7 April 2025

Dutton backflips over his controversial work-from-home policy

| Chris Johnson
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Peter Dutton filling a car

Peter Dutton wants to talk about the cost of living but has had to walk back his comments about work from home for the APS. Photo: Peter Dutton Facebook.

Peter Dutton has apologised for insisting he would end work-from-home arrangements for public servants, in what amounts to an embarrassing mid-campaign backflip that also retreats on his promise to sack 41,000 APS employees.

With just one week of the federal election campaign behind him, the Opposition Leader has been forced to admit the Coalition policy to force public servants back to the office five days a week was a dud.

A backlash inside his party, sparked by voter outrage (particularly from women) over the plan, brought on the U-turn, with Mr Dutton admitting the policy was wrong.

“We made a mistake,” he said in a media interview.

“I think it’s important we say that and recognise it. Our intention was always to make sure that taxpayers are working hard and their money is being spent to pay wages — that it’s being spent efficiently.”

Flexible working rights were successfully negotiated for Australian Public Service employees as part of their new enterprise agreement.

Shadow finance minister Jane Hume first announced Coalition policy in March that public servants would have to front up to the office five days a week if Mr Dutton becomes prime minister.

She now says flexible working arrangements had always been the Coalition’s position, but that didn’t necessarily mean work-from-home.

Now it does.

“We very much respect those existing flexible working arrangements, and we’ve said that we will enshrine them in future agreements,” Senator Hume told the ABC.

“So we’re not changing the current flexible working arrangements, and that includes work-from-home policies.”

The policy went down like a lead balloon in the electorate, with many workers fearing it would go beyond the public service and also apply to the private sector.

Outspoken Nationals frontbencher Barnaby Joyce said dumping the policy was the right thing to do because it made many voters “pretty upset”.

“I think the sensible thing, if it’s not working, is to change,” Mr Joyce said.

“I mean, that’s what you should do. That’s what people want to see in a leader.”

Mr Dutton, however, insists the policy was never going to apply to the private sector.

He said that was all Anthony Albanese’s doing.

“The Prime Minister was out there saying that. It was just a lie,” the Opposition Leader said.

“We’re listening to what people have to say. We made a mistake in relation to the policy.

“We’ve apologised for that and we’ve dealt with it. But we’re not going to be framed up by a Prime Minister who’s got a real problem with the truth.”

Mr Albanese said Labor had protected flexible working rights, but the Coalition backflip shows Mr Dutton can’t be trusted on the issue.

“I’m not quite sure where they are at the moment, but the Coalition certainly said they’d stop working from home. They didn’t want to support it,” the Prime Minister said.

“Today, they’ve gone from defending to pretending that they weren’t.”

READ ALSO Dutton’s PS jobs threat sparks change in Labor strategy, but only locally

The Opposition Leader has also ruled out forced redundancies in the public service, saying the plan was to reduce the workforce by 41,000 through natural attrition and a hiring freeze.

He remains confident he’ll still be able to find the $7 billion in savings by reducing public service numbers.

“There’s no change to the costing at all because the original plan of the natural attrition and the freezing was what we’d always had,” Mr Dutton said.

“It’s the way in which Labor’s contorted that into something else.”

The PM said those comments offer another example of why the Coalition can’t be believed.

“The fact is that Peter Dutton is pretending,” Mr Albanese said.

“As late as last week, his budget reply had the 41,000 job cuts front and centre.”

Those sentiments were repeated Monday morning (7 April) by a string of on-message Labor frontbenchers, including Public Service Minister Katy Gallagher, who expressed her distrust of the backflip during an ABC Canberra radio interview.

“Well, forgive me for being a bit cynical about this … but I just don’t believe them,” she said.

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Research shows that WFH increases productivity, reduces staff turnover, encourages employees to work more; and promotes a positive work culture.

Instead of focusing on the minority of people who abuse or take advantage of the lack of oversight; why not focus on identifying why WFH is so successful? That way it could potentially allow for replication of some elements in workplaces that do not allow for WFH (many services and front line workplaces).

The same people who dislike WFH are the same people who think that everyone who uses Centrelink are ‘bludgers’. They are (inaccurately) suggesting the minority represents the majority.

