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  1. #426
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Deputy Nationals leader backs net zero

    Speers asks Hogan outright:

    ‘People are grateful and thankful that we’re standing up for these regional policies’

    Hogan says despite the criticisms of the National’s decision this week, the feedback from the communities they represent is overwhelmingly positive:

    I can tell you the feedback into my office from my community. I know a lot of my colleagues have said this, is very different from the commentary in the cities about what we’ve done this week. People are grateful and thankful that we’re standing up for these regional policies we have. They’re important to people’s daily lives.

    What is the Nationals position now on net zero?

    Hogan:

    The Nationals support net zero 2050.

    Hogan said that policy was settled seven years ago and “that’s not up for review or being changed.”



    Nationals deputy leader Kevin Hogan (right)


    The Guardian
    Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.

  2. #427
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    Australia begins clean-up after floods kill 5, damage 10,000 properties

    Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Saturday the clean-up had begun in the country's southeast after floods killed five people and inundated more than 10,000 properties.

    "We’re continuing to work closely across federal, state and local governments to make sure Australians get the support they need now and through recovery," Albanese said on social media platform X.

    Damage assessments were under way in New South Wales' hard-hit mid-north coast region after floods this week cut off towns, swept away livestock and destroyed homes, the state's emergency services agency said. It estimated that at least 10,000 properties may have been damaged.

    Conditions had improved since Friday in the affected areas of Australia's most populous state, the agency said.

    Even so, hundreds of flood-hit residents were still in evacuation centres, State Emergency Services commissioner Mike Wassing said at a media conference in Sydney, with 52 flood rescues being made overnight.

    The latest flood-linked death was that of a man in his 80s, whose body was found at a flooded property about 50 km (31 miles) from Taree, one of the worst-hit towns, police said.

    Albanese, forced on Friday to cancel a trip to Taree due to floodwaters, said it was "awful to hear the news of more loss of life". Taree sits along the Manning River more than 300 km (186 miles) north of Sydney.

    "All of our thoughts are with his loved ones and the community at this time," Albanese said in a statement.

    The floods, sparked by days of incessant rain, submerged intersections and street signs in mid-north coast towns and covered cars up to their windshields, after fast-rising waters burst river banks. At their peak, the floods isolated around 50,000 people.

    Australia has been hit with more extreme weather events that some experts say are the result of climate change. After droughts and devastating bushfires at the end of last decade, frequent floods have wreaked havoc since early 2021.

    reuters.com

  3. #428
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Son of Palestinian refugees projected to win Calwell for Labor








    Earlier we brought you news that electoral analysts Ben Raue and Antony Green have called the Melbourne seat of Calwell for Labor candidate Basem Abdo.

    Born in Kuwait to Palestinian parents – his father left a village in the occupied West Bank after the Six Day War in 1967 – Abdo’s family sought refuge in Jordan during the Gulf War before migrating to Australia in 1991.

    He has previously spoken of how his father was trained as an electrical engineer but couldnÂ’t find a job in that field in Australia.

    “I have always had that instilled in me – a deep appreciation for the dignity of work and the impact that social and economic displacement has on people. I think it can be tackled by governments,” Abdo said last year.

    “That’s a strong part of what has driven me within the movement,” he said of his position in Labor.

    The Guardian


    Labor has 94 seats and the Coalition 43.

    Plus 1 makes it 95 seats
    Last edited by S Landreth; 26-05-2025 at 12:12 PM.

  4. #429
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    Matt Kean says election was win for rational policy

    The chair of the Climate Change Authority, Matt Kean, has said the federal election was a “win for rational decision-making and rational policy” and the authority has been consulting on a potential 2035 emissions reduction target of between 65% and 75%.

    Kean, a former NSW Liberal energy minister, told a webinar organised by news website the Energy that “the Australian public clearly chose the rational path, which is also the cheapest path, and also the path that lets us decarbonise the economy”. He said:

    This election result was a win for rational decision-making and rational policy.

    And clearly there was a fork in the road when it came to the choices that Australians were presented with when it came to the energy transition and the transition of our broader economy.

    Under one path, one party was saying we’re going to delay the transition to net zero until 2048 when we might install some nuclear reactors.

    He said the election outcome was a “win for evidence, engineering and science” and “I think clearly the government has a mandate to get on with this energy transition”.

    The Guardian

  5. #430
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    PM sends army to help clean up after devastating NSW floods

    Seventy Australian defence force personnel will be deployed to the New South Wales mid-north coast to assist with the cleanup from the devastating floods.

