Rudd says he is able to work intently with incoming Trump administration
Australia’s ambassador to the US, Kevin Rudd, says Australia is “prepared” for a second Trump presidency.
Rudd gave a speech to the Sydney Worldwide Technique Discussion board this morning by way of video hyperlink, and mentioned the embassy had been working over the course of the final yr to “be certain that we have been effectively ready for this second” – that means the US election final result.
And the underside line is, we’re prepared. The group right here on the embassy and the federal government of Australia are able to work intently with the brand new Trump administration to proceed to grasp the advantages of what’s a really sturdy financial and safety partnership.
Rudd mentioned that Australia’s bilateral relationship with the US “has by no means been extra related, or extra vital”, on this “age of strategic competitors”.
We stay in a world of many challenges and we’re clear that the area we would like, the pursuits we’ve and the values we share require and name for our two nations to work collectively. And that’s what we’ll proceed to do with President Trump and his incoming administration.
We right here on the embassy in Washington sit up for contributing to that sooner or later.
Rudd made headlines this month after deleting tweets he beforehand made about Trump, saying it didn’t mirror the views of the Australian authorities. Shortly afterwards, a senior Trump adviser reposted Rudd’s congratulatory assertion to Trump on social media with a gif of an hourglass.
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Up to date at 19.46 EST
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Peter Hannam
Financial system generated 1000 jobs a day since authorities took over, Chalmers says
Treasurer Jim Chalmers is giving his second ministerial assertion on the financial system from midday, and it provides a “stocktake” on international and home circumstances – and a little bit of sneak peek at subsequent month’s Mid-Yr Financial and Fiscal Outlook (Myefo).
As you may anticipate, it’s a usually upbeat speech, itemizing “important progress” in combating inflation, repairing the funds (and some reforms) whereas Chalmers stays “optimistic” in regards to the future.
There’s not plenty of arduous new numbers, although, it could be the primary outing I’ve seen of a “1000 jobs a day” created for the reason that Albanese authorities took energy 30 months in the past. (We’ve recognized in regards to the million jobs…although they could downplay that bit as a result of we would but get just a few months of job cuts earlier than they go to the polls.)
Anyway, the inflation outlook might be largely consistent with the Might funds forecasts (with headline CPI falling to 2.75% by subsequent June, and remaining there for the next June, earlier than ebbing additional in subsequent years to 2.5%).
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Josh Butler
Canavan continued, from the earlier put up:
I’ve this quite simple, shared with Senator Antic, quite simple place on these points, that any human being, it doesn’t matter what their age, it doesn’t matter what their state of well being on this nation, deserves to have care. That’s all my invoice does.
Doesn’t change abortion process. Doesn’t prohibit abortion procedures. It merely says that everyone, each Australian, deserves to have medical care applicable to their circumstances. I’ll at all times defend that.
Requested if Dutton had requested them to take away the invoice, Canavan mentioned: “Nobody has performed that.”
We’ve bought an important custom in our occasion of respecting one another’s views. I do respect different views on this, however I’d by no means search to take away a Greens invoice that took an reverse place than me on these points. I’ve no downside debating my place however clearly the Greens are fearful of a dialogue.
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Up to date at 20.10 EST
Canavan nonetheless combating for abortion invoice
Josh Butler
The Nationals senator Matt Canavan says he gained’t again down after the Greens sought to take away his abortion-related invoice from the Senate discover paper, accusing the minor occasion of searching for to “silence debate”.
Canavan, the maverick Queenslander, mentioned the opposition chief, Peter Dutton, has additionally not requested him or fellow co-sponsor, Alex Antic, to take away their “youngsters born alive” invoice from the Senate.
Guardian Australia’s Karen Middleton reported in a single day that the Greens senator Larissa Waters was searching for to have the Human Rights (Kids Born Alive Safety) Invoice discharged from the discover paper, the place it has sat – with out debate – for a while.
Dutton advised Coalition MPs in a celebration room handle two weeks in the past that they need to keep away from public debate about abortion, with concern the problem could have value them seats on the Queensland state election.
Requested about Waters’ push and the standing of his invoice, Canavan mentioned: “The standing of it’s it’s on the discover paper.”
That is an try to censor and silence debate … however clearly I do really welcome the chance that Senator Waters has given me to state once more that there are round two infants every week on this nation born alive following a termination process.
Canavan was at a press convention with Antic and the American free speech campaigner Michael Shellenberger, discussing the federal government’s misinformation invoice – which is in peril of happening in flames, with little help on the Senate crossbench up to now.
