pacer Plus trade agreement – an important part of the Plus is building up the capacity of the workforce to take advantage of the new trade arrangements.
And it complements efforts to increase business in the agricultural sector.
On this note, it is my pleasure to announce today a new program funded by the Australian Government to improve marketing opportunities for small farm holders here in Vanuatu and in several other Pacific countries.
The $10 million program will give farmers extra help to improve and expand their products, their supply chains and their marketing.
It will make it easier for them to get their products to markets and become more competitive in the region.
This program will be carried out by several research institutions and agencies in the Pacific and Australia and will be led by the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research.
Improving food security and improving the livelihoods of people living in rural areas in the Pacific will help countries make greater progress towards the Millennium Development Goals.
I said at the outset I wanted to mention the Millennium Development Goals because these effectively represent the human face of development.
This year is a critical one for the UN and for the countries committed to the achievement of the MDGs because it’s an opportunity to leverage the change needed to reach the targets by 2015.
The MDG Leaders summit to be held in September will give us all a chance to take stock of progress and the challenges ahead.
It is an opportunity to ask whether the MDGs have been the right targets and goals and what will happen after 2015.
Most importantly, we will want to stop backsliding where it is occurring and accelerate progress where it is needed.
Australia will contribute our ideas, those we have learned from our experience as a bilateral donor and ideas that emerge from interested Australian groups and individuals.
However it’s critical that the views of developing countries be heard at the Summit.
This can be hard for some states, particularly the smaller states, but the world needs to hear from you.
Through the Pacific Islands Forum or Association of Small Island States, or both, you can present a common and independent position on the MDGs which will say something the rest of the world needs to hear.
You all know that small island states have some issues which differentiate their position from that of other developing countries.
It is a top priority for Australian in the lead up to the Summit to make sure your important viewpoint gets a fair hearing.
We will all be asking questions of the MDGs in coming years.
We will want to know the ways in which a common international agreement on aid and development has been useful, whether the structure of the MDGs should be replicated in the future or whether the context of the MDG framework has served the interests of developed and developing countries effectively.
There is a lot to discuss.
I want to finish on the note on which I began – throughout the global recession we have all sought to minimise the impact on individuals.
Social protection can do so much but improving access to reliable and quality services and increasing access to economic opportunity will do a lot more.
More than ever, donor assistance needs to be as effective as it can be – the Cairns Compact on strengthened donor coordination will help us achieve this.
I understand substantial progress has been made towards implementing the Compact since it was agreed by Leaders last year and that work is on track for key reviews and reports to be completed ahead of this year’s Forum here in Port Vila.
This is encouraging.
Although I will be retiring from politics this year, my interest in international development remains as strong as ever.
My intention is to do more work in this field, not less, and I relish that thought.
I have been interested in aid and development all my adult life and nothing will change that.
Thank you.
Transcript: 666 ABC with Alex Sloan (More)
Bob talks to Alex Sloan about his recent trip to Africa
Transcript - 2UE The George and Paul Show (More)
Topic: Australia's response to the Samoan tsunami
Speech to the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness, Melbourne, 1 October 2009 (More)
Second reading speech - Asian Development Bank Additional Subscription Bill (More)
In the House of Representatives 15 September 2009
Opening statement of the Second Conference of States Parties to the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (More)
Speaking at the United Nations building in New York
Speaking in Parliament celebrating the 60th Anniversary of the Four Geneva Conventions of 1949 (More)
Speaking in Parliament to celebrating the 60th Anniversary of the Four Geneva Conventions of 1949.
Speech recognising the 60th Anniversary of the signing of the 1949 Geneva Conventions (More)
Transcript of interview with SBS Ethnic Radio (More)
Discussing the release of the '2009 Report of the Global Campaign for the Health Millennium Development Goals'.
Second Reading Speech, Budget '09 (More)
Speech on the Second Reading of the 2009 Budget, discussing the macroeconomic situation, the impact of the Budget in the ACT, extra funding for the ABC and SBS, and the future and purpose of the aid budget.
Transcript of interview with Alex Sloane, 666 ABC Canberra, 11 December 2008 (More)
Bob McMullan discusses the Bali Democracy Forum, the FAO's World Food Insecurity Report 2008, and the Future of Australia’s aid program with Alex Sloane on the 666 ABC Canberra Morning Show.
Australian Statement at Financing for Development Conference (More)
Attached is the statement I made on behalf of Australia at the International Review Conference on Financing for Development at Doha on 1 December, 2008.