    The troops will be on the ground from Tuesday alongside the veteran-led Disaster Relief Australia, helping to clear debris, reopen roads and conduct welfare checks on residents in the flood zone.

    Anthony Albanese announced the ADF deployments as the massive cleanup operation began for communities across the region.

    Unfortunately we are getting far too much experience in dealing with extreme weather events, the prime minister told a press conference inside the national situation room in Canberra.

    Science told us that there would be more frequent events and that they would be more intense, and that is what we are seeing playing out with a devastating impact on communities; most significantly, a devastating human impact, with five lives lost during this event, but also a significant environmental impact and of course a significant economic impact as well.

    The Guardian

  6. #431
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    Culture war cost us seats, senior Liberals tell Four Corners

    Current and former Liberal party MPs and senators have said the party’s focus on culture war has seen their inner-city constituencies abandon them and contributed to their election loss in what one called fairy floss politics.

    Speaking to ABC’s Four Corners on Monday night, former NSW Liberal president Jason Falinski, former senator George Brandis and NSW senator Maria Kovacic criticised their party’s focus on small, hard-right constituencies and culture wars.

    The party alienated women, especially those who wanted to work from home, offended public servants, multicultural communities, people in the inner cities, students and other minority groups as well, Brandis said:

    It was almost as if we were running out of new people to offend.

    People who felt the party needed to lean harder into the culture wars were “nuts”, Brandis said:

    The people you have to persuade are the people who didn’t vote for you last time but are open to persuasion. And those people live in the centre ground of Australian politics. And if you spend your time drinking your own political bathwater and only living in an echo chamber of far-rightwing opinion, you’re never going to get them.

    Falinski said that fairy floss politics – that is, high-calorie, low-nutrition politics such as copying Donald Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency, or Doge, concept – was not healthy for us.

    Kovacic said:

    I don’t think that everyday Australians are particularly interested in culture wars. People have abandoned us in the cities because our messaging doesn’t resonate with them, and they haven’t gone to the right. They voted for Labor and the teals because what we’re selling them isn’t aligned with them.

    The Guardian

  7. #432
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    Australia’s youngest-ever senator Charlotte Walker has a lot to learn but says she is ‘not naive’

    Walker unexpectedly took the sixth Senate spot for Labor in South Australia at the election on 3 May – her 21st birthday






    The median age of Australia’s federal parliamentarians is 50.

    On election night, as the scale of Labor’s victory was revealed, Charlotte Walker was blowing out the candles on her 21st birthday cake.

    On Tuesday, she was officially declared a Labor senator for South Australia and became the youngest senator ever elected.

    “I’m just taking it a day at a time,” she tells Guardian Australia as she prepares for Senate school in Canberra.

    On 3 May Walker worked on polling booths then spent the night in the seat of Boothby, where Labor’s Louise Miller-Frost held out against Liberal Nicolle Flint. Amid the other celebrations, a colleague sorted her out with cake.

    Walker says she loves her work for the Australian Services Union, and would be staying there if she wasn’t off to Canberra.

    Asked what makes her nervous about her parliamentary debut, she says she is “not naive”.

    “There’s a lot to learn,” she says, but the support from her union and Labor colleagues has been “amazing”.

    The Guardian

  8. #433
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    Labor approves extension of Woodside’s contentious North West Shelf gas development

    The environment minister, Murray Watt, has given the greenlight to Woodside Energy’s application to extend the life of one of the world’s biggest liquified natural gas projects from 2030 to 2070.

    Watt said he had told Woodside he planned to approve the life extension of the North West Shelf gas processing plant, on the Burrup Peninsula in northern Western Australia, with “strict conditions” relating to local air pollution. Woodside has 10 days to respond.

    The proposed approval has come despite some experts raising concerns about the impact of local pollution on a globally significant collection of rock art in the Murujuga cultural landscape, which includes the Burrup Peninsula. The area is home to more than 1m petroglyphs, some nearly 50,000 years old.

    Scientists and activists have said the life extension could be linked to up to 6bn tonnes of greenhouse gases being emitted in the decades ahead, mostly after the gas is shipped and burned overseas.

    The Guardian

  9. #434
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    Andrew Forrest’s mining company Fortescue says North West Shelf project approval ‘a step backwards’ on climate ambition

    The mining company Fortescue Metals – owned by the billionaire Andrew Forrest, who says he aims to meet “real zero” carbon emissions – has sharply criticised the Albanese government’s approval of a 40-year life extension for the North West Shelf gas processing facility.

