Housing Minister Clare O’Neil has accused the Greens and Coalition of getting in the way of Labor’s housing reform, but has refused to say how the country will build 1.2 million homes in two years if they cannot pass legislation.
Labor’s housing schemes, including Help to Buy and Build to Rent, were blocked during the last sitting week by the Greens and Coalition, and sent to an inquiry to report by September 4.
Asked what the government will do if the bill does not pass, O’Neil said it was up to the opposition parties to work with Labor.
“Our government has stepped into this space,” O’Neil said. “This is a really big and ambitious target, and the schemes that are before the parliament are an essential part of them.
“We’ve got a bill being blocked by the Greens and the Liberals in the Senate … I mentioned we have this really big problem with a housing shortage, this is going to build 160,000 additional homes over the coming decade and again, being blocked by the Greens and Liberals in the Senate.”
O’Neil said she will be talking to the Greens about their policy positions and “I can tell you that my focus is not on the politicians here, and it’s not on the politics of this. It is about trying to get more homes for Australians,” she said.