LEADER OF THE OPPOSITION | SELENA UIBO MLA
STATEMENT FROM SHADOW MINISTER FOR TOURISM AND HOSPITLAITY - CLP BACKING TOURISM IN WORDS, NOT FUNDING
SHADOW MINISTER FOR TOURISM AND HOSPITLAITY | DHERAN YOUNG MLA
Wednesday, 5 November 2025
The CLP Government’s “High-Level Strategy Framework” for the tourism industry once again demonstrates their preference for style over substance.
The Minister for Tourism and Hospitality has delivered a document with repackaged aspirations instead of real long-term actions.
The tourism sector has delivered some clear messages to the Government about what they need, but the CLP has stopped listening and stopped investing.
In just 14 months, the CLP Government has slammed the brakes on our visitor economy:
- They have cut funding to the combined tourism, events and screen sector by a whopping 23 per cent;
- The screen industry alone has suffered a $1.5 million cut under the CLP compared to the previous financial year;
- Despite the tourism industry highlighting the importance of cultural tourism, they have ripped funding out of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Gallery in Alice Springs — a project that would have attracted 53,000 visitors and injected $64 million into the economy each year;
- They have scrapped the Darwin State Square Art Gallery and left it as an empty shell;
- They have scaled back tourism investments, including scrapping upgrades to the Central Arnhem Road and Alice Springs tourism infrastructure; and
- They have failed to keep routes flying into Central Australia year-round.
The CLP can rush out all the glossy “high-level strategy frameworks” they like — but their cuts to tourism tell a different story.
Under the former Territory Labor Government, action and industry growth were driven by a comprehensive and well-considered tourism industry strategy, a cruise tourism strategy, an Aboriginal tourism strategy, a long-term business events strategy, a drive tourism strategy, an aviation strategy and the Territory Aviation Scheme — all designed to strengthen visitation, connectivity, and investment.
Territory Labor backs the people who keep this industry running, with a record of delivering real projects, supporting operators and driving visitation across the Territory.
We acknowledge their contribution to the 2025 Visitor Economy Strategy and will continue to call for projects and investment that deliver them real results.