    The company’s chief executive, Dino Otranto, said the idea that Australia could lock in fossil fuel projects until 2070 while still claiming progress toward net zero was “concerning”.

    If Australia is serious about tackling climate change we must move beyond net zero and commit to genuine emissions reduction.

    Extending high-emitting projects like the North West Shelf is not a credible long-term climate solution – it’s a step backward. More than that, it raises serious questions about how we define climate ambition in Australia.

    We need to ask ourselves why we are rewarding companies that continue to burn fossil fuels, instead of incentivising those that are leading the way on decarbonisation. Every year, Australia pours billions into fossil fuel subsidies – public funds that should be redirected toward eliminating emissions.

    The Guardian

  10. #435
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    Winter to be warmer than average across Australia, BoM says

    Winter will be warmer and in some places wetter than average this year, the Bureau of Meteorology says.

    “While winter is a time for cooler weather, the winter long-range forecast shows day and night temperatures are likely to be above average across Australia for this time of the year,” BoM said in its forecast.

    Rainfall is also expected to be above average for interior and central parts of the country, while parts of the tropical north, south-east and south-west will see rainfall in the typical range.

    This includes in parts of South Australia, Victoria and Tasmania that have been affected by prolonged dry conditions as well as parts of New South Wales recently impacted by severe flooding, BoM said.

    This winter forecast follows an autumn which was much wetter than average in the north and east of Australia, and much drier than average in many southern parts.

    There is also an “unseasonal increased risk of fire this winter” across parts of South Australia and Victoria.

    The Guardian

  11. #436
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    Australia is the best country in the world,’ PM Albanese hints at legacy

    Albanese also shared insights on upcoming infrastructure plans tied to the Brisbane 2032 Olympics.

    In a relaxed and rollicking interview on Brisbane’s Nova radio, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese mixed banter, music nostalgia and politics, declaring confidently, “Australia is the best country in the world.”

    Albanese made a rockstar-style entrance — timed perfectly with a Rihanna track — prompting the hosts to joke, “I’m not coming in until they play Rihanna,” to which the PM quipped, “Exactly.”

    The light-hearted conversation drifted into 90s music, Origin footy heartbreak, DJing days, and his love for the South Sydney Rabbitohs. He cheekily admitted he’d only made it to one game this year — the one where Souths pipped the Broncos with Latrell Mitchell’s heroics, to the despair of Queensland fans.

    “You’re doubling down on us,” laughed the hosts as Albanese recalled Latrell’s epic field goal and tackle on a “rampaging Payne Haas,” which left Broncos fans crushed.

    But the banter gave way to more serious reflections on political life. The PM noted that politics is “an honourable profession” but not for the faint-hearted, stressing the personal toll, public scrutiny, and resilience required.

    “You’ve got to be motivated by wanting to make a difference,” he said, recalling moments where government policies had tangibly helped Australians, from housing support to single parent payments.

    Albanese also shared insights on upcoming infrastructure plans tied to the Brisbane 2032 Olympics. He assured listeners that the government was committed to delivering value-for-money legacy projects, like a new arena and upgraded facilities, hinting at a mix of public and private investment.

    “It will happen,” he said confidently, adding that the Games would be a moment for Brisbane to shine — just like Sydney did in 2000.

    The PM wrapped with fond memories of cheering on weightlifters over beers during the Sydney Olympics:

    Everyone in the audience wants everyone to be successful.

    With cracking one-liners, classic rock throwbacks, and a dose of optimism, the Prime Minister’s Nova appearance served up Albanese at his most relatable — part fan, part leader, and all in for Australia.

    ‘Australia is the best country in the world,’ PM Albanese hints at legacy | The Australia Today

  12. #437
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    Federal budget deficit running better than expected, data shows

    The federal budget deficit is already running $4.8bn better than expected in the financial year to April, according to the Department of Finance’s latest monthly statements.

    To be clear: the nation’s finances are still in the red, just not as deeply as anticipated a couple of months ago.

    The March 25 budget forecast an underlying cash deficit of $24bn in the first 10 months of 2024-25.

    But the departmental figures show the actual deficit for the period came in at $19.2bn.

    The rapid improvement was powered by corporate taxes coming in $3.2bn better than anticipated, the statements show.