Was the back-flip a core promise?

Capital Retro8:43 am 08 Apr 25

Most of you lefties supporting the WFR people probably have your superannuation with one of the Industry Super Funds.
Are you aware that those funds own a lot of large office blocks that will become stranded assets if WFR isn’t stopped because the buildings will become empty and now rent will be collected to pass on to your precious super accounts.
https://www.afr.com/property/commercial/big-industry-super-property-fund-plunges-to-1-5b-loss-on-write-downs-20241107-p5kosr

@Capital Retro
I’m more concerned about the impact Trump’s maniacal trade actions are having on global stock markets, and the consequential wide reaching negative growth across all superannuation accounts, than a couple of investments my fund may have in property in Canberra, CR.

Capital Retro12:10 pm 08 Apr 25

So you have chosen the growth option, JS?
You will have to defer your retirement to “catch up”.

@Capital Retro
As usual, CR, you have no idea what you are talking about – because, I have told you on several occasions, CR, I am a fully self funded retiree – and am living a comfortable lifestyle thank you.

Despite your ill-informed and mindless chicken little predictions, this Trumpian set back will not endure. Just like the GFC and COVID slumps, my (Industry Fund) super balance will take a short term hit, and then bounce back and continue to give me very acceptable returns, and still out perform retail funds.

Capital Retro,
Those Superannuation firms also have massive investments in companies that will no longer needed to rent those massive amounts of office space for employers, increasing profitability.

What exactly is your strange point meant to mean?

The blip from commercial property price reductions due to WFH wouldn’t even be considered noise in the overall Super performance outcomes.

Capital Retro4:23 pm 08 Apr 25

I apologise JS, I got you mixed up with Seano, another one of the CR hit squad.
I hope you are right. You are certainly a thrill-seeker by having equities instead of only cash in retirement.

Capital Retro4:24 pm 08 Apr 25

chewy, I don’t care what you think.

HiddenDragon10:53 pm 07 Apr 25

“….with many workers fearing it would go beyond the public service and also apply to the private sector”

To the extent that this back-down/back-flip by the Coalition has implications for the private sector, it probably only increases the likelihood that more private sector employers will take steps like this, sooner rather than later –

https://ia.acs.org.au/article/2025/canva-lays-off-technical-writers-amid-ai-push.html

Likewise for the public sector, although not with the same urgency when taxpayers are footing the bill, and (for the most part) there’s no competitive forces at work.

There’s bad news & good news in Dutton’s latest flip flop, the bad news is that as PM Dutton will be a torrent of dumb ideas but the good news is most of them won’t be implemented…

Heywood Smith1:55 pm 07 Apr 25

Dutton simply backpaddled on a policy he couldn’t implement, You can’t simply “DEMAND” people return to the office when Workplace Agreements clearly stipulate, they can work flexibly from home, in some cases, permanently WFH!

Dutton sounds like he’s taken electorate feedback on board, taken ownership and changed the policy. That’s good politics isn’t it ?

You mean, as opposed to sounding weak with short-term thinking, saying anything to get elected then break promises as suits him?

That is what I would expect you to say if the same happened on the other wing of politics.

To strike a middle ground, the serious question for electors is what sort of leader or party comes up with such a daft unevidenced policy in the first place*. While such things are not the sole preserve of one side of politics, Dutton’s volte face is the one we are discussing here.

* Possibly one which promotes new nuclear power as if it were an economic, timely solution, for example.

Ideally it does. But my experience of successive Liberal government in coalition with the Nationals is that they like to whack Canberra and excite anti-public service sentiments as a way of pleasing the crowd. Turns out the crowd isn’t there to cheer them on this time. And the willingness to try and rouse the crowd is a cynical ploy. In this case, the insinuation that people at home don’t work showed how uninterested the Liberal party is in workers’ rights. It was the fear of electoral backlash, not support of workers and their families, that motivated the change.

@Penfold
So does that mean you are now retracting your negative comments about WFH for APS staff and your support for the LNP proposal to sack 41,000 of them?

Holocene, Dutton’s already made a strong case for nuclear. The “timely” aspect is a complete furphy, as if the planet is going to disintegrate soon. We will always need baseload, reliable power.

