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Albanese dismisses crossbench staff furore

Colin BrinsdenAAP
Anthony Albanese says he can't see why one MP should get more staff than another from a major party.
Camera IconAnthony Albanese says he can't see why one MP should get more staff than another from a major party. Credit: AAP

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has defended cutting the number of parliamentary staff crossbench MPs and senators can hire from four to one senior adviser, alongside their four electoral office staff.

"We have one vote, one value in this country," Mr Albanese told reporters on Sunday night, before flying out for talks in Europe.

"And it shouldn't be the case that if you live in an electorate that's not served by a major party, you simply don't have the same level of support in an electorate office," he said.

Under the previous coalition government, crossbench MPs and senators were allowed to have two advisers and two assistant advisers.

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'Teal' independent Monique Ryan, who ousted former treasurer Josh Frydenberg from the seat of Kooyong, is outraged at the move.

"After coming to power, Prime Minister Albanese stated that he wanted to work co-operatively with crossbench MPs to ensure they were able to contribute fully to the parliament's deliberations and operations," she said.

"It's disappointing that his first act towards the cross bench is utterly at odds with that statement."

Fellow independent MP Zali Steggall and senators Jacqui Lambie and David Pocock have also criticised the reduction in staff.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers defended the prime minister's decision, telling ABC's Insiders program he was surprised to learn some crossbenchers had twice as many staff as other backbenchers.

But he recognised there was more pressure on independents to scrutinise legislation when they didn't have the backing of a major party.

"They get an extra, quite senior staffer, which other backbenchers don't get and that's in recognition of that," Dr Chalmers said.

The government is also boosting its investment in the parliamentary library to help with crossbenchers' workload.

Deputy Liberal leader Sussan Ley is sympathetic to the crossbench complaints.

"When you do have to look every piece of legislation and get across numerous different issues, many in the one parliamentary week, without the support of a party structure I do understand it is a pretty high workload," she told Sky News' Sunday Agenda program.

"However, we are not the government and this is a decision that the present government, the present prime minister, needs to own and back in."

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