    High commodity prices may explain the larger than anticipated tax take on profits: the iron ore price is still sky high, trading at about $US96 a tonne, despite the global jitters caused by Trump’s tariffs.

    The March budget predicted last financial year’s surplus of $15.8bn would flip to a $27.6bn deficit in 2024-25 – the start of a string of deficits.

    “The budgetary bad news is arriving more slowly than Treasury and Finance forecast,” the independent economist, Chris Richardson, said.

    The Guardian

  13. #438
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    Australia’s emissions up slightly in 2024 as Labor faces heat over ‘climate-wrecking’ gas project

    Australia’s climate-heating emissions increased fractionally last year as pollution from fossil fuel power plants rose for the first time in a decade, and domestic air travel and use of diesel-powered cars and trucks hit record highs.

    The jump in emissions was small – just 0.05% – due to falls in pollution from other sectors. But the direction was at odds with the Albanese government’s pledge to cut pollution to reach targets for 2030 and 2050.

    The data was released on Friday, two days after the environment minister, Murray Watt, announced he planned to approve a 40-year life extension for one of Australia’s biggest fossil fuel developments – Woodside Energy’s North West Shelf liquified natural gas (LNG) processing facility in the Pilbara.

    Based on the Burrup peninsula, in Murujuga country, the North West Shelf is Australia’s third biggest industrial polluter, responsible for about 1.4% of the country’s annual climate pollution.

    The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, has rejected concerns about the facility’s emissions continuing for decades after 2050, saying the national goal was “net zero, not zero”, implying ongoing fossil fuel use could be justified by using a contentious carbon offset scheme. His comments echoed language used in 2021 by the Coalition’s then emissions reduction minister, Angus Taylor, when defending climate policies under Scott Morrison.

    Rising electricity use

    The quarterly greenhouse gas inventory said the increase in national emissions last year may be short-lived, with preliminary data suggesting they fell in the first quarter this year.

    Emissions last year were estimated to be 446.4m tonnes of carbon dioxide, 0.2m tonnes higher than in 2023. The increase is largely due to pollution from electricity generation rising by 2.2%, reversing a 10-year trend. Australians used more electricity overall, and there was less hydro power available than usual during winter. Solar use was up, but the extra demand was otherwise met by more coal and gas.

    Initial data for the March quarter suggest the long-term trend of pollution from electricity falling should restart this year. This has been backed by a separate report by the Australian Energy Market Operator.

    At the end of last year emissions from power generation was 23.7% lower than in 2005. Experts expect it to continue to fall as a government underwriting program announced in November 2023 supports an influx of new large-scale solar, wind and batteries.

    But emissions from transport continue to surge as Australians fly more and burn more diesel in bigger cars and trucks. Pollution from the transport sector was up 1.9% last year. It has skyrocketed 20.8% since 2005.

    Vehicle efficiency standards introduced last year require auto companies to reduce the average pollution from new cars each year, but they are expected to only gradually affect total transport emissions.

    ‘More to do’

    Government officials estimated national pollution was 27% below 2005 levels, largely due to a change in the amount of carbon dioxide that is absorbed by the land and forests. The Albanese government has a legislated target of a 43% cut by 2030 and has promised a 2035 target later this year.

    The climate change and energy minister, Chris Bowen, said Labor was on track to reach the 2030 target but there was “more to do” to get there.

  14. #439
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    ‘We’ll determine our defence policy’: Albanese responds to US push for huge rise in spending as it stokes China fears

    Anthony Albanese has responded to the United States’ calls for a huge rise in defence spending amid fears about China, while hitting back at Donald Trump’s move to double tariffs on steel and aluminium.

    On Saturday Pete Hegseth urged US allies in the region, including Australia, to “share the burden” and lift defence spending to 5% of GDP, warning that “Beijing is credibly preparing to potentially use military force to alter the balance of power in the Indo-Pacific”.

    “There’s no reason to sugar coat it,” he said. “The threat China poses is real, and it could be imminent.”

    Albanese said Australia had already committed to additional investment in defence and would “determine our defence policy”.

    “We’ll determine our defence policy, we’ve invested, just across [the next four years], an additional $10bn in defence,” the prime minister said on Sunday. “What we’ll do is continue to invest in our capability but also our relationships in the region.

    “Our position in regards to Taiwan is very clear, has been for a long time – a bipartisan position to support the status quo.”

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    Australia is on track to lift defence spending to 2.4% of GDP by 2033-34, up from the approximately 2% it is on now.

