The federal government rejected a call for nationally consistent laws to move people off gas appliances.Credit:Louise Kennerley
The decision came as Labor MPs urged Treasurer Jim Chalmers to deliver new policies to put downward pressure on the cost of living,such as by making federal assistance more widely available to Australians who currently miss out on the help.
The moves are another sign of the pressure within the government for policies that deliver cost relief and avoid placing any new burden on households while Chalmers and other ministers devise new measures for the May budget.
Chalmers made no comment after meeting the Labor caucus members on Thursday,but one of the MPs in the talks,Jerome Laxale,told his constituents that he asked the treasurer to extend the eligibility for federal assistance.
“Many more of you have been telling me that you’re struggling,” said Laxale,the member for Bennelong in Sydney,in a Facebook post to voters. “Our cost-of-living relief to date has been targeted and measured. For those eligible,it has helped and has been welcome.”
“Today,I asked the treasurer to consider widening the eligibility of some of these effective policies through the budget process. As the impacts of interest rates linger,I believe more Australians will require access to targeted,measured and effective cost-of-living relief.”
Existing government assistance measures include the energy bill subsidies unveiledlast December and opposed by the Coalition in parliament in a vote on whether to restrict coal and gas exports and increase local energy supply.