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  • 2 days ago
The Tasmanian Greens have withheld support for Labor leader Dean Winter's bid to become Premier citing key policy differences.

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00:00The battle to form government in Tasmania continues more than three weeks after the
00:07state election. Liberal Premier Jeremy Rockliffe has been sworn in as Premier. He's also had
00:14his ministers sworn in yesterday, but there's a battle. Labor will move, a no-confidence
00:20motion in the government and a confidence motion in a Labor minority government next
00:25week when state parliament resumes. So far, there's been a whole lot of posturing and
00:30negotiations between both major parties and the crossbench. Labor's bid for power was delivered
00:36a blow earlier today when Greens leader Rosalie Woodruff said at this stage that she can't
00:42support the Labor's motion because of a lack of negotiation and compromise between Labor
00:47and the Greens, but also no policy compromise on some of the issues that the Greens campaigned
00:52on, like the Macquarie Point football stadium. She says, like, budget repair, although Labor
00:59says that is one of their priorities. So it leaves Labor in an interesting position now,
01:04looking like they need to budge to be able to get the numbers that they need for that
01:08no-confidence motion to work. They have 10 members on the floor of the House of Assembly
01:14in Tasmania. That means they need eight more MPs on board. That requires the five Greens.
01:20So we'll wait and see. But at the moment, Dean Winter is refusing to bend and saying that
01:26his party is the best to deal with the challenges being faced by the state budget and crossbenchers
01:33should opt for it. Here's what Dean Winter had to say a little bit earlier.
01:37Well, the Greens have a choice. They have a choice between Jeremy Rockleaf and Erica Betts,
01:41who want to cut two and a half thousand public sector jobs, and Labor, who wants to work together
01:46with the community sector, unions and business on a mix of revenue and expenditure options.
01:52Every single crossbencher has told me that the budget is their number one priority, and
01:56I share that number one priority. So the question for the crossbenchers, who's best to deal with
02:01this? Is it the Liberals who've wrecked our budget and have a plan to sack two and a half thousand
02:06public sector workers? Or is it Labor, with Ruth Forrest in the Cabinet, working together with unions,
02:11business and the community sector to fix our budget? Rosalie Woodruff's statements were all full of
02:16at this stages, and she's left the door open for Labor to negotiate and get the Greens on board in
02:22the future. It feels like the early stages of the AFL or NRL trade week at this stage. A club puts a
02:28really hefty price on a player's head, and the other club refuses to pay anywhere near it, and eventually
02:34they end up meeting in the middle. Let's see if that's what happens this time around. The Liberals are
02:40saying that they're negotiating in good faith with the crossbench as well. They've already announced
02:44a plan to ban greyhound racing from 2029. It'd be the first Australian state to do that, and then
02:51also wind back a plan to log up to 40,000 hectares of previously protected forest as well, in a bid to
02:57win over the crossbench. So there's lots happening, and we won't really know what the outcome's going
03:02to be until next Tuesday, when State Parliament resumes.

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