    The Pentagon undersecretary Elbridge Colby has previously told a US Senate hearing that the US wanted Australia to reach a 3% defence spending threshold.

    On Sunday, Australia’s defence minister, Richard Marles said the issue of defence spending was a conversation he was “totally up for”, noting Hegseth had raised it in talks.

    The head of China’s delegation at the conference dismissed Hegseth’s warnings as “groundless accusations” and “nothing more than attempts to provoke trouble, incite division and stir up confrontation to destabilise the Asia-Pacific region”, according to Associated Press.

    Marles noted that China had developed the single biggest increase in military capability by any country since WWII, and that it had occurred “without strategic reassurance” and “without a clear strategic intent”.

    The tussle comes as Donald Trump announced he would double steel and aluminium import tariffs worldwide from 25% to 50% from 4 June to “further secure” his country’s domestic industry.

    Albanese reiterated on Sunday that the president’s decision was an “an act of economic self-harm” and “inappropriate” for US consumers.

    The trade minister, Don Farrell, said Australia would “convince” the US to exempt Australia from the universal tariffs.

    “We’re going to coolly and calmly argue our case for the removal of these tariffs,” he said.

    The energy minister, Chris Bowen, told ABC’s Insiders on Sunday “all options” would be considered, including a World Trade Organization dispute, but the first step would be discussions with the US.

    Trump had said he would give “great consideration” to an exemption for Australia from steel and aluminium tariffs in February but ultimately decided against any exemptions.

    Albanese is expected to meet Trump in person for the first time since both leaders were re-elected on the sidelines of the G7 leaders’ summit in Canada this month.

    The shadow finance minister, James Paterson, said the US decision was “harmful” to its relationship with Australia and that the prime minister needed to “robustly defend” Australia’s interests.

    “[Albanese] should lay out the case to the president both why these tariffs are unwise and unjustified, generally, but particularly why they’re unjustified when it comes to Australia, a country with which the United States has a trade surplus,” he told Sky News on Sunday.

    Australia exports relatively little steel to the US. About 2.5% of US aluminium imports by volume come from Australia, but this is less than 10% of Australia’s total exports of the metal.

    The National party leader, David Littleproud, said Albanese should convince Trump of the seriousness of the decision and to return to “rules-based order of trade”.

    “We have a compelling case, to have a carve-out, even if you take away the insanity of these tariffs as a whole because of our relationship and the cheque we just dropped for submarines with the United States,” he told Weekend Today.

  15. #440
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    Queensland premier won’t walk away from net zero targets despite some Coalition hand-wringing

    Queensland premier David Crisafulli said he will not walk away from net zero targets and instead support a sustainable approach to support both the state’s agriculture industry and invest in renewable energy.

    Crisafulli spoke to the ABC this morning, as some in the Coalition are debating support for net zero, and addressed questions about how he could support the tourism industry – centred on the Great Barrier Reef – and gas exploration. The premier stressed his government would ensure there were “hard no-go areas” to protect the environment, but said he believes Queensland can do things “environmentally sustainably.” He told the ABC:

    We do believe there is a way we can do our energy transition in a calm and methodical way. … We are very, very ambitious about gas as a transition fuel and we are looking at storage options to make sure we bring renewable energy into the grid. That is part of an affordable energy mix.

    The Guardian

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    Albanese: ‘Climate change is real and we need to respond to it’







    The prime minister has said that while Australia has always had droughts and flooding rains, “the truth is that there are more extreme weather events, and they’re more intense now”. He went on:

    Science told us that that was the case. The science has been proven, unfortunately, to be playing out …

    The thing is that climate change is real and we need to respond to it. And we need, I think, to respond to it across the board. That’s why my government has a comprehensive plan to deal with climate change.

    The Guardian

  17. #442
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    Tanya Plibersek ‘delighted’ Dorinda Cox has defected to Labor

    Tanya Plibersek, the minister for social services, said she is “delighted” senator Dorinda Cox had defected from the Greens to Labor. Cox announced the shock move yesterday during an appearance alongside the prime minister, saying after some “deep reflection” she had determined “what it is that I would like to achieve in my political life and what you can’t do from the crossbench is make change”.




    Plibersek told Radio National Breakfast this morning:

    We’re delighted that she’s joining a very strong West Australian team …

    I’m very much looking forward to her joining what’s a very strong representation for Western Australia, and I’m looking forward to going there this afternoon for a cabinet meeting.

