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Jacqui Lambie Delivers Blunt Verdict On Federal Budget

  • Written by: The Times

Senator Lambie

Tasmanian senator Jacqui Lambie has delivered a characteristically blunt assessment of the federal budget, warning that many ordinary Australians remain under severe financial pressure despite the government’s promises of reform and relief.

Appearing in media interviews following Tuesday night’s budget, Lambie said many working Australians, pensioners and veterans were still struggling to cope with rising living costs, housing affordability problems and growing economic uncertainty.

While stopping short of completely condemning the budget, Lambie signalled she would closely scrutinise several key measures before offering support in the Senate, particularly any changes affecting vulnerable Australians.

Lambie said Australians were tired of political spin and wanted practical outcomes.

“People out there are hurting,” she said during post-budget commentary, arguing that many families no longer feel financially secure even when working full time.

The independent Tasmanian senator has long positioned herself as a voice for lower and middle-income Australians, veterans and regional communities, and her response reflected those themes.

Housing Remains Central Concern

Lambie expressed concern about the worsening housing crisis and questioned whether budget measures would genuinely improve affordability for younger Australians.

Like many crossbenchers, she warned that Australians increasingly feel locked out of home ownership while rents continue rising sharply.

She indicated she would support reforms that genuinely improve housing access but warned against policies that create uncertainty without increasing housing supply.

Her comments reflected a broader national concern that housing has become one of the defining political and economic issues of modern Australia.

Concern About NDIS Changes

The senator also raised concerns about savings measures linked to the National Disability Insurance Scheme.

Lambie said Australians supported the idea of ensuring the NDIS remains financially sustainable, but warned that genuine participants must not be punished because of system failures or misuse.

She indicated the government would need to explain in detail how changes would affect vulnerable recipients before expecting easy passage through Parliament.

Cost Of Living Pressure Dominates Political Debate

Lambie repeatedly returned to cost-of-living pressures during her commentary.

She argued that many Australians no longer feel the economy is working in their favour despite headline economic statistics.

Fuel prices, grocery bills, rent increases, insurance premiums and rising utility costs were all contributing to public frustration, she said.

The senator warned Canberra risked becoming disconnected from everyday financial reality.

Her remarks tapped into a growing mood across the country that many Australians are working harder while feeling less financially secure.

Veterans And Defence Spending

As a long-time advocate for veterans, Lambie also used her budget response to renew pressure on the government regarding defence personnel welfare and veteran support services.

She warned that increased defence spending and strategic concerns in the Indo-Pacific must not come at the expense of the men and women already carrying the burden of military service.

Mental health services, compensation systems and housing support for veterans remained major concerns, she said.

Crossbench Influence Growing

Lambie’s response also highlighted the growing importance of the Senate crossbench in Australian politics.

With major reforms now facing intense scrutiny, crossbench senators are increasingly influential in determining whether governments can implement controversial economic measures.

The Treasurer may have framed the budget as a reform package designed to reshape Australia’s economic future, but senators like Lambie are signalling that political acceptance cannot be assumed.

Her response suggested the government still faces substantial political negotiation before key measures become law.

A Mood Of Frustration

Perhaps most significantly, Lambie’s reaction reflected the broader national mood currently shaping Australian politics.

There is increasing public frustration about:

  • housing affordability
  • cost of living pressures
  • government spending priorities
  • and whether ordinary Australians are still getting ahead.

Lambie has built much of her political identity around speaking directly to those anxieties in plain language rather than bureaucratic terminology.

Whether one agrees with her politics or not, her budget response demonstrated why figures outside the traditional major party structure continue gaining traction with voters who feel unheard by Canberra.

As debate over the federal budget intensifies, Lambie’s position may become increasingly important — particularly if the government requires crossbench support to pass its most controversial reforms.

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