Mr DICK (Oxley) (12:12): Like many of my colleagues on both sides of the House, I'd like to start by
acknowledging the extreme gratitude and honour I feel to once again be elected to this place and to once again
represent the people of Oxley in the community that I proudly call home. I'm grateful to the 95,043 people who
voted at prepoll, by post or on election day and the further 30,000 people who live in our community, be they
new arrivals to our great country or permanent residents.
Today I recommit my pledge to serve the people of Oxley, to be your representative in the federal parliament
and to do my very best to represent you and your families to the best of my ability. But whether you voted for
me or not doesn't matter. It's what is great about our democracy. As soon as the hard campaigning was over and
the people had their say back on 18 May, all 151 members and all 76 senators got on with the job of making
Australia the best it can be for its people and our future.
Whilst it is indeed the voters who decide who represents them, it is the team behind each of the election candidates
who deserve a great deal of thanks, and I'm lucky to have one of the best teams anywhere in Australia. They have
been with me through thick and thin, some for more than a decade, when I was first elected as a representative of
the Richlands Ward in the Brisbane City Council, now proudly represented by local councillor Charles Strunk.
I want to make special mention of some of the amazing people who have helped me and supported me on this
journey. Thanks go to my FEC chairman and former councillor Les Bryant, my magnificent campaign director
Mrs Margie Nightingale and some of the hardest working volunteers you will ever meet: Cathy Bidgood, Nayda
Hernandez, Phuong Nguyen, Tuan Le, Mai Linh Do, Penelope Webster, Daniel Robinson, Rachel Hoppe, Nino
Lilac, Lucy Bordin, Barry MacIntosh, Don Fraser, Bruce Leslie, Tony Cook, Neil and Judy Bennett, Fran Bell,
Rose Newell, and our amazing local state MPs in the division of Oxley. I proudly serve alongside five state MPs,
magnificent members of the Palaszczuk government: Jess Pugh, the member for Mount Ommaney; Mrs Charis
Mullen, the hardworking and capable member for Jordan; Minister Leeanne Enoch, the member for Algester; JoAnn Miller, the member for Bundamba; and, of course, my great friend and supporter the Premier of Queensland,
Anastacia Palaszczuk, the state member for Inala. To all of our local branches, my staff in my electorate office
—Karen Bell, Jen, Ros, Michele, Brent, Riley, Coen and Michael—they all played crucial roles in supporting
me not just during the election campaign but of course with the work that I do in serving the people of Oxley.
I'm very privileged to be supported by a number of unions in the state of Queensland. In particular, I want to
acknowledge my own union, the Australian Workers Union, led by state secretary Steve Baker; the SDA; Gary
O'Halloran from the Plumbers Union; Peter Biagini from the TWU; Neil Henderson from the ASU; and local
resident and supporter Bill Marklew from the CPSU.
Everyone who comes to this place relies on a team, through their family, through their support networks and,
of course, through the communities that they represent. I thank each and every one of those members of my
community who have supported me to enable the work that I do for the people of Oxley.
The work that they do in enabling me to serve here is of course worth fighting for. The Australian Labor
Party is Australia's oldest political party. Our passion for fairness at work, health care for everyone and access
to quality education, no matter a person's circumstances, add up to a firm belief that we should all have the
same opportunities in life. These are the values that underpin everything we do. In the Labor Party we believe
that government has a responsibility to keep the nation safe, to invest in all our people's potential, to reverse
disadvantage and to care for the most vulnerable among us. Our greatest achievements have always come from
helping this great country to fulfil its potential whilst at the same time ensuring we leave no-one behind.
Once upon a time in this country when you got sick you almost went broke, until Labor, and one of my
predecessors as member for Oxley, the great Bill Hayden, created Medicare. There was a time when people
worked hard all their lives only to retire poor, until Labor created universal superannuation, which was opposed
by those opposite. Not so long ago, there was a time when hundreds of thousands of Australians with disability and their carers had to scrape to get by, until Labor built the National Disability Insurance Scheme. We stand for
workers finding secure jobs in safe workplaces for decent pay.
On that note I'd like to acknowledge in particular the Australian mining and resources industry. For more than
100 years, the mining and resources sector has been the backbone of the Australian economy and workforce,
powering our nation into the 21st century and, with it, one of the best standards of living of anywhere in the
world. Whilst there have been many scaremongering calls to see the end of mining coming from some corners
in our community, I for one remain buoyed and optimistic about the role mining and resources have played in
the story of Australia, particularly in Queensland, to date and will play into the future.
Over 300,000 Queensland jobs are supported by resources. In 2017-18 alone, mining and resources contributed
$5.2 billion in wages for Queensland workers, $4.3 billion in royalties to pay for our schools, hospitals and
roads and a total of $69.9 billion to the Queensland economy. That's $1 in every $5 of the Queensland economy
and one in eight jobs provided thanks to mining and resources. It's not hard to see why mining is so important
to Queensland. On top of this, the mining and resources sector has a supply chain of over 14,000 Queensland
businesses and assists with more than 1,200 community organisations.
Last year Australian resource exports set a new record of $248 billion, which also included a record $66 billion in
exports of coal, making it Australia's single most valuable export. Australia has also recently become the world's
single largest gas exporter, ahead of Qatar, with earnings expected to increase by more than 60 per cent, from
$31 billion in 2017-18 to $50 billion in 2018-19.
Because the demand for the critical commodities of the future is booming, Australian mining is well placed to
take advantage. We are in the top five holders of 14 out of the 35 of these critical commodities that will power
the economies of the future. We produce 10 of the 16 commodities needed for the manufacture of solar panels.
We hold the largest reserves of lithium, and we mine every commodity required to build smartphones and the
battery and storage technology of the future. These numbers prove the worth that mining and resources have to
the Australian economy and to the Australian people. Without them, we would not be able to build the roads
and bridges we drive on. We would not be able to make the important investments in health and education and
would not be able to employ the 1.1 million Australians who have a job in the mining, equipment, technological
and services sectors.
But we must not take these figures for granted. We must ensure that Canberra and governments of all persuasions
back our resources sector and regional communities to support the economy, support jobs and support our
councils that are doing it tough.
A division having been called in the House of Representatives—
GOVERNOR GENERAL'S SPEECH Address-in-Reply
24 October 2019