    The Guardian

  18. #443
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    PM says the Greens have ‘lost their way’ after Cox defection

    The Greens have been accused of “losing their way” after senator Dorinda Cox defected to Labor in the aftermath of the party’s tough election result, AAP reports.

    The prime minister said her values had become more aligned with those of his government, and noted the Greens had previously voted against Labor’s legislation to boost housing supply and had drifted from its environmental foundations to other issues.

    “We know that the Greens have lost their way,” Albanese told ABC radio earlier today, adding:

    I think having to sit in the Senate while the Greens blocked funding for public housing would grate against anyone who regards themselves as progressive.

    The Guardian

  19. #444
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    Anthony Albanese says he’s open to negotiating with Coalition on $3m super tax

    Anthony Albanese has indicated that he will work with the Coalition to pass Labor’s proposed tax to hit super balances over $3m with a 30 per cent tax.

    Speaking from Perth on Tuesday, the Prime Minister conceded that Labor doesn’t have “majority in the Senate” and said “we obviously work with different parties”.

    “If the signal from the Coalition is across the board – I’m not talking specifically here – that they will be more constructive and not just be part of a no-alition with the Greens Party, then that would be welcome,” he said.

    “I think people in the last term of parliament saw a Coalition that was just committed to blocking everything – housing investment, support for further investment in education,” he continued, adding that he hoped the Coalition will support Labor’s push to cut all HELP debts by 20 per cent.

    While Labor has continued to face questions over its plans to double earning tax on superannuation balances over $3m, the Greens have given the policy in-principle support.

    This would negate the need for Labor to seek bipartisan support in the Senate.

    However the minor party has argued for the threshold to be lowered to $2m, with indexation requirements that would result in the threshold increasing over time.

    Although the Coalition has indicated that it is open for negotiations, this is contingent on the inclusion of indexation provisions, and excluding the tax on unrealised gains, like property.

    https://www.news.com.au/national/pol...20e4fe53a7b316

  20. #445
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    More from Climate Change Authority chief Matt Kean yesterday

    In his speech at the Australian Museum, Matt Kean also briefly referred to the Climate Change Authority’s work advising the Albanese government on a 2035 emissions reduction target.

    The advice was delayed before last month’s federal election. The advice and a government announcement is now expected by September, before the Cop30 summit in Brazil in November.

    Kean said he wanted a target that was “ambitious, informed by the science, but also achievable”. He has previously said the authority was consulting with stakeholders on a target range – a 65% to 75% cut below 2005 levels.

    He said part of the authority’s work was to understand what Donald Trump’s attempts to dismantle the Biden administration’s decarbonisation funding would mean for Australia – whether it would hamper or help a rapid shift to cleaner practice.

    Some political or business leaders have suggested if a target appears beyond reach, we should throw in the towel.

    In fact, there are many ways we can do more, mostly by going with the electron flow. The pace of electrification will determine whether we succeed.

    He said giving households more help to take up solar and batteries was “not only good politics. It could pick up some of the slack if the larger grid overhaul takes longer than expected”.

    The Guardian

  21. #446
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    Liberals will vote against Labor’s super tax plan, O’Brien says

    The deputy Liberal leader and shadow treasurer, Ted O’Brien, has committed to voting against the government’s plan to trim superannuation tax breaks for very large balances.

    It leaves the Greens in the box seat to negotiate with Labor to get the bill through, in an early test of how the minor party will seek to make deals in this term of government.

    O’Brien told Sky News the opposition would “definitely, as a Coalition, oppose this unfair super tax of Labor’s every step of the way”. He called the tax changes “super big and super bad”.

    The changes, which Labor proposed way back in 2023, would today affect about 80,000 Australians with more than $3m in superannuation – adding an extra 15% to the earnings in their account over $3m.

    The Guardian

    What is Labor proposing to do with superannuation, and why is it controversial?

    Labor says the changes are fair and only affect a small number of Australians. The Coalition has strongly opposed the change, saying a failure to index the threshold means more people will be caught every year, as well as vehemently criticising the plan to tax “unrealised” gains which exist on paper in someone’s super account.

    O’Brien has now committed the Coalition to opposing the bill. He says it will catch people who are “asset rich but cash poor”, such as farmers who may have included their farms inside their superannuation account.

    The Greens now loom as Labor’s pathway to pass the bill, but the minor party says it would seek to reduce the threshold from $3m to $2m – therefore capturing more people initially – but also indexing the rate, to capture fewer lower-income earners over time.

