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Small business voters turning on Coalition, Julie Collins says, as May budget nears

Small Business Minister Julie Collins has swung against Opposition Leader Peter Duttonโ€™s claim the government treats small business owners with โ€œsuspicionโ€, drawing links between the Liberal Partyโ€™s recent by-election defeat and its recent record on small business issues.
David Adams
David Adams
housing
Minister for Small Business Julie Collins. Source: Mick Tsikas / AAP Image

Small Business Minister Julie Collins has swung against Opposition Leader Peter Duttonโ€™s claim the government treats small business owners with โ€œsuspicionโ€, drawing links between the Liberal Partyโ€™s recent by-election defeat and its recent record on small business issues.

Speaking at the Council of Small Business Organisations Australia (COSBOA) National Small Business Summit on Tuesday morning, Dutton questioned the Albanese governmentโ€™s small business credentials, and criticised its rollout of โ€œdraconianโ€ industrial relations reforms.

Closing out the conferenceโ€™s first day, Collins highlighted a suite of policies brought forward since Labor took power in May last year as evidence Labor is โ€œsaying โ€˜yesโ€™โ€ to the SME community.

Those measures included $18.6 million for the latest round of Digital Solutions grants to boost the technical proficiency and cyber resilience of small business, the federal governmentโ€™s $62.6 million energy efficiency grant program, and funding for mental health support rank among the Labor governmentโ€™s achievements to date, she said.

Conversely, Collins said the Liberal Partyโ€™s remarkable by-election loss in the Division of Aston, traditionally a solid blue stronghold, was evidence that voters are turning against the Coalitionโ€™s approach to small business policymaking.

โ€œAfter the historic result here in Melbourne over the weekend it is worth reflecting on who is saying โ€˜noโ€™ to small business,โ€ she said on Tuesday.

โ€œOn so many of the practical measures our government has proposed that will support small business, the Opposition Leader and the Liberal party have said โ€˜noโ€™.โ€

โ€œThe Opposition Leader has pointed to small business as a key constituency for his party in the aftermath of the Aston by-election,โ€ she added.

โ€œBut small businesses are smart.

โ€œThey know when it matters the Opposition Leader and his party have said โ€˜noโ€™ to them.โ€

While Collins took the opportunity to question the Coalitionโ€™s standing among the SME community, her address revealed little in the way of wholly new funding ahead of the May federal budget.

As lawmakers put the final tweaks on their overarching economic plan, the Minister was reticent to unveil any major spending commitments before the small business decision-makers in attendance.

Instead, power relief will form a linchpin of the upcoming budget, she said, referring to the bill relief contained in the Albanese governmentโ€™s broader $3 billion energy package, which was revealed in December.

Existing efforts to remove โ€œroadblocksโ€, like the Payments Time Review, also form part of the federal governmentโ€™s plan.

When COSBOA chair and director Matthew Addison joked that the federal government would enact every point in its 29-point budget wishlist, Collins issued a similarly light-hearted response.

โ€œNot quite, Matthew,โ€ she said.

โ€œWhat I am doing is championing the needs of small businesses and making sure that your voice is heard,โ€ she continued.

โ€œWe want to work with you in a collaborative way.

โ€œWe do acknowledge that [in] the discussions I have with small businesses, there are things that are raised that are not raised in my speech, particularly that skills shortages and supply chains and inflation continue to be raised.โ€