Katter lashes PM over Hells Gates broken promise

March 23, 2022

BOB KATTER, Federal Member for Kennedy, has lashed the Prime Minster of Australia for backing the wrong horse on the Hells Gates Dam project and has warned that unless the dam is built to a height of 395m, as opposed to a significantly smaller project announced today, then he would flex his powers, clear his voice and ready himself for the biggest fight of political career. 

A fight that has been 45 years in the making. 


“The Prime Minister’s announcement today destroys the great Bradfield vision forever and proves that I have been flagrantly lied to,” Mr Katter said.


“I am holding a letter from the Deputy Prime Minister, the person responsible for this project, saying that the dam will be built to 395m high. This is the height that will water Townsville and the height needed to go out onto the Western Plains. That was the undertaking agreed to in writing.


“But I have been lied to. The undertaking announced today doesn’t go anywhere near that height. It might irrigate maybe a hundred or so farms along the waterbed. But to put that in perspective, Ingham and Ayr have 1500 farms, so what’s an extra 100 farms going to do for a city of 200,000 people.?” he said. 


“The money announced today could not be justified in a million years.


“This country has had a dream of taking the giant floodwaters that wreck the coast each year, taking a tiny little part of those floodwaters, and turning them onto the Western Plains to supplement the massive floodwaters of the Flinders River and produce about 20 billion a year of production.


“What the PM is talking about will be flat out producing $200 million.


“A dam to 395m would provide all of North Queensland’s electricity – clean, green, with no C02 emissions, the entire base load will be carried from the Upper Burdekin Irrigation Scheme (UBurIS) which has always been what everyone has agreed to.


“The person responsible for this “announced” project did not consult to anyone even remotely associated with the Revised Bradfield Scheme.


“What the PM has proposed is built as a low dam. A very low dam. There is not enough height to syphon the water. The dam is so low that it can’t ever get through the Great Dividing Range via a break in the Range.” 


Mr Katter said he had attempted to contact he Prime Minister several times today to raise these concerns and had not received a returned call. He said that he would have to consider his options in relation to how much support he will throw behind the Government moving forward.


“I’ve given the Prime Minister my support. I’ve given him loyalty. And I’ve been flagrantly lied to.


“He expected me to be jumping up and down with excitement on this, but he was badly mistaken.


“I will be considering all my options. We aren’t for the Liberal party of Australia, we aren’t for the Labor party of Australia, we are for the people of Australia.


“I’m leaving it out there. The PM can ring me up any time. The DPM can ring me up anytime. The Labor Party can ring me up anytime. But I’m considering all my options,” he said.


“Bradfield has been spat on. This project has been spat on and I’m risking my political life to push for his great vision. When I go to sleep at night, I don’t ask myself how many votes I won today – I’d love to go out there skiting about $5.4 billion in my electorate. But instead, I ask whether I did the right thing today. And this might be politically disastrous to me, but I just have to do what I think is the right thing and push back on this.


“If you can supply cheap electricity and reliable water for the people of north Queensland for forever, and if you can supply protein for the poultry, dairy and cattle industry, then why would you continue to support a pigmy a project that produces nothing, for anyone?!


“I will have to consider my position with respect to the budget and if there is a Balance of Power situation in the federal parliament.


“This is quite serious. The dream of Australians for a hundred years has been destroyed this morning. A dream that would have made this area become one of the biggest agriculture producing areas in the world. Destroyed.


“All this has been at the hands of a bunch of pygmies coming out of Townsville Enterprise. The bloke that got the $50 million, from me, refused to speak to me. A dropkick out of a Sydney bank who had been thrown out of the labor party for his dark views and landed on the front page of the Townsville Bulletin for embezzlement. And this is the bloke the Prime Minister of Australia listened to. Not the great Bradfield, not Sir Leo Hielscher, not the Deputy Prime Minister of Australia.


“It is a very sad day for all Australians. But I promise you this; you haven’t seen the last of me on this. We will have our say.


“I have a reputation for brutality and let me tell you, I’ve earnt it.”



-ENDS-


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By Kahla Kruger February 4, 2026
KENNEDY MP Bob Katter MP led a scathing attack on the Albanese Government’s handling of the Excise Tariff Amendment (Draught Beer) Bill 2025 in Parliament, calling it un-Australian and warning that it was clear Labor was drunk on power moving legislation that threatens the heart of Aussie culture – having a beer at the local pub. “The original Labor Party was born in the pubs of Australia. These fellas in those days would quite literally drag you out of a pub and punch you in the face if you didn’t take a union ticket out – yet here we are, debating a law that taxes beer. I cannot think of a better example of just how dangerous and drunk on power the Labor party have become. They are now threatening the very fabric of our social and community life,” Mr Katter said. The Bill before Parliament seeks to freeze the automatic inflation-linked increase on draught beer excise for a two-year period from 1 August 2025 to 1 August 2027 but Mr Katter wants the increase scrapped indefinitely. Mr Katter seconded his crossbench colleague, Barnaby Joyce’s, second reading amendment of removing the annual increase to keep alive an Australia tradition. “Australia's identity very much comes out of the bush pub, and you are eroding the identity of Australians if you take that away. You are also eroding our ability to talk to each other,” Mr Katter said. Mr Katter, who is infamous for talking with patrons of pubs all over Australia, said one of the most important places to learn about the state of politics and the state of the nation was by talking to people having a beer. “As a member of parliament, I like to find out what people are thinking and what their attitude is towards the government's policies and the best way to do that is to go down to the local hotel. “I’ve been shown an interesting graph which shows suicides amongst males in Australia – parallels the graph of the decline of the hotels and people going into the pubs. “I know that, if I myself am really down, I just go down to the pub, have a lot of good fun with my mates and go home a lot happier and more relaxed than before. But, for people who are more traumatised by reality than, probably, I am, it really is a matter of life and death in many cases, and that's not an exaggeration. “There's a little town called Maxwelton, and I love pulling up there because of all the cockies in the area and all the contractors and various other people that are employed in the cattle and sheep industry. You find out what's going on. You could have a good time at the Maxwelton pub. Well, it doesn't exist anymore, because of the impositions that government placed upon it.” Mr Katter warned that while a freeze may superficially lower the pressure on draught beer prices, many in the hospitality and brewing sectors argue that a broader reform is needed to sustain small venues and local producers. “Beer is tradition, it is community, and it is part of our social fabric. A two-year freeze on indexation isn’t enough when pubs are struggling under rising costs, regulatory burdens and declining patrons,” Mr Katter added. “In the end, it’s about more than beer. It’s about protecting our way of life, our towns, and the simple Aussie traditions that bind us together,” Mr Katter concluded. ENDS