Development for All - Launching AusAID's strategy for development for people with a disability (More)
Attached below is the speech I made at the launch of AusAID's new strategy for development for people with a disability, 'Development for All'.
Australia leads support for people with disabilities in Asia Pacific (More)
Parliamentary Secretary for International Development Assistance, Bob McMullan, today committed Australia to a leadership role in supporting people with disability in the Asia Pacific.
An estimated 650 million people across the world have a disability and about 80 per cent of the population with a disability live in developing countries. The Asia Pacific region is home to two-thirds of this population.
“The Australian Government recognises that poverty is both a cause and consequence of disability and is committed to ensuring that the benefits of development reach those who are most excluded,” Mr McMullan said.
Speech to the United Nations Association of Australia - Millennium Development Goals 3 and 5 (More)
A transcript of a speech delivered by Bob McMullan to the annual conference of the United Nations Association of Australia in Brisbane.
Transcript of speech at the Australian launch of the UN Year of Sanitation – Parliament House, Canberra - 17 June 2008 (More)
Distinguished guests, your excellencies, ladies and gentlemen, it’s easy for people to be cynical when there’s another announcement of another year of something, because we are always campaigning around the international year of this and that, and none of them appeal to everybody. They all have a target audience.
Sometimes, years later, you look back and see how impact they’ve had, but I’m sure that if you went into the street and asked ordinary citizens of this country or most countries whether the first thing we needed to do was have an International Year of Sanitation, they might not immediately respond, but I really want to challenge that. In my view, this is an excellent decision by the United Nations. I’m very excited about it.
Speech to the ASEAN-UN International Pledging Conference - Yangon, Myanmar - 25 May 2008 (More)
Cyclone Nargis Pledging Conference, Burma (More)
Transcript of the press conference held following the pledging conference in Burma on 25 May.
Future Directions for Australia's International Development Program (More)
The second in a series of speeches on the future for Australia's Development Assistance Program, delivered at the University of Adelaide
Transcript of interview with Jacinta Tynan and Susanne Latimore – Sky News on the Hour 2pm - Emergency aid to Burma (More)
Speech at the Alfred Medical Research and Education Precinct World Health Day Symposium (More)
Northern Territory National Emergency Response Bill Speech (More)
I support the amendment moved by the shadow minister and the position which she outlined in her remarks. I have some serious concerns about the Social Security and Other Legislation Amendment (Welfare Payment Reform) Bill 2007 and cognate legislation, notwithstanding the proper and necessary decision that we, as an opposition, have made to support it—hopefully with some amendments. But in the realistic knowledge that the government will never accept amendments we reluctantly support the bill as it is.
Kevin Rudd on A New Approach to Australia's Arc of Instability (More)
Click here to read Kevin Rudd's speech to the Lowy Institute
Adjournment Speech: Liberal Party (More)
I want to raise a series of issues this evening concerning a growing trend in the Howard government’s failure to distinguish between the national interest and the Liberal Party’s interests, between public purposes and private purposes and a trend towards confusing public assets and private assets. We have seen it recently with advertising. We have seen it recently with polling. We have seen it recently with fundraising. We are seeing serious allegations raised now with regard to the overlap between the Liberal Party, the government and what was previously seen as being, quite properly, a legitimate business campaign. We are starting to see the first glimpses of it with regard to taxpayer funded dirt units. In the time available, I want to talk mainly about that.
Adjournment Speech: Australian Public Service (More)
I want to talk this evening about some matters relating to the Public Service. Firstly, and most importantly, I want to talk about politicisation of the Public Service. I have a serious concern that after 11 years we have a government which takes the benefits of office as a right. We have seen it in highly publicised ways in, for example, the outrageous advertising campaigns robbing the taxpayers to fund what should be funded by the Liberal Party. But I want to proceed from that, which I now take as a given fact, to some serious matters concerning the Public Service.
Doorstop: Development funding, Therese Rein (More)
Australians will be extremely disappointed. Australians are very generous with their own money to fight global poverty and they’ll be extremely disappointed to hear that the money they thought the Government was using for that is actually being used to fund the Government’s tricky political exercises.
Speech: Canberra planning, Federal/State Relations, Overseas Aid Performance (More)
The debate on the Appropriation Bill (No. 1) 2007-2008 and cognate bills gives me an opportunity tonight to speak on three matters of my shadow portfolio: firstly, my constituents in the ACT; secondly, federal-state relations; and, thirdly, international development assistance.