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Up to date at 20.20 EST
Josh Butler
Coalition invoice on McPhillamys goldmine rejected by Senate
The Coalition is furious that its invoice on the McPhillamys goldmine was rejected by the Senate this morning, with Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Value accusing the Labor authorities of searching for “to maintain Indigenous Australians deprived to be able to higher management them”.
Now to recap, that is the proposed goldmine at Blayney, in central west NSW, which was put in jeopardy after a call by the setting minister, Tanya Plibersek, to stop a tailings or run-off dam being inbuilt one a part of the venture. It got here after a Wiradjuri elder lodged an software to guard Aboriginal heritage from being destroyed.
The Coalition has been frequently outraged over the choice, citing a mix of native financial advantages and criticism of how the environmental session course of was carried out, together with considerations raised by different native native Aboriginal land council teams.
The Coalition had put up a Senate invoice which sought to stop “the minister from making a declaration that will have an effect on the development or operation of a goldmine within the Blayney goldmine space.” Nevertheless it was quashed on the second studying stage of debate, negatived 24-27 in a Senate vote as we speak.
Shadow ministers Jonno Duniam, Susan McDonald and Value gave a press convention shortly afterward, once more criticising the unique resolution and the way Plibersek got here to it. McDonald claimed the federal government wasn’t doing sufficient to help mining, however Value – the shadow Indigenous Australians minister – raised considerations in regards to the lack of earnings for native Aboriginal individuals.
She mentioned:
They’re not doing something to profit Indigenous individuals on this nation, and so on this state of affairs, it’s entire communities which might be lacking out. This authorities is totally in opposition to guaranteeing that Indigenous Australians can profit in any financial approach going ahead. However that’s not shocking to Labor, as a result of Labor prefer to preserve Indigenous Australians deprived to be able to higher management them, to be able to achieve energy and preserve the little individuals down.
I imply, why would they? Why would they permit for a improvement like this to happen, which might imply alternative, which might imply jobs for the Indigenous group within the space, and extra broadly, the broader group.
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Up to date at 20.16 EST
Paul Karp
Authorities’s spending and donation cap invoice receives second studying
The federal government’s controversial spending and donation cap invoice has simply acquired a second studying within the Home of Representatives.
The impartial MP Kate Chaney is shifting amendments that take away provisions on spending caps and elevated public and administrative funding. Chaney says these are the “most offensive components” of the invoice.
She says:
The best way this laws is drafted, any advertisements that aren’t for the person however for a celebration should not counted inside the [$800K] divisional cap, so a celebration incumbent might outspend a challenger many instances over … This isn’t a degree enjoying subject.
Chaney argues that in a “cost-of-living disaster” the federal government shouldn’t be rising public funding of elections by $40m:
Events are in a position to make a revenue in unwinnable seats and shift that cash to the place they’re being challenged … It provides them a warfare chest to combat any new challengers. It’s high-quality for me – I’m an incumbent. Nevertheless it’s not high-quality for anybody new, who thinks we want new concepts and new methods of being represented in our politics. This reduces competitors, and it’s not on.
The impartial MP Kylea Tink is now talking in help of the amendments.
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Up to date at 20.12 EST
Peter Hannam
‘Wave of warmth’ to raise fireplace dangers and electrical energy demand, meteorologists say
We’re not formally in summer time for an additional week and a half however for a lot of in Australia’s south-east, it is going to actually really feel prefer it within the coming days.
Dean Narramore, a senior forecaster on the Bureau of Meteorology, says day- and night-time temperatures might be as a lot as 8-14C hotter than ordinary for this time of yr:
We’re going to see the warmth actually begin rising throughout South Australia tomorrow, after which proceed constructing there and into Tasmania, Victoria and southern New South Wales Friday and thru the weekend.
Some areas will endure a low-intensity heatwave though pockets may also anticipate extreme circumstances.
As talked about in our earlier put up, the tail finish of the heat – what the Weatherzone senior meteorologist Ben Domensino dubbed a “wave of warmth” – may also push up electrical energy demand.
Domensino mentioned:
It’s most likely the warmest burst of warmth that we’ve had [so far this warming season], as a result of the dew-point temperatures might be rising as effectively. There’s a little bit of moisture within the ambiance, which is able to make it really feel fairly muggy with this scorching climate. It’ll really feel fairly heat.
Air-conditioning demand will seemingly be excessive. Comparatively mild winds may also imply there most likely gained’t be plenty of windfarm electrical energy era, Domensino mentioned. The dearth of wind, although, may also imply fireplace hazard ranges – other than the Eyre Peninsula and another components of South Australia – gained’t be fairly as elevated as they may in any other case have been.
