WITH families in Blair feeling the pinch like never before, the cost of living has become a defining issue of the upcoming Federal Election.
Skyrocketing grocery bills, rising rents, and increasing energy costs are stretching household budgets to breaking point, leaving many voters desperate for relief.
As the political battle lines are drawn, incumbent Labor MP Shayne Neumann and Liberal National Party candidate Carl Mutzelburg are making their cases to the people of Blair.
Mr Neumann insists his government has already been delivering relief to struggling families.
“We know times are tough, but that’s why we’ve taken real action to ease cost-of-living pressures,” he said.
“Every Australian is getting a tax cut, we’ve delivered direct energy bill relief, and we’ve made it cheaper to see a doctor and buy essential medicines.”
Mr Neumann argued that the Albanese Government had put people first, highlighting initiatives to tackle rising grocery prices.
“We’re strengthening the Food and Grocery Code of Conduct to ensure supermarkets do the right thing,” he said.
“There will be fines of up to $10 million for those engaging in unfair pricing, and we’re cracking down on shrinkflation.”
He also pointed to economic improvements under Labor’s leadership.
“Inflation has dropped to almost a third of what it was when we took office, real wages are growing again, and unemployment is at its lowest sustained level in 50 years,” he said.
However, Mr Mutzelburg slammed Labor’s economic record, arguing that Blair’s residents were worse off under its leadership.
“The truth is, Australians are experiencing the biggest collapse in living standards in our history,” he said.
Mr Mutzelburg cited alarming statistics from the University of New South Wales and Digital Finance Analytics.
“In Ipswich and Somerset, 78 per cent of households are under financial stress, and a staggering 91 per cent are under rental stress,” he said.
“This is not just numbers – it’s real people suffering because of Labor’s failures.”
Mr Mutzelburg positioned the LNP as the party to restore financial stability.
“Our plan is clear: rein in wasteful spending, cut red tape, and reduce taxes to put downward pressure on inflation,” he said.
“We’ll deliver cheaper energy through a mix of renewables, gas, and zero-emissions nuclear power, and we’ll tackle housing affordability by investing in infrastructure, restricting foreign investors, and helping first-home buyers.”

