Fronting reporters,David Crisafulli promised an opposition focused on three things:a small and family-business built economy,frontline service delivery,and integrity in government.
Since then,we’re yet to see much detail on just how the party would realise such a vision beyond its own contribution to.
And with a Wednesday sit-down interview scheduled between the leader and decorated journo Kerry O’Brien (topic: of politics),now’s maybe a good time to take stock.
The three areas most troubling the government as we move through the third year of this first four-year parliamentary term are health,housing and youth crime.
This is acknowledged by Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk herself in her.
Often enlisting his shadow cabinet members to throw most of,Crisafulli has sought to rise above,declaring last month people wanted solutions,not politicians pointing fingers.
But the ideas placed on the table by Crisafulli&Co so far,through daily press conferences, and simple social media graphic lists,are what you could maybe generously describe as thin.
On crime,the LNP has so far announced vague plans to introduce “consequences for actions” by “putting victims before young criminals”. There has been little elaboration of what this involves.
The LNP would also (again) remove a nationally consistent and United Nations-backed principle that judges use detention for young offenders guilty or accused of crimes.
Never mind many in the legal field,including the Queensland Law Society,aren’t sold on the idea – which youth advocates and experts say will only drag more kids,,deeper into cycles of offending.
Or the fact the law society says the Palaszczuk government’s essentially does this for kids declared serious repeat offenders anyway. (Those changes also struck out an earlier item of the LNP’s plan:)
The LNP also lists funding,resourcing and reforming “gold standard early intervention” as one of its solutions on the table,of which there is little detail beyond links to work by the audit office around programs aimed at helping stop kids being pulled into crime in the first place.
Turn to health,with,and the solutions are equally symbolic:real-time emergency department data,streamlined “triaging when patients arrive”,putting “doctors and nurses back in charge” and investing in more hospital beds.
Something the LNP has been focused on is running “health crisis town halls” to hear community experiences of the health system,with the 31st taking place on Monday in the Redlands.
The party’s solutions on housing are hazier still.
But the LNP’s priorities so far have not extended to (which,to be fair,would be doomed to the bin under the government’s numbers and consideration by the Labor-controlled committee system).
The offer of a was extended to the LNP by the parliament’s speaker,Labor MP Curtis Pitt,last year to little response.
Crisafulli last month suggested he wanted to “reform” at least part of the system,alongside resurrecting the Productivity Commission. But don’t expect the party to be to implement some of the suggestions that agency.
His conversation on Wednesday is expected to touch on the internal state of the LNP following efforts to clean it up amid internal,and electoral, nationwide.
He is also likely to try to distance himself from his stint as a minister in the Newman government – whose spending cuts 10 years on.
Asked for more detail on his party’s plans for hospitals at a press conference on Monday,Crisafulli said there would be more to come as the October 2024 state election approaches. A reply to the government’s budget will also come within weeks.
Meanwhile,the opposition has cranked the dial on its efforts to paint the government in a state of “chaos and crisis” (not helped by Labor’s) using variations of the phrase in official statements almost every day this month.
If as the LNP repeatedly suggests,Queenslanders deserve better from – or than – the Palaszczuk government,they could also rightly expect more from the party who would seek to replace it.
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