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Up to date at 20.08 EST
Paul Karp
Chalmers outlines plan to encourage extra girls to review economics
Final night time the treasurer, Jim Chalmers, addressed the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia, revealing a plan to encourage extra girls to review economics and take up financial management roles.
Chalmers mentioned he has placed on the agenda for the subsequent assembly of state and territory treasurers subsequent week:
Exploring methods we will work collectively to elevate limitations to the examine of economics.
The function treasuries can play, as stewards of the self-discipline, in making the career extra inclusive.
How we will convey a broader vary of views and views into future public coverage and recommendation.
How we enhance the variety of girls in financial management positions in any respect ranges of presidency, together with by exploring extra strong and common reporting.
Chalmers additionally mentioned among the causes of alienation in politics:
However underpinning, if not undermining, all of our efforts throughout all of those coverage areas is the sense laid naked within the closing report of the Covid evaluate that there was an erosion of belief in establishments, like governments. As Mark Butler mentioned after we launched that Covid report, it’ll be a protracted, arduous street to get belief to the extent it was earlier than the pandemic. It’s simply misplaced and arduous to construct it again up …
The lack of belief is not only from Covid, although, that’s simply one in every of three shocks in 15 years – The GFC earlier than it and an inflation spike exacerbated by two wars – Which have created financial and social undercurrents that exposed themselves all over the world over this longer interval, and never simply current weeks in US politics. These undercurrents have created a way of alienation.
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Up to date at 19.48 EST
Earlier this morning, some parliamentarians in Canberra attended the lighting of the giving tree within the marble lobby of Parliament Home.
Every year, Parliament Home raises cash for 2 charities by way of the giving tree. The president of the Senate, Sue Strains, and the speaker, Milton Dick, switched on the lights and introduced the 2024 charities simply earlier.
And Mike Bowers was there to seize all of the motion:
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Up to date at 19.55 EST
Peter Hannam
Main financial indicator experiences strongest end result since July 2022
We’ve famous in a few locations (akin to right here) that the worst of the financial slowdown might be behind us (until there’s some nasty shock looming).
The stable labour market, tax cuts which might be flowing and easing inflation counsel issues are beginning to search for. (Company failures, a lagging indicator, may need a option to rise additional, although.)
The Main Index printed by Westpac and the Melbourne Institute provides to the indicators of a doable upturn gaining momentum. The index moved firmly into constructive territory final month (going from -0.2% in September to +0.26%), and is now at its highest degree since July 2022’s 0.63% studying.
Again in mid-2022, the burst of financial exercise after Covid-19 was absolutely underneath approach, Ryan Wells, a Westpac economist, mentioned.
The index’s return to constructive territory was “broadly in keeping with Westpac’s view that the tempo of [annual] financial development, having hit a nadir of 1.0% in the midst of the yr, is about to select up tempo, reaching 1.5% by year-end and a pair of.4% by the top of 2025”, Wells mentioned.
Not fairly financial nirvana, thoughts, however one thing of a gentle touchdown notably if the Reserve Financial institution begins to chop rates of interest from early 2025 (as Westpac predicts for February). After all, if the main index retains rising, the RBA may suppose it’s too early to chop.
Anyway, all of it retains just a few pundits in enterprise.
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Up to date at 20.02 EST
Paul Karp
90% of commercial gasoline use could be electrified or regassed with inexperienced hydrogen: report
Earlier as we speak, the Australian Manufacturing Employees Union and Lock the Gate launched a report commissioned from Springmount Advisory referred to as Turning Down the Gasoline, which discovered that no less than 90% of commercial gasoline use can already be electrified or regassed with inexperienced hydrogen, and know-how options are quickly being developed for the remaining 10%.
It discovered gasoline demand might lower 216 petajoules by 2035, together with by:
Changing gasoline use in manufacturing with electrical energy utilizing know-how that’s commercially accessible as we speak would cut back demand by 112PJ.
Doing the identical in industrial buildings would cut back gasoline demand by 25PJ.
“Regassing” and substituting metals smelting and refining, iron and metal manufacturing, and chemical manufacturing with inexperienced hydrogen would reduce gasoline use by 62PJ.
If gasoline use have been decreased by this a lot, wholesale gasoline bills could be decreased by no less than $2.5bn, and chopping greenhouse gasoline emissions by greater than 11m tonnes annually.
