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The Budget 2026 live updates: Jim Chalmers claims no election lies, Albanese says Labor changed its mind

LIVE UPDATES: Treasurer Jim Chalmers is facing the music after handing down his fifth Federal Budget, one full of election broken promises.

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Max Corstorphan
The Nightly
Jim Chalmers defends broken election promise in 2026 budget

Follow the latest news and updates as Labor fronts up to election broken promises and reaction to the 2026-27 Federal Budget.

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Max Corstorphan is reporting live.

WATCH: Albanese defends housing policy backflip

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese defends the government's decision to reform negative gearing and capital gains tax policies, acknowledging a reversal from pre-election commitments.

‘We have changed our position’: Albanese on broken promises

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says he is being “upfront” and Labor changing its mind on CGT and negative gearing, breaking election promises.

“This is a budget of reform and resilience,” Albanese told Sunrise.

“It is making sure that the Australian dream of buying a home isn’t out of reach.”

Mr Albanese said Labor will “own” the decision to change their mind.

“We have changed our position. I am upfront about that, and we will own that,” the Prime Minister said.

“The difference between negatively gearing a new home instead of an existing home… You are investing in Australia as well as your future wealth.

“We have changed our position on property issues because we want 75,000 additional young Australians to access their own home.

“What has changed is that increasingly we realised what we were doing wasn’t enough.

“If you have a negatively geared property, no change to your existing arrangements.

“We are also saying we are not going to sit back and just kick this can down the road again.”

WATCH: Treasurer defends negative gearing, CGT changes

Federal treasurer Jim Chalmers has defended an ambitious budget despite it going against promises made in the last election.

How Labor is trying to manipulate the property market

Dr Chalmers said there would soon be a “phasing out” process for investors hoping to continue negative gearing a property.

Anyone who currently has an investment property won’t be affected by the new negative gearing changes.

From today, anyone who buys a home and wants to access negative gearing needs to invest in a new build.

Labor claims the change will push some investors into new builds, boosting supply.

“People who are negatively gearing right now, we respect and recognise those decisions that they have taken already. They can continue to negatively gear that property. At some point, it will become positively geared, and so there will be an element of phasing out,” Dr Chalmers told Sunrise.

“If people want to continue investing in housing, they can negatively gear a new property so that it adds to housing supply.

“What the Budget is really about is recognising that some of the opportunities that people have had in the past, we want to make that more people can do well into the future.“

‘Did you lie?’: Chalmers grilled on Labor’s broken promise

Treasurer Jim Chalmers is facing the music after breaking election promises in his fifth Federal Budget.

The Albanese Government on Tuesday announced major changes to capital gains tax and negative gearing as Dr Chalmers attempts to force investors into new homes, potentially freeing up homes for younger Australians.

“One of the main motivations for the changes we made, which we understand are contentious changes, is to make it easier for young people,” Dr Chalmers told Sunrise.

“This is about levelling the playing field. The changes we announced last night, we expect it to mean 70,000 new homes.

Asked flat out if he lied at the 2025 election when Labor said there would be no changes to CGT of negative gearing, Dr Chalmers claimed the decision to make a change from the promise came just weeks ago.

“We’ve come to a different view on these policy areas. Too many young people are being locked out of the housing market,” Dr Chalmers said.

“(The change) was decided in the usual way late in the Budget process.”

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