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Home News

Government allegedly uses populist measure to secure crossbench support for super tax bill

According to an association boss, the government is trying to force crossbench support for its super tax bill.

by Maja Garaca Djurdjevic
February 5, 2025
in News
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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According to an association boss, the government is trying to force crossbench support for its super tax bill.

The government is said to be heavily lobbying crossbenchers to get the Better Targeted Superannuation Bill across the line, even going so far as to pair the bill with a populist measure to try and force its passage.

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The bill is scheduled to be tabled in the Senate on Thursday (6 February).

Speaking to Super Review sister brand SMSF Adviser, SMSF Association CEO Peter Burgess said: “It seems the government is looking to team the Better Targeted Superannuation Bill with a measure that would reduce surcharges on credit card transactions.

“It’s a populist measure that everyone wants to see get through and it is rumoured the government is going to force the crossbench to vote for the super bill if they want the surcharge measures to also be passed.”

In October, the government announced it would put in place measures to crack down on unfair and excessive card surcharges, alongside a $2.1 million injection for the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission to tackle the issue.

“The government is prepared to ban debit card surcharges, subject to further work by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and safeguards to ensure both small businesses and consumers can benefit from lower costs,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said at the time.

“We are prepared to ban debit card surcharging from 1 January 2026, subject to the consultation undertaken by the RBA, and sufficient steps and safeguards to ensure both small businesses and consumers can benefit from lower costs.”

Burgess on Tuesday said the government has said that if the crossbench fails to support the superannuation bill as it currently stands, the surcharge measures will not be implemented.

“The crossbenchers we have spoken with said they won’t support it, but there are a couple that we are concerned may vote with the government,” he said.

“The government has backed the crossbench into a corner. If they don’t vote for the super tax bill, their constituents will miss out on the credit card surcharge measures and some cost-of-living relief.”

Speaking on Sky News last month, Jim Chalmers described the $3 million super tax as an effort to turn “very, very generous concessions for people with big super balances into slightly less generous concessions”.

“We remain committed to it,” the Treasurer said.

“The Senate has expressed a view on that on a couple of occasions, and we’ll keep working to implement it, because this is one of the ways that we fund the cost-of-living help or strengthening Medicare or the things that we want to see in our budget, in the most responsible way.

“We know that our political opponents are digging in for people who’ve got more than $3 million in super. They’re digging in for long lunches and bosses. We’re for cost-of-living help and strengthening Medicare, and we’ve got to pay for it somehow.”

Pushed on the concerns that stakeholders have raised and how realistic it is that the legislation passes the Senate, Chalmers said the government “did a heap of consultation, and this was the best way to go about it”.

“Secondly, there are other parts of the superannuation system where unrealised gains are calculated. And thirdly, when it comes to some of the issues raised by farmers and others, it’s already the law that people are supposed to maintain an element of liquidity to be able to meet their tax obligations,” he said.

The Coalition has said that if the tax were to pass ahead of the election, it would repeal it.

Shadow finance minister, Jane Hume, told Sky News last month, Division 296 “should have been doomed from the start”.

“It’s a brand new kind of tax, one we haven’t seen in Australia before. One that hasn’t worked in any other jurisdiction. This was a terrible idea from go to woe,” Hume said.

“The Coalition has said not only would we vote against it, but should it pass and we get into government, then we will repeal this terrible Labor tax.”

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