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The Liberal Party positioned home ownership as its centerpiece issue under new leader Angus Taylor, who says "young Australians deserve the stability and opportunity to own a home" in a direct pitch to priced-out buyers.
If you can’t afford to buy a home, Australia’s conservative opposition wants you to know they’re now making that their problem to solve.
Angus Taylor, sworn in as Liberal Party leader on February 13, 2026, made housing affordability his first major policy commitment - signaling a shift in conservative priorities toward younger voters facing a brutal property market.
“We’ll re-establish home ownership as the centerpiece of the Australian dream,” Taylor said in his inaugural press conference at Parliament House. “All Australians, especially young Australians, deserve the stability and the opportunity to own a home.”
Why this matters to you
Australia’s housing crisis has intensified over the past decade. Median house prices in major cities have soared while wage growth stagnated. Many millennials and Gen Z buyers have been entirely locked out of the market, forced into long-term renting or living with parents well into their 30s.
For young Australians, this represents a fundamental break from previous generations who could reasonably expect to buy a home by their late 20s or early 30s.
What the Liberal Party hasn’t specified yet
Taylor’s press conference was long on commitment but short on details. He didn’t outline:
Specific policies to increase housing supply
Whether they’d restrict foreign buyers or investment properties
Tax incentives for first-home buyers
Infrastructure plans to open up new housing areas
Any timeline for when these policies would be released
What is the Liberal Party?
Australia’s center-right major party, currently in opposition after losing badly in the 2025 election. The party traditionally favors free markets and lower taxes but is now under pressure to show it cares about issues affecting younger Australians - a demographic that has trended away from conservative parties.
The housing crisis by numbers
While Taylor didn’t cite specific statistics in his speech, the housing situation he’s responding to is severe:
Homeownership rates for Australians under 35 have fallen dramatically from previous generations
Rent now consumes 30-50% of income for many younger workers
Waiting times for public housing stretch into years in major cities
(Note: These are general trends - the transcript doesn’t include specific data, and we can’t verify current exact figures without additional sources.)
The political calculation
Taylor’s housing focus represents a strategic choice. He’s competing with:
Labor (current government): Already has housing policies in place, though Taylor argues they’re failing
The Greens: Have pushed aggressive policies like rent caps and massive social housing expansion, appealing to younger renters
One Nation: A right-wing populist party that’s been gaining conservative voters on immigration and cost-of-living issues
By leading with housing, Taylor is trying to show the Liberal Party cares about issues that directly affect young people’s daily lives - not just traditional conservative concerns like defence or economic management.
What comes with the housing promise
Taylor packaged housing with related economic commitments:
Lower taxes overall (”The Liberal Party must always be the party of lower taxes”)
Fighting any new taxes on homes or superannuation (retirement savings)
Reducing childcare costs through more “choice and flexibility” (possibly subsidizing nannies or at-home care, though unspecified)
Lowering energy costs by scrapping what he called “carbon taxes”
The credibility problem
There’s an awkward fact Taylor had to confront: he was shadow treasurer when the Liberal Party made what he now admits were “big calls wrong” on tax policy during the 2025 election campaign.
That loss left the party with just 30 of 151 parliamentary seats - its worst position since formation in 1944.
Now he’s asking voters, including young would-be homebuyers, to trust that things will be different under his leadership.
What happens next
Taylor needs to follow through with actual policy. The housing commitment is currently a priority statement, not a plan.
Parliament returns from summer break on February 17, 2026. The next federal election must happen by May 2028, giving Taylor roughly two years to prove his housing focus is genuine before voters decide.
Opposition parties can make promises, but they can’t implement policy until they win government. For now, this is about signaling what the Liberal Party would prioritize if elected - and trying to win back voters who’ve given up on conservative politics caring about their financial future.
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