Australian Oppn abandons poll promise to ban WFH, cut 41,000 bureaucracy jobs

IANS April 7, 2025 145 views

Australia's Opposition leader Peter Dutton has dramatically reversed his controversial plan to cut public service jobs and end work-from-home arrangements. The policy shift comes as Labour maintains a lead in recent polls ahead of the May 3 election. Dutton admitted the original plan was a mistake and would now reduce public service workforce through natural attrition. The move reflects growing voter resistance to rigid workplace policies that could impact family flexibility.

"Many parents work full-time, while making time for family." - Anthony Albanese, Prime Minister
Canberra, April 7: Australia's Opposition party has abandoned its plan to end work-from-home (WFH) arrangements for public servants and cut 41,000 bureaucracy jobs, in a major policy reversal ahead of the general election.

Key Points

1

Dutton reverses coalition's plan to cut 41,000 public service jobs

2

Work-from-home policies to remain unchanged

3

Labour leads 52-48 in latest poll

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Election scheduled for May 3

Peter Dutton, leader of the Opposition coalition, announced the policy shift on Monday, admitting the party "made a mistake" and "got it wrong" with the plan that had proved unpopular with voters.

He said that a coalition government will not change current flexible working arrangements, including work-from-home policies, for federal public servants.

Instead of cutting 41,000 public service jobs to reduce government spending, Dutton said that a coalition government would reduce the public service workforce over five years through hiring freezes and not always replacing workers who retire or resign.

The governing Labour Party, led by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, had repeatedly described Dutton's plan to cut the public service workforce as "Trumpian" and warned it could leave welfare recipients and veterans waiting several months for payments to be processed.

Albanese said on Monday that the ability to work from home was beneficial for Australian families, Xinhua news agency reported.

"Many parents work full-time, while making time for family. And with cost-of-living pressures, many families can't afford it any other way," he said.

"Peter Dutton and the coalition want to end that flexibility, and it would have real consequences for Australian families."

Dutton's move to abandon the policy came after a major opinion poll published on Sunday night found that Labour is on track to win a second term in power in the May 3 election.

According to the Newspoll survey published by News Corp Australia newspapers, Labour now leads the coalition 52-48 on a two-party preferred basis.

If neither Labour nor the coalition win 76 seats in their own right at the election -- an eventuality known as a 'hung Parliament' -- both parties will enter negotiations with minor parties and Independents for their support to form a minority government.

Reader Comments

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Sarah K.
Smart move to reverse this policy! WFH has been a game-changer for so many families. My sister's been able to care for her toddler while still contributing to her government job. Flexibility is the future! 👏
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Michael T.
Seems like a classic case of political backpedaling when polls don't go your way. I wonder if they truly changed their minds or just want votes...
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Lisa P.
As a public servant, this is such a relief! The original plan would have been devastating for morale. The gradual reduction approach makes much more sense.
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David R.
While I support WFH flexibility, I do think we need an honest conversation about productivity metrics in government roles. Some departments clearly work better remotely than others.
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Anita S.
The original job cuts plan was way too extreme. 41,000 jobs gone overnight? That would have wrecked so many lives. Glad they're taking a more measured approach now.
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James L.
Interesting timing with the polls coming out. Still, better late than never to admit a mistake. WFH saves commuting time and costs - it's a win-win for workers and the environment.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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