Victorians cherish our democracy as the foundation of a strong multicultural and multifaith community, yet as the ongoing crisis in the Middle East unfolds, we have seen unacceptable displays of hate threaten this foundation.

It gives me great pleasure to rise and speak in support of the government business program. Once again we have some very serious and substantive pieces of legislation coming before the house for debate, which speak to our Labor government’s commitment to making Victoria safer and fairer.

It pains me to speak on this incredibly serious bill, which will make non-fatal strangulation a standalone offence in Victoria, pained because violence against women still haunts us. It still permeates across our communities. It follows us into our homes, where we should be safest. I say ‘it’, but violence against women is not perpetrated by a nondescript ‘it’. Violence against women, the murder of women, is perpetrated by a ‘who’, and it is important that we are self-aware in our language, attributing the deliberate action to the perpetrator who commits it, in most cases a man known to the victim.

My question is to the Minister for Children and I ask what is the impact on communities when Councils move to increase charges, shorten leases or privatise not-for-profit early learning services?

Residents of the inner north are outraged as Darebin Council has moved to cut our 18 community centre leases to a mere two years under the guise of developing a new council-wide leasing policy.

Thank you Speaker, it’s my pleasure to rise today in support of the Environment Legislation Amendment (Circular Economy and Other Matters) Bill 2023.

This legislation is not just about policies or practices. It is about values.

The values that drive us to prioritise our environment, our communities, and the sustainable future of Victoria.

Because it’s easy to talk about climate action – but it’s quite another to do the work to get on with the real policy and legislation that will make a tangible difference.

 I am delighted to rise today to speak on this matter of public importance (MPI), which is all about our littlest Victorians – and rightly so, because though our youngest Victorians may not have the voting rights which elect us as members of this Parliament, it is nevertheless the decisions that are made here which will impact on them and their opportunities into the future.

My question is to the Minister for Public and Active Transport and I ask how is the Allan Labor Government working to deliver better and safer public and active transport options in my electorate of Northcote?

Trams, trains, buses, cycling and walking are central to our way of life in the inner north.

It is with a sense of vexation that I rise to speak in support of this bill to ban the Nazi salute in Victoria – vexation because in our modern multicultural state, a state which prides itself on equality and respect, it is nevertheless apparent that we are again having to strengthen our laws simply to ensure Victorians can live free of bigotry, hate and violence.

My question is to the Minister for Education. I ask the minister what the Victorian Autism Education Strategy means for students and families in my electorate of Northcote. Across my community I have spoken to parents, carers and students about how our education system supports students with autism and indeed all forms of neurodivergence.

It gives me great pleasure to rise in support of the government business program today. Once again we have got an incredibly important piece of legislation coming up for debate, which speaks to the real and rapid transition our state is making to deliver a clean energy future.

My adjournment is to the Minister for Planning, and I warmly ask the minister to join me in the Northcote electorate to speak with members of my community about some of the planning challenges we are facing in the inner north. Northcote, like so many other parts of Melbourne, is grappling with the housing crisis, and there are many planning matters that are of immediate and paramount importance to us.

Thank you to all of the previous speakers in this debate so far, although I do think that the win for best performance goes to the member for Richmond. I mean, seriously, we have all had the opportunity to witness her confected outrage before in this chamber, but I think she may have taken it to a new whole level today. Unfortunately, though, theatrics do not build the safe and secure homes that Victorians desperately need right now, and neither do simplistic tweets and neither do catchy slogans, the other weapons in the Greens arsenal, yet we have seen them plastered all around our inner-city suburbs and on fancy cupcakes paraded by the member for Richmond