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political reporter Jake Evans

Peter Dutton says Liberals will not attend government's national jobs summit

Jim Chalmers slams Peter Dutton for declining his invitation to the jobs summit.

The federal Liberals have rejected an invitation to attend a national jobs summit next month, labelling it a stunt.

The federal government is preparing to convene a summit for the first week of September that it hopes will be a keystone for its economic policy in the term ahead that will unify business, government and unions.

Government ministers had expressed hesitation over inviting the opposition, saying it would only be invited if it was prepared to be constructive.

On Tuesday Treasurer Jim Chalmers wrote to Opposition Leader Peter Dutton, extending an invitation for him or another Coalition MP to attend.

But Mr Dutton has rejected the invitation.

"It's a stunt with the unions," Mr Dutton said.

"We'll support all sorts of good policies from the government … but we're not going to support stunts.

"The fact that Jim Chalmers wrote to me and then within a couple of hours dropped it to The Australian newspaper demonstrates it is nothing more than a stunt."

The Treasurer said the Liberals were attempting to "trash" the collaborative efforts of those attending the summit.

"I think the whole country and certainly the Albanese government is trying to build consensus, and Peter Dutton is trying to wreck it," Mr Chalmers said.

"He is a less constructive version of Tony Abbott. He is a less inclusive version [of] Scott Morrison."

Nationals leader David Littleproud told Sky News he did want to attend the jobs summit, but had not been invited by the Treasurer.

Unions lay down reform agenda ahead of summit

Overnight, the peak union body outlined its goals for the upcoming jobs summit, with "full and secure" employment being its first priority.

The Australian Council of Trade Unions said despite unemployment being at a historic low, real wages were declining and insecure work was "rife".

The ACTU said the federal government should implement an excess-profits levy on companies "enjoying windfall profits as a result of current inflation", cancel planned tax cuts for high-income earners and regulate labour markets to ensure wages rose in line with productivity.

The unions have already flagged they want enterprise bargaining rules overhauled, something the government has indicated it will pursue despite resistance from business groups.

ACTU secretary Sally McManus said for workers to benefit, the government must do more than fiddle around the edges on workplace reforms.

"It requires new ways of thinking about how our system is managed, who benefits from it, and how to change it for the better," Ms McManus said.

Shadow Finance Minister Jane Hume said despite her party's refusal to attend, the jobs summit would be an important chance to set the policy agenda for the coming term of government.

"The jobs summit that's coming up will be a very important event in which a lot of these demands get aired," Senator Hume told Sky News.

"The real test, of course, will be when Labor starts ruling out some of these demands from their union masters.

"I think this is an important opportunity for the Australian public to hear really what it was they voted in."

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