Also the gencost report by the CSIRO was highly flawed and overestimated nuclear costs by a factor of more than 3.

Btw did you hear Labor are again promising cheaper power ? How stupid do they think voters are ?

PV – whether they WFH or not, why on earth are there 41,000 extra public servants, or 25%, in just three years ?

Well, given your preferred approach is ‘fact free’, no wonder you believe Dutton’s nuclear fantasy hahaha.

The only fantasy is the idea that ‘baseload power’ is something other than a coal sector invention.

You mean Dutton’s flip flopped on yet another of his ill-conceived thought bubbles after seeing polling.

Happy I could help.

Sentence by sentence for Penfold:
Wrong.
Wrong point.
Uncomprehending claim.
Ridiculous.
No.
See: USA.

6 sentences, 5 responses. Sounds like a translator’s needed to respond to your post Holocene.

But it’s hard to contest the need for baseload power, particularly after this summer when corporates like Tomago and households were asked to reduce power use. Coal, gas, hydro and nuclear provide baseload. Unreliable wind and solar do not.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-11-29/nsw-energy-supply-hot-weather-explainer/104658606

So many public servants with knives out. Makes for good humour

“But it’s hard to contest the need for baseload power, particularly after this summer when corporates like Tomago and households were asked to reduce power use. Coal, gas, hydro and nuclear provide baseload. Unreliable wind and solar do not.”

This is the idiotic statement of someone who does not know what baseload power is or understand how the grids but persists on relentlessly exposing their ignorance on energy.

https://www.unsw.edu.au/newsroom/news/2013/04/baseload-power-is-a-myth–even-intermittent-renewables-will-work

https://reneweconomy.com.au/base-load-power-a-myth-used-to-defend-the-fossil-fuel-industry-96007/

Penfold cannot even count to six.

You don’t think we need baseload power Holocene ? Why don’t you try going without electricity for 24 hours. Lettuce know how you go 🥬

That’s not what baseload power is Penfold….thanks for playing “Penfold demonstrates that he doesn’t understand how our grid works even though he relentlessly posts partisan commentary about energy”.

Seano your inability to understand even the most basic of concepts is why there is very little point engaging with you.

I have seen Penfold before. When he* gets something completely wrong he urgently changes the subject to something else he does not know.

Maybe he is a Young Liberal. He quacks like one.

* the gender seems a fair assumption.

Explain baseload then please Penfold.

Good luck with that, we both know you won’t because you can’t because you’re just repeating talking points and memes from the culture wars.

The rare times you reference an article in an attempt to defend your relentlessly wrong claims, not knowing the article doesn’t actually say what you think it says proves this.

Well Holocene with monosyllabic responses like “wrong” you didn’t invite much debate. Perhaps you should try constructing an argument.

Still waiting for you to explain baseload Penfold…lol

Why would I bother, you’d only come back with the highly intellectual response of “wrong”. Find out for yourself, try a google

Try a google search. You’ll be close to the mark when you see the words “reliable” and “constant”. We know you’d argue night is day but even solar cells know the difference.

Penfold, arguments are constructed against properly argued, evidenced, propositions. You have presented none of that so your plaintive claims can rightly be dismissed without hesitaton, as I did.

I can see your desperation, that you would beg your interlocutors to google up something which you are incapable of finding and supporting for yourself.

“Why would I bother, you’d only come back with the highly intellectual response of “wrong”. Find out for yourself, try a google”

Another cowardly response from Penfold because he knows he can’t define “baseload” because I’ll come back with evidence proving that baseload isn’t what he claims it is, proving that he is either clueless or hopelessly partisan (or both) and entirely wrong on energy.

Game over.

Holocene – i was even kind enough to give you a hint about the outcome of a google search, the words “reliable” and “constant” being clues.

Perhaps you’re too scared to find out the result because baseload means coal, gas, hydrogen or nuclear. It means power available 24 x 7, which by definition excludes solar and wind. Hmmm …. wind ….

I’ll bet your favourite expression around this is the famous joke that the laughing stock Bowen came out with a few years ago …. “the sun doesn’t send a bill” ! If only energy providers didn’t either 🤣

Love it when Seano childishly declares “game over”. It translates to “Seano has no more to offer”. 🍼

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