

Just look at all our politicians and how they’re handling our country. Our leadership problems start with the old saying that great leaders understand: “No guts, no glory.”
Despite a pre-election commitment to solving this country’s housing supply problem that has driven house prices so high that young people are giving up on owning a home, this is another case of politicians over-promising and under-delivering.
When you look at the Prime Minister’s stumbling efforts to deal with the Bondi massacre and the simmering anti-Semitism that ran before it. And then you see the Coalition disintegrate as a team — with the Nationals refusing to support Susan Ley over her agreement with the Government to ‘shut up’ racist people most of us think are loonies. Given all this, you know our leadership problems start with the old saying great leaders understand, which is “no guts, no glory.”
That said, while Susan Ley has been mistreated by her side, she too hasn’t demonstrated the leadership qualities that would’ve have nipped in the bud the disloyalty we’re seeing from her Coalition.
John Howard and Bob Hawke would have stared their in-house enemies down and made sure they were isolated from the main team. Tough politicians like Donald Trump and Margaret Thatcher do kick arse. They’re often seen unlikeable and unreasonable, but they successfully lead the sheep-like and potential enemies within their party.
Of course, PM Anthony Albanese suffers from a similar leadership inadequacy problem. But even though he has too many anti-business zealots in his team, it’s a stronger team than the Coalition. Lots of Australians might not like many Federal Labor Ministers but they are strong on the messages they support, even if the messages aren’t helping the economy with inflation, interest rates and other problems, such as the supply of new housing.
While the failure of lots of politicians is down to a guts problem, this housing festering sore never gets solved properly and remains with us because of a genuine lack of commitment. The words that carried the promise of 1.2 million homes over a decade haven’t been backed up by a commitment to make that happen. It takes guts to remain committed.
Ask anyone who has already broken the New Year Day promise of self-improvement already! They know how a lack of real commitment explains their failure. Thankfully, in our new short-cut tech-solving world, Ozempic has come to rescue diet-breakers. However, our politicians don’t have what looks like an easy solution to our housing supply challenge.
Be clear on this: too low housing supply with its high price and rent effects are a big part of our inflation and interest rate problems that cruels lots of Australians lives.
Here’s a question for you: Who’s our Federal Housing Minister? Most Aussies wouldn’t know that it’s Clare O’Neill. While O’Neill is regarded as a pretty good politician, she hasn’t been forceful and pushy enough to make Albo’s promise on housing happen.
Someone has to take the blame for failure.
So, what does that failure look like? Nathan Schmidt of The Daily Telegraph did the homework on this subject. Here’s the guts of the matter:
Treasurer Jim Chalmers admits that “housing-related infrastructure and taxation
reform” is needed but concedes Canberra needs to do more on the infrastructure front.
Housing Industry Association (HIA) senior economist Maurice Tapang explained to The Daily Telegraph what’s needed: “Demand is not the challenge. Delivery is. Land supply, infrastructure
timing, planning bottlenecks and workforce capacity will shape the 2026 experience more than interest rates”.
O’Neill needs to get state premiers and key local council leaders together to get a national commitment to make approvals easier and kill barriers to building homes for young Australians.
This isn’t going to happen unless someone like O’Neill shows guts, names the names of those frustrating the housing supply goals and, ultimately, delivers on her leader’s promise.
Given the threat of inflation and rising interest rates to both the material lives of those with mortgages and the overall economy, this goal of more housing ASAP looks like an aspirational target that a courageous politician should publicly fight for.
Margaret Thatcher once said: “If you want something said, ask a man If you want something done, ask a woman.”
I suggest Ley and O’Neill go for it and remember Thatcher’s words!