Australia politics live: Labor optimistic of nature laws deal with Greens; catastrophic fire warning for NSW’s central west | Australian politics

Labor optimistic of nature laws deal with Greens as summer break nears Dan Jervis-Bardy Labor is growing optimistic it can land a deal with the Greens to rush through its signature environment protection laws before parliament suspends for the summer break. The government is desperate to pass legislation to overhaul the Environment Protection and Biodiversity…

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Labor optimistic of nature laws deal with Greens as summer break nears

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Labor is growing optimistic it can land a deal with the Greens to rush through its signature environment protection laws before parliament suspends for the summer break.

The government is desperate to pass legislation to overhaul the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act in the final two sitting days of the year, finally delivering on Graeme Samuel’s blueprint to fix the nation’s broken nature laws.

The bill was not listed on the draft program for Wednesday but Guardian Australia understands it will be quickly added to the run-sheet as soon as Labor is confident it has the numbers to ram the 1,500-page bill through the upper house.

The environment minister, Murray Watt, is genuinely open to a deal with either the Coalition or the Greens and has offered a raft of concessions to both in the hope of winning the support of either side.

As we reported yesterday, those concessions failed to woo either side.

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Key events

Cabinet minister Clare O’Neil has defended the government’s move to find savings in departments, following reporting yesterday that the minister for the public service, Katy Gallagher, has instructed all departments to find savings of 5%.

In the Senate, Gallagher said yesterday the reporting was “incorrect” but suggested Labor’s attempts to rein in spending was an example of “fiscal discipline”, and that there would be no reductions to the average headcount in the next budget.

On Sunrise this morning, O’Neil said taxpayer dollars “are really precious”. When pushed on that (rather large) $100m spend for the BOM website, O’Neil said it was an “historic spend” and that the minister is “unhappy” with it.

There’s absolutely areas in the public service where we do need to think about making sure that we’re spending taxpayers money wisely.

On the panel with her, Bridget McKenzie accused the government of putting “Christmas job cuts” on the table.

[There’s a] trillion dollars worth of debt, $50,000 in interest repayments every single minute of every single day because they refuse to make the tough decisions and now you’ve got Christmas job cuts on the table that they’re saying won’t be cuts.

O’Neil hit back saying the trillion dollars of debt was “racked up” by the previous Coalition government.

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