    However, the Greens have also signalled their willingness for a more constructive approach in this parliament, after holding up several key Labor bills last term. Parliament returns in late July.

  22. #447
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Boele says Labor risks squashing business confidence on energy transition without firmer climate change stance

    Incoming independent MP Nicolette Boele says Labor should send clearer signals to investors about climate change and energy supply, warning business confidence on the transition to renewables is being held back.

    Boele was declared the winner in the Sydney seat of Bradfield this week, after a month of counting and recounting in her race against Liberal Gisele Kapterian.

    She is preparing to take her seat in parliament after securing a wafer-thin victory of 26 votes. The blue-ribbon Liberal seat was previously held by Paul Fletcher.

    A former management consultant and climate expert, Boele said Labor should consider implementing a price on carbon or other decisive policy settings to supercharge renewables investment.

    She made the comments in an interview for Guardian Australia’s Australian Politics podcast, released on Friday.

    “This Labor government, so far, is still walking both sides of the fence and it’s confusing as hell for the private sector in terms of investing their money. Do we continue to invest in coal and gas, and for how long, or do we double down on the renewables?

    “If we just had some certainty – some long, loud and legal signs from the government about a direction and pace of travel on climate – we could have literally tens, if not hundreds of billions of [dollars of] investment from superannuation, private wealth, flowing into those solutions in large scale wind, and solar, and storage and batteries, and energy efficiency, and all of those things,” she said.

    “But we haven’t had it, and that is where it’s not so much big or small government – it’s about just smart government.

    “Government has a role to be clearer with what its policy directions and settings are, and you’ll see just how amazing the business community can be … because as soon as they smell an opportunity to make some money, and do good and have fun, people want to go on board that bandwagon for sure.”

    Boele said the environment minister, Murray Watt, should face tougher scrutiny over his decision to approve Woodside’s expansion of the North West Shelf gas project to 2070, a development she called “a climate bomb”.

    “This is a party that I thought did understand the climate science. I’ve been watching the treasurer managing the economy in the last term, and [he’s] done, frankly, quite a formidable job in that,” she said.

    “This decision, for example, just makes no sense to me economically, scientifically. There’s got to be a political reason why it’s happened.”

    Anthony Albanese defended the North West Shelf decision on Friday, telling ABC radio in Melbourne that Watt had to assess the application based on strict interpretation of the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act.

    Bradfield was the last outstanding seat from the 3 May election, but the result could still be challenged by the Liberals in the court of disputed returns.

    Kapterian said in a statement she would carefully review the count, stopping short of congratulating Boele. Any candidate or elector from the seat can challenge the result within 40 days of the return of the election writ.

    But Boele said she was confident the result would withstand by possible legal challenge.

    “I had intrinsically felt that our democracy is one of the best in the world, that the electoral commission is not only independent, but very well run, and very thorough. And watching this process has given me that confidence.

    “Built into the system is the court of disputed returns and that is an important check and balance as well. So if the other side wants to challenge, that’s completely their prerogative.

    “It’s a tiny, tiny margin, but it’s a definitive one,” she said.

    Boele says Labor risks squashing business confidence on energy transition without firmer climate change stance | Renewable energy | The Guardian

  23. #448
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    Greens and independents to push Labor for tougher regulation of political lobbying

    The Greens and prominent crossbenchers will push Labor to toughen regulation of political lobbying, promising to use their balance of power to increase transparency and probity around vested interests with access in Canberra.

    Labor’s thumping election win has given the party a historic majority in the House of Representatives. Final results in the Senate and the defection of Western Australian senator Dorinda Cox from the Greens to Labor give the government 29 seats in the upper house, meaning it can pass legislation with the Greens’ 10 votes.

    The Greens leader, Larissa Waters, said strengthening the federal lobbyist register and improving rules on access to ministers and government department heads was “a missed opportunity” from the last parliament and would be a priority for her party in negotiations with Labor.

    Crossbenchers in both houses, including the Wentworth MP, Allegra Spender, and ACT senator David Pocock, supported the push, urging Labor to toughen the rules on the influence industry.

    “There’s very poor regulation of lobbyists and access to politicians by lobbyists and vested interests,” Waters said.

    “They still walk the halls essentially with the red carpet rolled out for them. They have an access level that ordinary Australians don’t have, so there’s unfinished business there with the regulation of lobbying, it’s really weak and effectively nonexistent.”

