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Australia politics live: PM says Barnaby Joyce net zero bill is ‘defying the science’; Lambie says development opponents should ‘get stuffed’ | Australian politics

BySoCal Chronicle

Aug 24, 2025


Joyce’s bill to end net zero ‘defying the science’, PM says

There’ll be plenty of drama in the house this morning when Barnaby Joyce’s end net zero bill is debated.

The government voted to debate it at the end of the last sitting fortnight, to wedge the Coalition. When voting on whether to put it on the agenda, only Joyce voted with Labor to debate it, where the rest of the Coalition opposed it.

At his press conference a bit earlier, Anthony Albanese stuck the boot in to the Coalition and Joyce.

If you get rid of net zero, you are saying climate change is not real, and you do not need to do anything about it … It is defying what we see happening around us and defying the science.

But Labor’s not coming out of this debate unscathed, and is still under enormous pressure to announce an ambitious 2035 target. Albanese won’t say yet when that target will be made public.

We’ll announce it when there’s an announcement … What we’ll always do is to support action on climate change.

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Key events

Llew O’Brien, a Queensland LNP MP, speaks on the repeal net zero bill first, and starts by saying that climate change “is real”, but that net zero is “economic sabotage”. O’Brien supported a Queensland LNP motion calling on the federal Coalition to abandon net zero at the party’s state convention over the weekend.

He says again that not supporting net zero doesn’t mean you’re “blind to climate change”.

What is real is the lives of business people who are trying to survive in this country, who are going insolvent… it is crippling our productivity, it’s seeing our manufacturing go offshore because we’re not competitive.

In response Susan Templeman – a Labor MP – says O’Brien is “saying the quiet part out loud”.

The Nationals want to party like it’s 1999. To be fair the Howard government in 1999 was in theory supporting action on Climate change but then changed its mind on supporting the Kyoto protocol.



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