Australia election 2025 live: McKenzie grilled over nuclear plan as Watt repeats claim that Medicare urgent clinics under threat if Coalition wins | Australian election 2025


Bridget McKenzie grilled over cost of Coalition’s nuclear plan

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Dan Jervis-Bardy

The shadow transport minister, Bridget McKenzie, is up next on Sky News and she’s immediately pushed on the cost of the Coalition’s nuclear plan.

As many of her colleagues have done in recent weeks, McKenzie refuses to give a straight answer before retreating to the line that it will cost 44% cheaper than Labor’s renewables-focused approach (that figure is based on Frontier Economics’ modelling of the two scenarios).

That will mean that when you look at the laws of economics, if it’s cheaper to produce something, it’s going to be cheaper to sell.

Clennell doesn’t appear to be buying it.

So this is probably the problem, isn’t it? You can’t tell me … and our viewers how much it’s actually going to cost to build these nuclear power plants?

Bridget McKenzie.
Bridget McKenzie. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
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Dan Jervis-Bardy

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Staying with the ABC, where Adam Bandt was asked whether the Greens would be prepared to phase out the concessions over a longer period of time to prevent a mass sell-off of investment properties, which could send rents spiralling.

The Greens leader said:

We are willing to consider any ideas. This is part of the reason it would be good for the public service to start work on this now.

The interview turns to Peter Dutton’s plans for an east coast gas reservation, a policy that has drawn praise in progressive circles (a rarity for a Coalition idea).

Bandt said Dutton’s policy was a “pretty stunning admission” – but argued there was a better option to shore up domestic gas supply.

But there is a much simpler solution than what Peter Dutton is proposing, which is just stop the corporations like Santos from dipping into the domestic markets to fulfil future contracts. Do that and you do not need to open new gas fields, which is what Peter Dutton wants to do.

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