3 November 2025

Has Chris Steel just missed the leadership bus with MyWay+ performance?

| By Ian Bushnell
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man in a suit using a bus card

Hopeful days: Transport Minister Chris Steel showing how it’s done pre-launch. Photo: Ian Bushnell.

Some wags are calling Chris Steel the Minister for Icebergs, in that he can’t help hitting them.

The MyWay+ debacle is just the latest after the disastrous $78 million digital HR project and the CIT corruption scandal, they say.

Mr Steel will contest the latter two, saying he stepped in when he became Minister to stem the bleeding and find a cheaper solution, and former CIT CEO Leanne Cover blindsided him.

With MyWay+, he takes responsibility for its failures and acknowledges the hurt they caused, but he sure as hell isn’t about to say sorry and won’t countenance falling on his sword, an aspect of ministerial responsibility that now seems quaint.

Perhaps there is a chance that apologising may expose the government to some form of litigation or compensation claim from groups such as seniors and people with disabilities who were disadvantaged.

But Mr Steel is nothing if not dogged, and it may be just that. He will argue for as long as anyone wants to hear that the new ticketing system is functioning, most bugs have been fixed, and the rest will be, as part of the terms of the NEC contract.

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There are plenty who will tell him, and I’m one, that they have been free riding on ACT buses where the tech is broken, and other system features are still not up to scratch.

The free ride is a bonus for commuters, and it makes you wonder whether the $64 million cost of trying to make travellers pay doesn’t add up.

Maybe free public transport — or the 50-cent Queensland option — would be more economical overall, given it might get people out of their cars, ease congestion and cut emissions. It might even make people healthier because they have to walk to the bus or light rail stop.

How much will MyWay+ hurt the Minister? Will it add to the cumulative baggage that might weigh heavily when the question of who will succeed Andrew Barr as Chief Minister arises?

Sources say Mr Barr has until 2027 when he is expected to step aside and give his successor a runway to the 2028 election.

They say it will come down to Mr Steel on the right and Rachel Stephen-Smith on the left, with the factions balanced and unaligned but right-leaning Taimus Werner-Gibbings and Marisa Paterson having the deciding votes.

The wildcard could be Dr Paterson backing a woman, and Mr Steel cannot avoid being wounded by the devastating MyWay+ committee report and subsequent censure in the Legislative Assembly.

By 2027, all might be forgotten or forgiven if MyWay+ is fixed, but he hasn’t done his cause much good by refusing to say those simple words.

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Mr Steel plans to tough it out, but a strong leader also needs to be flexible, agile and on his feet, and there is no proof of that yet.

As Treasurer with an ailing budget and Transport Minister with a challenging light-rail decision ahead, there are plenty more icebergs around for him to hit.

Ms Stephen-Smith — older, more experienced and a details person — has had the thankless task of trying to knock the health system into shape.

But she oversaw the successful Canberra Hospital expansion, and there are signs of hope in the ED.

If she prevails — accepting that Mr Barr will actually want to go — it may be due to the memory of Mr Steel pressing on regardless with MyWay+ despite the warnings and then not offering a simple apology when it went pear-shaped.

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Further great arguments arguments for giving up on Self-Government. We are a failed state, bit like a banana Republic or African dictatorship, and need to be just put out of our misery.

Leon Arundell2:04 pm 03 Nov 25

Antarctica’s icebergs might appreciate a transport minister like Chris Steel.
The latest TCCS annual report says that public transport boardings fell from 19.9 million in million in 2023-24 to 13.2 million in 2024-25. That’s not a great endorsement for Fare-Free Fridays.
The government expects Steel’s $577 million contract for stage 2A to increase the Territory’s public transport travel by 0.6%, and the billion dollar stage 2B to reduce the Territory’s public transport travel by 6%.

Not only should it rule him out as a potential leader it should rule him out as a Minister. The man has been nothing but a disaster and in any other jurisdiction in the western world his position would be untenable.

MyWay+ is still rubbish. A couple of days ago we caught two buses. Both buses were having problems with their validators, so those of us who normally pay also rode for free, like the scammers.

I had used the MyWay+ App, to plan our trip. We were travelling from Tuggeranong Interchange and wanted to get off near Gordon Primary School. The Journey Planner wanted to take us past the school, up through the hills of Gordon, around through Banks, and drop us off at Lanyon Market Place, and then provide us with a map for a 20-minute walk.

I’m sorry, I can’t see Canberrans supporting Mr Steele as a future CM. Thinking about it, our Health system is a chaotic mess too, so that counts out Stephen-Smith.

Heck, no one on either side is capable of being the next Chief Minister.

Our current Chief Minister isn’t capable of being Chief Minister so I’m not sure if capability is actually a requirement for the job

Steel & most of the Labor mob have never actually had a real job just Uni then work in a politician’s office then preselection.

Or union office.

Waiting for anyone to give any sane reason not to just myway tickets.
There is zero difference to budget if its offset by a public transport levy, which is far cheaper than a $65 million dollar circus.

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