Sign your wage could rise soon

Labor’s wide-ranging industrial relations reforms are on the brink of becoming a reality as the deciding vote on the Secure Jobs, Better Pay Bill draws close.

The legislation, which will introduce the most significant changes to Australia’s workplace laws in more than a decade, is in the final stages of debate in the Senate, where a vote is expected as early as Thursday.

The Albanese government at the weekend struck a deal on the legislation with independent ACT senator David Pocock, who holds the balance of power, in exchange for the key crossbencher’s support.

Labor doesn’t have a majority in the upper house, meaning it needs the support of The Greens and one crossbench senator to pass legislation.

Debate on the Bill continued on Thursday morning after running late into the evening on Wednesday, where Coalition senators took the opportunity to frame Labor as being against small business.

Liberal senator Andrew Bragg said Labor “hates small business” and “always has”, with his colleague Gerard Rennick calling the legislation a “grave digger’s Bill” which would “chuck dirt on small business”.

The Coalition unsuccessfully attempted to move amendments which would have delayed the legislation by three months and scrapped the planned expansion of multi-employer bargaining.

Employer groups have slammed the planned expansion of “single interest” multi-employer bargaining – which will essentially makes it easier for workers at different companies to band together to call for better pay and conditions, as long as the Fair Work Commission determines they have a shared interest.

Labor has agreed, at Senator Pocock’s request, to raise the threshold for small businesses to be excluded from multi-employer bargaining from those which employ 15 people to those employing 20.

Anthony Albanese on Wednesday night told the nation’s business leaders he knew they disagreed with “some elements” of Labor’s industrial relations plan.

In an address to the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry’s annual gala dinner, the Prime Minister said no significant economic reform had ever enjoyed 100 per cent support.

“And I’ve always said that while I believe in the value of consensus, I certainly don’t expect everyone to agree on every single element of every single issue,” Mr Albanese said.

“More broadly, I don’t think one point of disagreement needs to define our every interaction.”

The Senate debate over the legislation comes as a new poll reveals 56 per cent of Australians are cutting back on essential items and 24 per cent have skipped meals because of the cost of living.

A survey of 3000 people conducted by the Australian Council of Trade Unions also found 14 per cent of respondents had been forced to move or look for more affordable housing.

The peak union body has been pushing for the Secure Jobs Better Pay Bill to pass parliament, arguing that enterprise bargaining reform is badly needed to boost wages amid the cost of living crisis.

ACTU national secretary Sally McManus said the debate over the legislation had verged on hysteria and accused some business lobbyists of waging a scare campaign.

“I think it’s been incredibly irresponsible for some people to be scaring the hell out of small business,” she told the ABC on Thursday.

“They’re not going to be affected by these laws other than the fact that their customers might have more money to spend.”

The Secure Jobs, Better Pay Bill will have to go back to the House of Representatives after it passes the Senate, so that the government can rubber stamp it in the lower house.

This means MPs may have to return to parliament for an extra sitting day on Saturday.

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