Australian conservatives withdraw campaign pledge to stop remote work for public employees

Category: Top Stories

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Unlocking Word Meanings

Read the following words/expressions found in today’s article.

  1. slash / slæʃ / (v.) – to reduce something by a large amount, especially money, prices, or jobs
    Example:

    The company slashed 100 jobs to save money during the economic crisis.


  2. attrition / əˈtrɪʃ ən / (n.) – the process when people slowly leave a job, school, or group over time, and are not replaced
    Example:

    The company didn’t fire anyone, but because of attrition, the team got smaller over time.


  3. freeze / friz / (n.) – a temporary stop to an activity, decision, or process
    Example:

    The company is losing money, so they announced a hiring freeze until business improves.


  4. mimic / ˈmɪm ɪk / (v.) – to copy the way someone moves, talks, or behaves
    Example:

    The parrot likes mimicking the sounds it hears from its owners, repeating simple words like “hello” and “goodbye.”


  5. disproportionately / ˌdɪs prəˈpɔr ʃə nɪt li / (adv.) – in a way that is too much or too little compared to what is fair or normal
    Example:

    The wealth in the city is disproportionately distributed, with a small number of people owning most of the property.


Article

Read the text below.

Australia’s opposition party withdrew election promises to prevent public servants from working from home and to slash more than one in five federal public sector jobs.


Opposition leader Peter Dutton announced his conservative Liberal Party had dropped its pledge that public servants would be required to work in their offices five days a week except in exceptional circumstances.


“I think we made a mistake in relation to this policy,” Dutton told Nine Network television. “I think it’s important that we say that and recognize it and our intention was to make sure that where taxpayers are working hard and their money is being spent to pay wages that it’s being spent efficiently.”


The opposition also withdrew a promise to use forced redundancy payments to slash 41,000 jobs from the 185,000 positions in the Australian Public Service. The reductions would instead be achieved through natural attrition and an employment freeze, he said.


Dutton’s announcements were the first significant policy shifts since Prime Minister Anthony Albanese called the May 3 election in March.


Albanese urged voters not to believe that Dutton now supported flexible work arrangements for public servants. “He’s now pretending that that program won’t proceed,” Albanese told reporters.


Members of the center-left Labor Party government have accused their conservative opponents of mimicking U.S. President Donald Trump and his billionaire adviser Elon Musk who has spearheaded the so-called Department of Government Efficiency efforts to downsize and overhaul the U.S. government.


“This is DOGE-y Dutton taking his cues and policies straight from the U.S.,” Treasurer Jim Chalmers said last week.


The government had argued that the opposition’s policy to reduce workplace flexibility would disproportionately disadvantage women because they often had greater childcare responsibilities.


This article was provided by The Associated Press.


Viewpoint Discussion

Enjoy a discussion with your tutor.

Discussion A

  • Australia’s opposition party dropped plans to end remote work for public officials and cut over 20% of federal public sector jobs. Do you think public officials should always be present in offices? Why or why not? Should people be allowed to work from home if they can do their job well? Why do you say so? Discuss.
  • The opposition planned to remove thousands of government jobs through natural attrition. Which way is fairer when reducing jobs: natural or forced cuts? Why? What do you think happens to a society when too many public jobs are cut? Discuss.

Discussion B

  • A political leader said he made a mistake and changed his policy. In your opinion, is it a good or bad sign when leaders admit they were wrong? Would you trust a political leader more or less if they changed their mind in public? Why? Discuss.
  • Do you think politicians generally keep their promises? Why do you say so? What helps you trust or distrust a political leader? Discuss.