“Queenslanders don’t trust the Palaszczuk government to fix the Queensland youth crime crisis,they don’t trust them to fix the Queensland housing crisis,they don’t trust them to fix the health crisis – it’s clear we must rebuild trust in government,” he said.
Crisafulli said an LNP government he led would have a three-step plan to deliver “Australia’s best public service” by redirecting money from the big four professional service firms – KPMG,PwC,Deloitte and EY – to “empower the public service like never before”.
He also announced the LNP would appoint a victim of crime to the Queensland Sentencing Advisory Council,develop a “contemporary Queensland Health Workforce Plan” and make real-time health data available within 100 days of the election.
The purchase of existing properties being lost as part of the National Rental Affordability Scheme wind-upwith the state’s Housing Investment Fund would end,and the number of community housing dwellings would be grown annually.
A Victim’s Commissioner,recommended in the second Women’s Safety and Justice Taskforce report last year but yet to be appointed,would be put in place within a month of the October 2024 vote if not already there.
Fees for replacing stolen state ID documents would also be scrapped – a measure recommended by agovernment-controlled parliamentary committee last month.