    A parliamentary inquiry report released last year showed the register of lobbyists administered by the attorney general’s department captured only a small slice of the paid influence industry operating around federal parliament.

    As only paid third-party lobbyists are required to register – and not in-house lobbyists employed by corporations – as much as 80% of the industry is not required to adhere to transparency rules.

    The New South Wales Independent Commission Against Corruption warned the inquiry that unregulated lobbying allows for private interests “to exert undue influence over official decision-making, while diminishing trust in government and increasing the risk of corruption”.

    In mid-2024, there were more than 2,050 sponsored passes for access to Parliament House, an unknown share of which were held by paid lobbyists. The report found there was no interaction between the lobbyist register and the pass approval system, despite access being a key tool for the industry.

    Spender, the teal independent, said Labor should use its powerful position to clean up the system.

    “As a member of parliament you’re elected to represent the people of your community, not special interests with special access,” she said.

    “We need much greater transparency of what lobbyists are doing so the public knows who is meeting MPs and why. We need to know which ministers and shadow ministers are meeting with lobbyists so we can see how they influence public policy.”

    Pocock warned unfettered access and transparency gaps around ministerial decision-making are having “a corrosive impact”.

    “We need a second-term Albanese government to step into the authority the Australian people have given them to do hard things that put people first,” he said.

    “It’s clear the major parties are captured by vested interests, whether it comes to standing up to big tech, pushing back on social harms like gambling or fossil fuel development.”

    Pocock pointed to Labor’s failure to crackdown on gambling advertising in the last term as an example of the influence of lobbyists, suggesting the government had listened to powerful sports boss Peter V’landys instead of the late Labor MP Peta Murphy. Murphy led a landmark inquiry into social harms from gambling.

    Pocock has draft legislation designed to improve the rules around lobbying and has pledged to push for reform. His bill would require lobbyists to give quarterly updates on their work, including detailing which MPs and senior advisers they have held talks with.

    Former ministers and senior officials would be banned from lobbying in their area of experience for three years, up from the current 18 months, and the National Anti-Corruption Commission would have powers to investigate alleged rule breaches.

  24. #449
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Hanson-Young says PM must press Trump on ‘shocking’ moment rubber bullet shot at Australian journalist

    Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young said Anthony Albanese must seek “an urgent explanation” from Donald Trump after journalist Lauren Tomasi was shot with a rubber bullet by police in Los Angeles.

    Hanson-Young, the Greens communications spokesperson, called the incident “simply shocking” and “completely unacceptable”. She said in a statement:

    The prime minister must seek an urgent explanation from the US administration. As Albanese is preparing for his first meeting with president Trump, the first thing he must tell the president is to stop shooting at our journalists.

    Albanese may get a chance to meet Trump later this month at the G7 conference in Canada, but a meeting has not yet been confirmed by the Australian government. Hanson-Young added:

    Freedom of the press is a fundamental pillar of a strong, functioning democracy.

    The Guardian





    9News releases a statement after correspondent hit by projectile in Los Angeles

    9News just released a statement saying Lauren Tomasi’s coverage served as a “stark reminder of the inherent dangers journalists can face”.

    While reporting from protests in Los Angeles, 9News reporter Lauren Tomasi was struck by a rubber bullet. Lauren and her camera operator are safe and will continue their essential work covering these events.

    This incident serves as a stark reminder of the inherent dangers journalists can face while reporting from the frontlines of protests, underscoring the importance of their role in providing vital information.

  25. #450
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    Albanese spoke with Nine journalist Lauren Tomasi, has raised rubber bullet shot with US administration

    The prime minister says he spoke with Nine correspondent Lauren Tomasi this morning and has since expressed concerns to the US government.

    She’s going OK. She’s pretty resilient, I’ve got to say. But that footage was horrific. That was the footage of an Australian journalist doing what journalists do at their very best. …

    We have already raised these issues with the US administration. We don’t find it acceptable that it occurred. And we think that the role of the media is particularly important.

    Albanese would not comment on his plans to raise the issue with US president Donald Trump at next week’s G7 meeting, saying such discussions were between “himself and the president”.

    That’s the way that I deal with people, diplomatically, appropriately and with respect. So I’ll leave the discussions with the president until they occur, rather than foreshadow them.

    He went on to say there was “no ambiguity” that Tomasi was identified as a reporter.

    There was no ambiguity. She wasn’t wearing a trackie. She was wearing a helmet and something that identified her as media.

    The Guardian

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