26 June 2025

Budget Reply: Castley's plan for a more affordable Canberra

| By Ian Bushnell
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Leanne Castley MLA.

Opposition Leader Leanne Castley says grandiose visions have left Canberrans poorer. Photo: Thomas Lucraft.

More affordable housing, easing the cost of living and better public services will be the three pillars of the Canberra Liberals’ path back to government.

Opposition Leader Leanne Castley told the Legislative Assembly in her Budget Reply on Thursday (26 June) those three priorities would restore the Territory’s finances and rebuild faith with the community.

In a speech short on detail and more of an election manifesto, Ms Castley indicated the Canberra Liberals would take government back to meeting people’s basic needs and cast doubt on the viability of the Barr Government’s big infrastructure projects, in particular light rail.

She said this week’s ACT Budget, with its record deficit and debt, was the culmination of a failed Labor agenda that had focused on grand projects at the expense of everyday Canberrans.

Ms Castley said Labor’s reckless spending had only brought higher debt and taxes, depleted services and failed businesses.

“Labor has spent more and more to deliver less and less – the very antithesis of the productivity growth it claimed to be pursuing,” Ms Castley said.

“The ACT is now worse off than if we never had Labor’s economic agenda.”

READ ALSO Ratings agency warns ACT on spending

Ms Castley said the size of the debt meant interest payments would consume one in every four dollars that people paid in local taxes next year, leaving not enough money to properly fund schools, hospitals and police.

She said Labor was irresponsible to maintain this grand agenda when COVID hit and during the inflationary aftermath, leading to the spiralling cost of government debt.

She said high tax and regulation meant empty shopfronts, deserted local shopping districts and businesses leaving Canberra, while unaffordable housing was also forcing Canberrans across the border or further afield.

“The exodus of small businesses from Canberra means the public sector will soon account for more than 60 per cent of the local economy, leaving us more dependent than ever on Commonwealth spending,” she said.

“Labor’s plans for infrastructure investment remain more of a fantasy than a reality, with light rail years behind schedule and their other promises more likely to inspire derision than awe.”

Ms Castley said Labor had lost its way and the likely successors to Chief Minister Andrew Barr offered no vision for the future.

She said most people wanted a more affordable city, where public services were accessible and reliable, with safe streets, clean parks, good schools and fast help when it’s needed.

“This is not just their vision of a better Canberra, it’s mine too.”

Ms Castley’s plan for the next three years was to focus on the three things that she believed would make the biggest difference for people and families – affordable, accessible housing, cost of living and better services.

READ ALSO Ley outlines another review and a new era of Liberal Party leadership

“There are no silver bullets to fix these problems and they cannot be solved overnight. But our team is developing the reforms that will put us on a pathway to delivering our vision for a better Canberra,” she said.

“Over the next three years, we will progressively release components of this agenda so Canberrans can see these are more than just aspirations or election commitments, but a true foundation for government and a foundation for change.”

Ms Castley said she would continue to rebuild trust with the community by genuinely listening to the community and responding to their concerns and their priorities.

“As a Territory, we can’t go on like this. We must change,” she said.

“And while the opportunity for that change – the next ACT election – is still more than three years away, we must use every minute we can between now and then to build the plans and the policies for that future.

“We have no time to waste.”

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I think there is merit in zooming out and reviewing what it is that Canberra wants to be. I feel there are growing discrepancies with housing and transport that are not getting sufficient answers. For example, the balance of housing types in the housing targets. The Light Rail is another long term issue that has always suffered from not having a sufficiently worked through strategy – including business and investment cases. Perhaps our Canberra strategy should be less politically generated and more socially generated. But how to do it?

Uninspiring. Sounds like a dull, unimaginative, bread and butter shopping list. We DO need SENSIBLE, economically viable, infrastructure projects (NOT the tram).

Good government should be boring.

Leon Arundell1:36 pm 27 Jun 25

Why would anyone want more slow, gold-plated light rail? The government estimated that stage 2a would cost around $300 million, but would offer only $150 million worth of benefits. Then it signed a $577 million contract for stage 2a. It estimated that keeping Adelaide Avenue’s transit lanes would result in 5% more public transport travel than if it spent an (optimistically) estimated $905 million on stage 2b.

I think ACT Government can save billions over 10 years and you’d hardly notice the difference, but it requires radical transformation and a huge uplift in senior leadership, preferably with people who have experience of managing restricted budgets but still produce results. That would rule out a lot of local Canberra people who are used to money falling from trees, which is always replaced when they waste it. We do seem to keep reverting to an old boys/old girls club in lots of senior jobs.
This budget is the first tentative acceptance of what the rest of the world has been going through for the last 15 years; if you do not manage your business effectively you run into massive problems when budgets dwindle, because you can no longer invest to produce savings but you are left with the liability you have created, that you then cannot remove. Your problem is that the citizens still want services to continually improve, so you are stuck with a weight around your neck.
Even the upcoming Government Directorate changes seem to be being implemented with no plan and no budget, which means it will probably fail and cause more problems. ACT Government is ready to start from a fresh, blank, piece of paper..and design the Government it will need. Then you plan to transition. You don’t start by making decisions with no idea how it’s going to happen, because where is the evidence for those decisions based upon except to deflect from existing problems? ACT Government’s core identity needs to run much deeper than that, and re-arranging deckchairs comes at the end, not the beginning.

‘But our team is developing the reforms that will put us on a pathway to delivering our vision for a better Canberra,” she said.

“Over the next three years, we will progressively release components of this agenda so Canberrans’…

Fair dinkum I honestly thought she would have a plan, I should have known. Clickbait.

Maybe you could send her the business cases for every ACT project ever.
The transparent govenment can’t seem to find them.

That’s right Seano – keep pointing the finger at the Liberals hoping to distract people from looking at the train wreck of a budget that’s just been handed down by a government that was just returned after hiding the true state of the finances from the public.

Whataboutism doesn’t change the fact that the Canberra Liberals remain a clueless, out of touch rabble Henry.

“That’s right Seano – keep pointing the finger at the Liberals hoping to distract people “

Get a grip Garfield, if you think I or anyone posting opinions on this site are why the Canberra Liberals are an unelectable rabble you need to log off and go for a walk.

BTW as I pointed out before the territory and federal elections, I vote for sensible, moderate independents whenever they’re available. If you’re not happy with the government then talk to the Canberra Liberals who have not only refused to listen to the electorate if anything they’ve drifted further to the right.

Castley literally just gave a budget reply where she basically promised and outline of a plan TBA. Maybe you should be whinging at the Canberra Liberals champ.

Garfield, its not a train wreck. Its a light rail wreck

“Whataboutism doesn’t change the fact that the Canberra Liberals remain a clueless, out of touch rabble Henry.”

I’m trying to work out your thoughts, what evidence do you have to support this assertion?

Trying to work out the logic, if any to your thinking…
You want the liberals to pitch costing on their ‘potentional’ projects, but ignore that current projects dating back to the dawn of time haven’t made most of the business cases or costing public. What information are the librerals to base these on?

The current gov have claimed a surplus in a few years for the last few decades.
I sense you aren’t familiar with hypocrisy?

“I’m trying to work out your thoughts, what evidence do you have to support this assertion?” look up whataboutism. I didn’t bother reading the rest.

Labor’s vision:

A quarter of your tax to ride the debt!

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