
Palestine, AUKUS set for debate at Labor love-in
Party leaders, members and union officials will gather for the Victorian Labor state conference on Saturday and Sunday in Melbourne, with MPs to rub shoulders with the rank and file.
A raft of grassroots resolutions will be put up for debate and voted on across the two days, although the motions are not binding on the state or federal Labor governments.
These include one calling for immediate action against the "military occupation, siege and genocide" in Palestine.
A similar resolution passed at the state conference in 2024 after the terror attack on Israel by Hamas on October 7, 2023, and the nation's subsequent military campaign in Gaza.
Suggestions within the motion, which is subject to change, include comprehensive sanctions on members of Israel's Netanyahu government and legislating improved military trade transparency and tracking laws.
Labor's official platform backs Palestinian statehood but Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has refused to set a timeline for the policy's implementation, recently declaring it was not imminent.
More draft motions seen by AAP relate to the AUKUS nuclear submarines pact, US President Donald Trump, a public housing towers redevelopment plan and the right to peaceful assembly.
A rally has been called outside the event by a coalition of groups opposing the "genocide in Gaza", forced administration of the embattled CFMEU and incoming state protest laws.
Security has been tightened for the event after pro-Palestine protesters stormed the venue in 2024.
The major security breach led to the conference floor being locked down and delayed speeches by Mr Albanese and Premier Jacinta Allan, who has warned people not to bring their "extremist behaviour" to the 2025 conference.
"If they want to join the Labor party and be part of the debate and discussion inside the room, that's how you make a difference," Ms Allan said.
A Victoria Police spokesperson said the force was prepared for protest action and ready to respond if needed.
The conference falls on the same weekend as Garma Festival in the Northern Territory's remote northeast Arnhem Land.
Mr Albanese is expected to attend the four-day festival, with another senior leader to give the federal address to the state Labor faithful in his place.
With issues mounting after a decade in power, the Victorian Labor brand was viewed as a drag on the Albanese government's hopes for re-election in the lead-up to the May 3 poll.
Labor ultimately retained all of its Victorian seats and added MPs for Deakin, Menzies and Melbourne to its ballooning lower-house benches in Canberra.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sydney Morning Herald
12 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Welcome to Country culture wars a ‘dry gully', PM tells Garma Festival
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has called the culture war over Welcome to Country ceremonies a 'dry gully' in a speech at the Garma Festival. Native Title holders will receive $75 million and mobile TAFE programs $35 million, Albanese announced on Gumatj country at Gulkula in the Northern Territory on Saturday. Albanese said the government must repay and build trust with Indigenous Australians, criticising 'those who choose the cheap politics of division over the patient work of lasting change, or who seek to turn the grace and generosity of a Welcome to Country into a political weapon'. 'Culture wars are a dry gully. They offer us nothing, they lead us nowhere. The way forward is to invest in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, trust in their aspirations and draw from their knowledge. Because when we lay these strong foundations together, there is no limit to what we can build,' he said. The latest update to Closing the Gap data, published this week, showed Australia had moved backwards on four of the 15 assessed targets. A further six metrics were improving but not on track to meet targets. One of the most alarming movements was a rise in suicide rates, with self-harm reported as the most frequent cause of death for Indigenous people aged 15 to 39. Rates were increasing for those aged 25 to 39. Fewer children were assessed as being developmentally on track, and more adults were incarcerated. The only on-track targets were in early childhood education, land and water rights, and economic participation. Minister for Indigenous Australia Malarndirri McCarthy said she was pleased the majority of targets were seeing some improvement, but found it 'very concerning' to see worsening rates of incarceration, children in out-of-home care and suicide. 'It's important that state and territory governments all back in their commitments under the National Agreement with actions that will help improve outcomes for First Nations people,' she said.

The Age
12 minutes ago
- The Age
Welcome to Country culture wars a ‘dry gully', PM tells Garma Festival
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has called the culture war over Welcome to Country ceremonies a 'dry gully' in a speech at the Garma Festival. Native Title holders will receive $75 million and mobile TAFE programs $35 million, Albanese announced on Gumatj country at Gulkula in the Northern Territory on Saturday. Albanese said the government must repay and build trust with Indigenous Australians, criticising 'those who choose the cheap politics of division over the patient work of lasting change, or who seek to turn the grace and generosity of a Welcome to Country into a political weapon'. 'Culture wars are a dry gully. They offer us nothing, they lead us nowhere. The way forward is to invest in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, trust in their aspirations and draw from their knowledge. Because when we lay these strong foundations together, there is no limit to what we can build,' he said. The latest update to Closing the Gap data, published this week, showed Australia had moved backwards on four of the 15 assessed targets. A further six metrics were improving but not on track to meet targets. One of the most alarming movements was a rise in suicide rates, with self-harm reported as the most frequent cause of death for Indigenous people aged 15 to 39. Rates were increasing for those aged 25 to 39. Fewer children were assessed as being developmentally on track, and more adults were incarcerated. The only on-track targets were in early childhood education, land and water rights, and economic participation. Minister for Indigenous Australia Malarndirri McCarthy said she was pleased the majority of targets were seeing some improvement, but found it 'very concerning' to see worsening rates of incarceration, children in out-of-home care and suicide. 'It's important that state and territory governments all back in their commitments under the National Agreement with actions that will help improve outcomes for First Nations people,' she said.

Sky News AU
42 minutes ago
- Sky News AU
Donald Trump growing ‘disillusioned' by Russia-Ukraine conflict
Former Labor adviser Bruce Hawker says US President Donald Trump appears to be increasingly 'disillusioned' by the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine. US President Donald Trump says he has ordered two US nuclear submarines to be moved following comments by a former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev. 'This was something he was going to deal with in the first 24 hours of his presidency,' Mr Hawker told Sky News Australia. 'We are getting well past the six-month mark now and nothing is happening there.'