Speech: Reforming the Federation: A Once in a Lifetime Opportunity (More)
The recent Budget speech by the Treasurer and the Budget Reply by Kevin Rudd illustrated the contrast in approach to Federal/State relations which is at the heart of the philosophical and policy division in this area in the lead-up to the 2007 election. The Treasurer made only one reference to the states and territories in his Budget speech – that was to blame the states for the inadequacy of current dental services to the poor and disadvantaged, not withstanding that his own government had cut $100 million from the programs which states run. By contrast, Kevin Rudd’s two principal initiatives of his Budget Reply were predicated on a cooperative, Federal/State approach.
Speech to the ALP National Conference (More)
In 2007 Australia not only faces what looks like a very tight election; it also faces a once in a generation opportunity to transform our federation.
We won’t be able to make more substantial progress without leadership from a federal government which actually believes in co-operative federalism.
So if the essential task of federation reform is going to be done, it will have to be done by a Rudd Labor Government.
Adjournment Speech - Reforming the Federation (More)
Everyone in this parliament knows that in 2007 we are facing what looks like a very tight election. I am not going to talk about that. We are also going to face a once in a generation opportunity to transform our federation. The question I want to deal with tonight is: will the Prime Minister use this crucial 18-month period during which no state or territory election is due to fundamentally reform the operations of the federation to save the $9 billion which the Business Council of Australia says the current mismanagement of federal-state relations is costing the economy each year?
The Rise of the Global Slave Trade (More)
We live in the South East Asian region, and it's here the issue of human trafficking, bond of labour, and other forms of contemporary slavery flourish. We are not responsible for that, other than in small part where it takes place here, but we are responsible to be part of a solution.
Doorstop Transcript - Government plans for nuclear reactors, Labor’s Education Plan, Uranium enrichment (More)
Adjournment Debate - The Prime Minister's standing (More)
Last year I made a speech in this House outlining my critique of the manner in which the published opinion polls were being reported. I believe subsequent events have borne out the validity of that analysis. This afternoon I want to add a further chapter to the ongoing debate about what the polls tell us. This is not to comment on the recent boost in support for the opposition in the polls—that is much too recent to give any confidence as the basis of analysis. All those polls tell us is that the next election is likely to be close and that the opposition has a chance. Rather, I want to look at an apparently unnoticed long-term trend which has developed over the full 2½ years of this term.
Once in a Generation Opportunity - Speech to the Australian Fabian Society (More)
Australia in 2007 not only faces what looks like a very tight election; it also faces a once in a generation opportunity to transform our federation.
The recognition that reform of federal/state relations is the key to the new round of economic and social reform we need over the next decade is spreading.
After all, how often do you see a common viewpoint on such an important issue from the Business Council of Australia, Steve Bracks, a Liberal dominated parliamentary committee; Professor Ross Garnaut, the Productivity Commission, Nick Greiner and the Leader of the Opposition.
It’s not surprising that all these individuals and groups have come to that recognition. The need is more obvious every week, every month, every year.
Speech about Technical Colleges (More)
I rise to support the amendment to the Australian Technical Colleges (Flexibility in Achieving Australia’s Skills Needs) Amendment Bill (No. 2) 2006 moved by my colleague the member for Perth. When the Leader of the Opposition took that job, he gave high priority to the task of ending the blame game and getting rid of the attempts by one level of government to explain away their failure by blaming the activity on the other. Australians are sick and tired of the blame game and, if the speech by the member for Mitchell had been broadcast, they would understand why. I have never heard a more old-fashioned, tired exposition of the blame game than that which we just heard. There was not one step forward in what he had to say. It was a straight 1990s exposition of the modern Liberal Party. In the 1970s, he would have been kicked out of the Liberal Party for saying all that, but these days it is the modern Liberal Party version and it is sad.
Speech on Energy Efficiency Opportunities Bill (More)
The Energy Efficiency Opportunities Amendment Bill 2006 is mainly technical in nature and will enhance the operation of the existing arrangements in a manner that is necessary and desirable. It is not of itself in that way a very important bill, but it is a bill about a very important subject and, together with the second reading amendment, gives us an opportunity to discuss some important issues relating to this matter.
Speech on the Prohibition of Human Cloning for Reproduction and the Regulation of Human Embryo Research Amendment Bill (More)
I welcome the opportunity to participate in this conscience vote on the private member’s bill presented by the member for Moore, the Prohibition of Human Cloning for Reproduction and the Regulation of Human Embryo Research Amendment Bill 2006. It is not possible for every matter that comes before the parliament to be considered as a conscience vote.
