Sussan Ley’s shock reaction to Labor’s offer to beat the HECs account for millions of Australians
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Sussan Ley has left the door open for the coalition to support the promise of Labor to beat the students’ debts by 20 percent in a milestone in the direction of the two -part government.
One of the most important commitments of Labor before the election Was to lower and help with 20 percent debts such as HECs.
The liberal party opposed the policy and burned the ‘elitist’ and ‘deeply unfair.
But now Ley has said that she is open to supporting the policy because the shattered party would ‘look at everything again’.
‘We have no policy forward. We are going to pause and consider everything, “she revealed in an interview with The Daily Aus.
“So we will consider that legislation when it comes to the fore. We have clearly not seen it, and if we do that, we have a discussion in our party room about how we react to it. ‘
During the broad interview with Lisa Wilkinson’s daughter Billi Fitzsimons, Ley said she could identify with the ‘challenges’ young people are confronted – before they make a Dringworthy pop culture reference.
“I remember that I don’t fit at school, became a kind of drop -out punk, struggle with all the problems you do as a teenager, and then found my way by having a passion, who wanted to fly planes,” she said.

Sussan Ley has left the door open for the coalition to support the promise of Labor to beat the students’ debts by 20 percent (shown: RMIT University students on graduation day)

During the broad interview with Lisa Wilkinson’s daughter Billi Fitzsimons, Ley said she could identify with the ‘challenges’ young people they are confronted with – but then a pop culture reference.
Ley, 63, said she was working three jobs to save for flying lessons.
Before she entered politics, she previously worked as an air traffic controller, a pilot in the air, a chef of scissors, a wool and beef and civil servants.
She said that the election loss of the coalition was a ‘very serious, humiliating message’ and that she was now aimed at listening to Australians before building a policy platform.
In an attempt to perhaps appear ‘Down with the Kids’, Ley also dropped a pop culture reference when discussing the short disintegration after the elections of the coalition.
“So he (David Littleproud) came back to the table to try again, and may have received some inspiration from Charli XCX and Lorde and yes, came together again,” she said.
However, she quoted the text somewhat wrong.
The reference is to the song ‘Girl, so confusing with Lorde’ by Charlie XCX, which actually has the text: ‘Let’s work it out on the remix’.
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