The nationwide secretary of the AMWU, Steve Murphy, mentioned:
Australia should prioritise our finite and valuable gasoline sources to help the industries that make use of a whole lot of 1000’s of extremely expert employees and that underpin each side of Australian life, from meals manufacturing and well being, to infrastructure and family items.
There’s a clear nationwide curiosity in guaranteeing that native manufacturing industries are supported and thrive because the world decarbonises. We commissioned this report as a result of it’s clear to us that the pursuits of gasoline firms are chopping throughout the pursuits of Australian employees, Australian trade, our rightful place because the chief in our area for a good and simply industrial transition.
I’m a agency believer that we will meet our commitments to local weather motion and create safe jobs in manufacturing if we make these two targets a nationwide precedence.
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Up to date at 19.28 EST
Sarah Basford Canales
Authorities senator says movement in Senate was about creating battle
Again within the Senate, the emergency administration minister, Jenny McAllister, mentioned she was disenchanted crossbenchers selected to create battle over dialogue after being caught off-guard by a shock suspension to the standing orders this morning.
These on the crossbench are pissed off with the quantity of laws the Labor authorities is making an attempt to push by way of the Senate this sitting fortnight. Specifically, they’re involved the drafting workplace – which helps them with amendments – is overloaded and under-resourced.
McAllister stood as much as say the federal government wouldn’t help the movement, saying it was not the suitable place to boost it. She mentioned:
The suitable place to boost that is both by way of discussions, informally, or by way of referral to the appropriations committee, which is the entity which oversees the funds for the Senate.
And it’s disappointing that the matter is as an alternative being raised on this approach, with out discover, with out dialogue, and means that the people who find themselves searching for to resolve it should not, actually, searching for to really resolve it, however really to escalate a battle, the place a greater and efficient approach of doing it will be by way of dialog.
As McAllister delivered her response, Jacqui Lambie could be heard on the parliamentary broadcast interjecting off-microphone.
In the end, the movement handed however until the federal government really allocates additional resourcing, that’s the place it ends for now. However not earlier than Lambie will get the final phrase:
So for the final two years, we’ve been telling you this can be a downside. So to return in right here and act like all the things’s all kosher and it’s high-quality and that we haven’t been doing something for 2 years – now, I intend to return again in right here tomorrow and do that once more tomorrow morning, until one thing is completed as we speak.
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Up to date at 19.18 EST
Rudd says he is able to work intently with incoming Trump administration
Australia’s ambassador to the US, Kevin Rudd, says Australia is “prepared” for a second Trump presidency.
Rudd gave a speech to the Sydney Worldwide Technique Discussion board this morning by way of video hyperlink, and mentioned the embassy had been working over the course of the final yr to “be certain that we have been effectively ready for this second” – that means the US election final result.
And the underside line is, we’re prepared. The group right here on the embassy and the federal government of Australia are able to work intently with the brand new Trump administration to proceed to grasp the advantages of what’s a really sturdy financial and safety partnership.
Rudd mentioned that Australia’s bilateral relationship with the US “has by no means been extra related, or extra vital”, on this “age of strategic competitors”.
We stay in a world of many challenges and we’re clear that the area we would like, the pursuits we’ve and the values we share require and name for our two nations to work collectively. And that’s what we’ll proceed to do with President Trump and his incoming administration.
We right here on the embassy in Washington sit up for contributing to that sooner or later.
Rudd made headlines this month after deleting tweets he beforehand made about Trump, saying it didn’t mirror the views of the Australian authorities. Shortly afterwards, a senior Trump adviser reposted Rudd’s congratulatory assertion to Trump on social media with a gif of an hourglass.
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Up to date at 19.46 EST
Crossbenchers demand extra resourcing to sort out finish of yr workload
Sarah Basford Canales
Again within the Senate, and Greens senator Larissa Waters has accused the Albanese authorities of making an attempt to curb the facility of the crossbench within the Senate by “diminishing” their resourcing.
A few of the independents banded collectively to droop the standing orders to boost the useful resource concern inside the drafting workplace, with senators warning the workplace couldn’t address the workload.
For non-government senators, the workplace helps draft its amendments to payments. Waters mentioned:
When the drafters say to us, ‘look, we’re actually sorry, however we’re slammed. There’s not sufficient of us to do the work that you just want us to do, as a result of the federal government haven’t [sic] given us the employees to do this work’. It’s not their fault. It’s the fault of the federal government not hiring sufficient individuals to do the work to assist the Greens and the crossbench repair the federal government’s weak laws.