Speech on the AWB Scandal (More)
I rise more in sorrow than in anger to speak in this debate. As a former minister for the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, I have very high regard for many of the officials in that department and they were put in a terrible position as a result of the circumstances that developed.
Australia and the Death Penalty (More)
I was in the United Kingdom when Saddam Hussein was sentenced to death. The first response from outside Iraq that I saw was Tony Blair expressing his opposition to the death penalty in the following terms:
We’re against the death penalty, whether it is Saddam or anyone else.
Then I heard reports of the EU calling on Iraq not to execute Saddam.
So, imagine my disappointment when I found the Australian government’s position was:
He [Prime Minister Howard] said that while he opposed the use of the death penalty in Australia or against Australians, ‘what other countries do with the death penalty is other countries’ business’.
I regard this position as morally flawed, politically manipulative and against the long term interests of Australia and Australians.
Pacific Relations - Matter of Public Importance Speech (More)
The Howard government’s relationships with our Pacific neighbours have reflected a continuing pattern of inattention and failure interspersed with occasional bursts of belated and sometimes unsuccessful frenetic activity. We hear the Minister for Foreign Affairs trying to reshape the question to say that our criticism of the way he has handled the matter equals support for the actions of people overseas—that we are supporting the Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea against Australia. Our concern is not that the Australian government has acted, but that it has acted incompetently. Our concern is not that the Australian government has spoken up about matters, but that it has spoken up in a manner that has been counterproductive.
MPI Speech on the Death Penalty (More)
On 30 November 2005, an impressive cross-section of Australians gathered on the lawns in front of Parliament House to call for leniency for convicted drug smuggler Van Nguyen, not because any of us there sympathised with his crime but because we were and remain genuinely opposed to the death sentence. It was particularly moving to hear the speech of Brian Deegan, whose son died in the Sari Club blast. He repeated his earlier eloquent opposition to the death penalty, including for Amrozi, who has been convicted for his involvement in that terrible massacre. It is by that standard that those who claim to be opposed to the death penalty should be judged.
Speech on the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Bill (More)
I have pleasure in entering this debate to support the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Amendment Bill 2005, extremely disappointing as it is, and the second reading amendment moved by the member for Grayndler. I listened with interest to the member for O’Connor. I always try in these speeches to start by finding something in what the member opposite says that I agree with. I was battling right until the end when the member for O’Connor said that this bill will not do very much. I certainly agree with that, but I do not think much of anything else that he said.
Speech on the Australian Law Reform Commission Report on Sedition Laws (More)
This is a very important debate. It is important in itself because it is a debate about legislation, the passage of which has had significant impact on the framework of civil liberties in this country, as the Law Reform Commission makes clear. It is also important for what it says about the state of our rights and our democracy after 10 years of a government that has grown increasingly intolerant and arrogant.
Speech on Tax Levels & Housing Assistance (More)
There is no doubt you have to have a special sort of nerve, a particular level of temerity, to come in here as a representative of the Howard government and complain about the level of taxation, because you are a representative of what is now universally accepted as the highest taxing government in Australia’s history. I made that claim first some four or five years ago and it was disputed. We had a debate for about six months as to whether it was correct or not depending upon certain definitional issues. But that debate is over. Everybody knows that the Howard government is the highest taxing government in Australian history.
Grievance Debate - Opinion Polls (More)
The issue I wish to raise in today’s grievance debate is the manner in which the media in Australia cover opinion polls on voting intentions and related issues. I raise it not for its short-term significance to the Labor Party at a federal level—it may or may not have some; that is not clear and it is not something on which there would be unanimous views—but for the long-term perspective, as one of a number of issues raising concerns for me and others about the nature and health of our democratic processes. We find ourselves in September 2006 in a position where objective evidence and public perception are miles apart. On a sustained basis, this cannot be a healthy thing.
Speech on the Petroleum Retail Legislation Bill (More)
I rise to support the amendments moved by the member for Hunter, particularly insofar as they relate to the issues of abuse of market power and unconscionable conduct. These are amendments of general application. It is particularly appropriate in the immediate case that they apply to the area of petrol, and that is why the amendments are being initiated here. I welcome that and support that but, in the years in which I have been dealing with this matter, it has become more and more evident that section 46 is the gap in the trade practices regime of this country. It is the gap in the competition regulation of this country.
