Crisafulli declares end to ‘cannoli diplomacy’ with Albanese over lack of hospital funding – as it happened | Australia news

Crisafulli declares end to ‘cannoli diplomacy’ with Albanese over lack of hospital funding – as it happened | Australia news


Queensland premier declares end to ‘cannoli diplomacy’ with Albanese over hospital funding

The Queensland premier, David Crisafulli, has declared an end to “cannoli diplomacy” until the state reaches a funding deal with the federal government over hospital funding.

Crisafulli coined the term last year – riffing on the fact both he and the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, are of Italian descent – to demonstrate a willingness for his LNP government to work with Labor in Canberra.

But he told the LNP state council meeting on the Gold Coast on Sunday that the relationship was anything but sweet; in fact it had reached a crunch point.

Crisafulli said “access to more beds” is key to addressing issues with the state’s health system, and that currently there were more than 1,100 long-term patients – who he claimed were the federal government’s responsibility – occupying acute care beds.

We need our partner, the commonwealth government, to hold up their end of the bargain.

Sadly the federal government is playing a cruel game at a critical time for our state.

The offer that is currently there falls well short of their 2023 promise for 42.5% funding by 2030 and 45% by 2035.

But most troublingly it’s a deal that abrogates the federal government’s responsibilities. An offer that will leave hundreds of long-stay patients, aged care and younger NDIS patients stranded in Queensland hospitals.

It’s not a deal I’m willing to take. I won’t accept it.

David Crisafulli
David Crisafulli. Photograph: Darren England/AAP
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Key events

What happened Sunday 9 November

We’re going to wrap things up for today. Here’s what happened:

  • Liberal senator Andrew Bragg has said he can’t see Australia leaving the Paris agreement and has urged his party to recognise “the Australian people are worried about climate change” ahead of a crunch week of meetings to determine the Coalition’s position on net zero emissions.

  • Natural disaster-prone councils in south-east Queensland say the Bureau of Meteorology’s decision to axe its free real-time flood forecasting tool is a “cost-shifting” exercise with “potentially deadly consequences”, with New South Wales emergency services also affected.

  • The Queensland premier, David Crisafulli, has said the relationship between his government and the federal government had soured over a hospital funding deal. Crisafulli declared an end to “cannoli diplomacy” – riffing on the fact both he and the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, are of Italian descent – to demonstrate a willingness for his LNP government to work with Labor in Canberra.

  • Princess Anne has her first full day in Australia as part of a royal tour that comes less than two weeks after King Charles announced he was stripping their brother Andrew of the title of prince, due to the ongoing fallout from his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.

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