The ACT senator David Pocock added:
Whenever you can’t get amendments which might be based mostly on what you’re listening to from specialists – once they have considerations a few authorities invoice, while you’re listening to from individuals that you just characterize and also you need to transfer amendments that mirror that, and also you’ve bought a authorities that appears intent to drop a whole lot of pages of laws, forgo all parliamentary scrutiny and ram it by way of, and you can’t transfer amendments – this isn’t good for our democracy.
The Liberals supported the suspension, so Lambie was in a position to transfer the movement.
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Up to date at 19.31 EST
Greater than 100 Sydney prepare providers cancelled or delayed yesterday amid industrial motion
Again on the press convention on Sydney Trains, a spokesperson mentioned greater than 100 prepare providers have been cancelled or delayed throughout Sydney yesterday.
I do know that created and continues to create inconvenience for passengers as they transfer across the community. Please be assured that our groups are doing their perfect to maintain the system operating reliably.
He mentioned there have been cancellations on the intercity line, notably providers coming in from Gosford and Newcastle, and buses have been changing the Blue Mountain providers for 3 hours as we speak on account of industrial motion.
Our groups are doing their finest and we ask passengers to please be respectful of our employees, they’re doing all the things they’ll to assist passengers navigate the difficult interval.
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Up to date at 19.00 EST
‘We will not get our job performed’: crossbenchers name for extra Senate employees
Sarah Basford Canales
Crossbench senators try to droop the standing orders within the higher home to be able to power the Albanese authorities to higher useful resource the process workplace, which helps parliamentarians with drafting laws and amendments.
The movement, moved by Jacqui Lambie and co-signed by David Pocock, Lidia Thorpe, Fatima Payman and Larissa Waters, calls on the federal government to urgently rent extra legislative drafters within the Division of the Senate earlier than any “additional controversial payments” are introduced ahead.
First as much as communicate is Lambie, who describes the under-resourcing as “completely disgraceful”.
We will’t get our stuff drafted, and also you’re making an attempt to throw by way of 20 payments in a fortnight? What’s unsuitable with you? … The dearth of resourcing is an absolute choke on democracy. The laws that the federal government is making an attempt to jam by way of is huge and has severe penalties.
Different impartial senators are getting as much as communicate.
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Up to date at 19.08 EST
NSW transport minister addresses media amid strike affecting Sydney trains
The NSW transport minister, Jo Haylen, has been chatting with reporters in Sydney after the announcement that Sydney trains will run tomorrow, after a small concession from the rail union to delay strike motion till Friday.
You possibly can learn extra on this earlier within the weblog, right here. Talking simply now, Haylen mentioned:
The actions are nonetheless in place for Friday and Saturday, inflicting potential huge disruption to our community and that means that individuals can’t get the place they should go.
The one option to preserve our community operating and to ensure individuals can get the place they should go is for the union to withdraw their industrial actions which might be at present in place for Friday and Saturday. That continues to be our ask of the unions.
She mentioned the federal government would proceed to fulfill with union management, however her accountability is to “make it possible for we will preserve the travelling public up-to-date”.
… to offer them as a lot discover as doable and to do all the things I can to minimise disruptions and preserve our community operating, whereas additionally persevering with our negotiations and conversations with the unions to succeed in settlement.
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Up to date at 18.47 EST
Josh Taylor
Instagram customers will be capable of refresh algorithm, Meta says
Two days after a parliamentary committee really helpful that customers be capable of have extra management over their algorithm, Instagram has introduced it is going to roll out a approach for customers to reset their algorithm that recommends content material to them.
In a weblog put up as we speak, Instagram’s father or mother firm Meta mentioned the brand new characteristic might be rolled out within the coming weeks, and permit individuals, with just a few faucets, to reset what Instagram exhibits them in discover, reels and their feed:
Your suggestions will begin to personalise once more over time, exhibiting new content material based mostly on the content material and accounts you work together with. When resetting, you’ll even have the choice to evaluate the accounts you’re following and unfollow any that share content material you now not need to see.
Resetting the algorithm was one of many key suggestions of the parliamentary committee analyzing social media’s report, launched on Monday. Nonetheless, the advice went additional together with permitting customers to choose out of the algorithm altogether.
It’s one in every of a lot of strikes Meta has made in current months to answer elevated political scrutiny on the impression platforms are having on society, together with lately the introduction of Instagram accounts for teenagers with extra restrictions over who they’ll comply with, who can message them and what they’ll see.
The committee, notably, didn’t advocate banning under-16s from social media, which the federal government is planning to legislate, as an alternative calling for a report on the result of a trial of age assurance know-how to be offered to the parliament when it’s accomplished in mid-2025.
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Up to date at 18.44 EST