Energy Initiatives Speech (More)
It is interesting to follow the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for the Environment and Heritage. I thought the first half of his speech was a very interesting definition of the comprehensive nature of the problem. I do not agree with everything he said but it was broadly and in sweeping terms an outline of the fundamental international characteristics of the problem. But what it inevitably meant was that the second half of his speech showed how inadequate the response is to the problem he defined.
Speech on Migration Law Changes (More)
I rise with my colleagues to oppose the Migration Amendment (Designated Unauthorised Arrivals) Bill 2006. This legislation, notwithstanding some attempts to ameliorate it, cannot be saved. It shows clearly that the government never really believed in the reforms they proposed in 2005 to seek to accommodate the rebels in their midst.
Aboriginal Land Rights Amendment Bill Speech (More)
I join with others in regretting the fact that the time available for all of us to speak on the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Amendment Bill 2006 has been cut so short. I will not waste any of my limited time railing against that—I will allow people to make judgments for themselves. One of the things that strike me about this bill is that it illustrates an emerging feature of the Howard government: the Howard government hates agreement about issues that it might be able to exploit as wedge issues.
Employment of people with disabilities (More)
I want to refer tonight, and seek a response, to what I see as a continuing scandal in Public Service employment as it relates to the employment of people with disabilities.
Australian Trade Commission Legislation Amendment Speech (More)
I rise, as other opposition members have, not to oppose the Australian Trade Commission Legislation Amendment Bill 2006 but to express my strong reservations about some of the changes that it is making. In the course of that I want to talk broadly about what I think it is a serious trade problem for Australia.
Appropriation Bill Speech (More)
Every weekday morning in my electorate, only a kilometre from here, breakfast is served to the homeless. This particular service has only been operating for a year and has grown from serving breakfast to a handful of people to regularly serving more than 70. Their clients are homeless and, in this weather, many of them are still sleeping rough—sometimes in tents provided by the service in lieu of affordable housing. They stay on after breakfast for counselling and referral. Many of them have complex issues which will need much time and help to resolve. After homelessness, one of the biggest problems seen at this centre is poor dental health—a problem for many other Australians too.
Export Market Development Grants Legislation Speech (More)
I rise to support the Export Market Development Grants Legislation Amendment Bill 2006 and the second reading amendment. It was interesting to hear the remarks by the member for Riverina. They would have led one to believe that the Export Market Development Grants Scheme was a great coalition initiative rather than one which the coalition butchered when it came to office. It slashed it and abolished all the accompanying programs in the biggest cut to assistance to exporters in Australian history.
Speech on Guantanamo Bay (More)
I want to use this opportunity to raise once again my concerns about the treatment of David Hicks and about the continuing operation of the Guantanamo Bay detention centre. It is humiliating to Australia that one of our citizens has had to seek to exercise a right to British citizenship to get a shot at justice.
Adjournment Debate Speech - ACT Civil Unions (More)
It was my intention to speak today in the adjournment debate on the issue of discrimination against same-sex couples, based on the experience of a couple in my electorate who also happen to be friends of mine. I hope still to get the opportunity to do that, but I want to speak today about my sense of outrage, as a member of the Australian parliament, as a citizen of Canberra and as an Australian, on hearing that the Attorney-General, Mr Ruddock, is contemplating overriding the ACT civil unions legislation.
Artist's Resale Royalties Bill 2006 - First Reading Speech (More)
I know the Artist’s Resale Rights Bill 2006 will not pass through parliament. It does not have the government’s support and they will not allow it to pass. So why am I moving it? In the first instance, obviously I am moving it because I passionately believe that visual artists in Australia should share in the wealth they generate through their creative efforts. But this bill is also deliberately designed to be a challenge to the Howard government
Speech: Ministers of State Amendment Bill (More)
I support the amendment moved by the member for Wills to the Ministers of State Amendment Bill 2005. In this debate I want to refer to a slightly different matter in addition to those matters raised by the member for Wills which I just heard so ably outlined by the member for Gorton. What I want to refer to more is the monumental double standard reflected in this bill whereby the government is applying one rule for itself and one rule for others in Australia.
The Artist’s Resale Rights Bill 2006 (More)
A Bill for an Act to amend the Copyright Act 1968 to provide for royalties for visual artists.
Speech: Gender Equality (More)
It is well established that gender equality is very important in development assistance debates for two reasons: one, which is clearly obvious, is that gender equality is a fundamental right; another is that there is clear evidence that gender equality is essential for successful economic and social development.
