Industry Minister Ed Husic has opened talks with the Greens and others on the crossbench while accusing the Coalition of abandoning working-class Australians by refusing to vote for the investments in manufacturing.
Deputy Opposition Leader Sussan Ley has ramped up her attacks on the fund,aLabor policy pledge at the last election,on the grounds it will need $15 billion in Commonwealth debt and waste taxpayer funds.
The amendments could constrain the new fund,which is to be led by an independent board and chief executive,because it is meant to help manufacturers,some of whom use gas,and invest in projects that create more local value in the resources sector.
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The Greens prepared their move on Wednesday ahead of a vote in the lower house. However,the bigger clash will come in the Senate where Labor can pass laws with support from the 11 Greens senators and at least two others – such as independent David Pocock,former Greens member Lidia Thorpe and Tasmanian senators Jacqui Lambie and Tammy Tyrrell.
Greens industry spokesperson Penny Allman-Payne welcomed the goal of the fund to help the manufacturing sector,but wanted the draft law changed to restrict the investments,rather than leaving this to an investment mandate or other document.
“A central role of government should be investing in nation-building projects and that’s why we support getting public money where it needs to be,” she said.