Speech: Appropriation Bill (No. 3) and Appropriate Bill (No. 4) (More)
It is very interesting to have the opportunity to speak in the debate on the Appropriation Bill (No. 3) 2005-2006 and the Appropriation Bill (No. 4) 2005-2006 on the day after the Treasurer has put out his ritual annual tough budget warning. I refer to yesterday’s Australian Financial Review, with the headline ‘Treasurer warns of tight budget’. I am sure that all the people who follow these things thought, ‘It must be mid-February again!’
It is perhaps a little earlier this year because of the Commonwealth Games, but essentially it is the Treasurer’s standard game—and I do not just mean this Treasurer. It is the standard game of ‘treasurers’, plural, and, in some ways, a proper and appropriate thing for them to do even in years when they do not mean it.
Speech: Therapeutic Goods Amendment (RU486) (More)
I wish to make it clear from the outset that I will be supporting the Therapeutic Goods
Amendment (Repeal of Ministerial Responsibility for Approval of RU486) Bill 2005 introduced by the member for Moore. I congratulate him and all those associated with bringing it forward. Coincidentally, I am the first male from our side of the parliament to speak. This is significant only because the Senate vote showed a dramatic gender divide in support for this legislation. It reflects a history of male domination breaking down in our country. On most issues this makes no difference. There has been a lot of rhetoric about how much change it would make, and in most issues it is absolutely irrelevant. But this is one example where the breakdown of the male domination of Australian politics is leading to a change in outcomes, and I welcome it.
Speech on Food for Oil Program (More)
In all these matters, for publicly elected officials the key question comes back to that which was posed in the Nixon impeachment hearings of 1974: what did you know and when did you know it? We now find out that the minister’s argument is that he never knew anything. That is not what I would call a great advocacy of ministerial responsibility and success because, as has been detailed on many occasions—and I will go back to some of them—on very many occasions the minister should and, by any credible explanation, must have known.
Speech on Future Fund Bill 2005 (More)
Like the member for Chisholm, I support the second reading amendment moved by the member for Melbourne to the Future Fund Bill 2005. I also support the idea of a future fund. In fact, I supported the idea when the Treasurer did not. With the member for Hotham, I was advocating what we were calling the ‘intergenerational fund’ when the Treasurer was mocking the idea.
Speech at the launch of Practising Reconciliation monograph (More)
I welcome the opportunity to launch this valuable monograph by Dr Angela Pratt. It is in my opinion a first class piece of work and a first class example of the strengths and value of the Parliamentary Fellowship program.
Narrowing the Poverty Gap (More)
This is the text of a lecture given by Bob McMullan about the need to start addressing indigenous disadvantage.
Address to the ALP South West Regional Conference (More)
The current $20 million advertising campaign in support of the Howard Government's IR proposals is just another example of the gradual corrosive corruption of our political culture. What is so concerning is that so many people who should know better appear unconcerned about this trend.
Speech for panel discussion at the UN (More)
Global poverty is one of the four great challenges confronting the international community in the early part of the 21st century. And it should be the one most readily addressed.
International Finance and Trade and the Millenium Development Goals (More)
This is the text of a speech given by Bob to the 2nd Committee of the Inter-Parliamentary Union. It focuses on international trade and finance.
The Case for Reforming Fiscal Policy in Australia (More)
This is the text of a lecture given by Bob McMullan. The lecture tracks Australia's decline in productivity, and argues that a wider and better informed debate on fiscal policy is needed if we are to reverse this trend.
Appropriations Bill speech on the National Capital Authority and Ethanol (More)
I want to use tonight’s debate on the Appropriation Bill (No. 3) 2004-2005 and cognate bills to deal with two issues. First, I want to deal with a local issue, an issue important in my local community: the unnecessary, wasteful and frustrating duplication of planning processes here in the ACT. Second, I want to rebut some allegations that the Deputy Prime Minister has repeated— misleading assertions he has made concerning my views and my activities in the past concerning the use of ethanol in petrol.
Speech to Parliament on Native Title (More)
The Howard government justifies its cuts to Indigenous programs on the grounds that it is eager to support Indigenous Australians to help themselves. I want to outline tonight an opportunity for the Howard government to put its money where its mouth is.
Post election speech to Parliament (More)
Speech given to the House of Representatives covering the topics of the Public Service efficiency dividend, the future of the Australian National University, and the Charter of Budget Honesty.
Speech to Parliament (More)
Speech given to the House of Representatives covering the topics of the Public Service efficiency dividend, the future of the Australian National University, and the Charter of Budget Honesty.

