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Building delay warning on Brisbane Games

Building delay warning on Brisbane Games

Brisbane 2032 boss Andrew Liveris says he is concerned by soaring construction costs and building constraints as the organising committee sets out to deliver major infrastructure ahead of the Olympic Games.
The former Dow Chemical executive said the industry barriers including worker shortages needed to be solved by Queensland's new Liberal-National government to pave the way for the multibillion-dollar venues.

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AUKUS defence pact 'being reviewed' by US government
AUKUS defence pact 'being reviewed' by US government

Perth Now

time2 hours ago

  • Perth Now

AUKUS defence pact 'being reviewed' by US government

The US government is reportedly reviewing the AUKUS trilateral defence agreement between Australia, the UK and the US. The decision to conduct a review has been reported by multiple news outlets including Reuters, which cited US defence officials without giving further details. The review will reportedly examine whether the pact is in line with US President Donald Trump's 'America First' policy, according to the ABC which also cited a Pentagon source. AUKUS is a three-nation security alliance between Australia, the UK and the US agreed in 2021 under the prime ministership of ex-Liberal leader Scott Morrison. It was formed to counter China's strategic moves in the Pacific arena and was underpinned by an agreement between the US and the UK to provide Australia with access to nuclear-powered submarine technology, to eventually replace its aging Collins-class boats. The deal is worth hundreds of billions of dollars, although the first submarine is not expected to join the Australian fleet for years. Australia, which in February made the first of six $US500 million (about $800 million) payments to the US for the boats, is expected to initially buy between three and five off-the-shelf Virginia-class boats. At the time, US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said Mr Trump was supportive of the AUKUS deal. "The president is very aware, supportive of AUKUS," Mr Hegseth said after a meeting with Australian Defence Minister Richard Marles. "(He) recognises the importance of the defence industrial base." Mr Marles responded that the pair had discussed how the US and Australia could advance their longstanding diplomatic relationship in terms of national security, including AUKUS. Australia's military budget is expected to rise to 2.3 per cent of gross domestic product, or output, by 2034. The US regime has already called for Australia to increase that spending to around 3.5 per cent. Australia tore up its $90 billion diesel-powered submarine deal with France to sign on to AUKUS and is contracted to buy several off-the-shelf submarines costing about $US4 billion each, before making its own. The first Australian-made boats are not due to be operational until the 2040s.

AUKUS defence pact 'being reviewed' by US government
AUKUS defence pact 'being reviewed' by US government

West Australian

time2 hours ago

  • West Australian

AUKUS defence pact 'being reviewed' by US government

The US government is reportedly reviewing the AUKUS trilateral defence agreement between Australia, the UK and the US. The decision to conduct a review has been reported by multiple news outlets including Reuters, which cited US defence officials without giving further details. The review will reportedly examine whether the pact is in line with US President Donald Trump's 'America First' policy, according to the ABC which also cited a Pentagon source. AUKUS is a three-nation security alliance between Australia, the UK and the US agreed in 2021 under the prime ministership of ex-Liberal leader Scott Morrison. It was formed to counter China's strategic moves in the Pacific arena and was underpinned by an agreement between the US and the UK to provide Australia with access to nuclear-powered submarine technology, to eventually replace its aging Collins-class boats. The deal is worth hundreds of billions of dollars, although the first submarine is not expected to join the Australian fleet for years. Australia, which in February made the first of six $US500 million (about $800 million) payments to the US for the boats, is expected to initially buy between three and five off-the-shelf Virginia-class boats. At the time, US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said Mr Trump was supportive of the AUKUS deal. "The president is very aware, supportive of AUKUS," Mr Hegseth said after a meeting with Australian Defence Minister Richard Marles. "(He) recognises the importance of the defence industrial base." Mr Marles responded that the pair had discussed how the US and Australia could advance their longstanding diplomatic relationship in terms of national security, including AUKUS. Australia's military budget is expected to rise to 2.3 per cent of gross domestic product, or output, by 2034. The US regime has already called for Australia to increase that spending to around 3.5 per cent. Australia tore up its $90 billion diesel-powered submarine deal with France to sign on to AUKUS and is contracted to buy several off-the-shelf submarines costing about $US4 billion each, before making its own. The first Australian-made boats are not due to be operational until the 2040s.

One job Liberal senator Jane Hume is holding on to
One job Liberal senator Jane Hume is holding on to

The Age

time3 hours ago

  • The Age

One job Liberal senator Jane Hume is holding on to

We return to the evergreen subject of the Liberal Party and its woman problem (or rather, as we quipped last week, its man problem) Party elder Alan Stockdale 's ill-considered comments last week about 'assertive women' giving Liberal blokes a hard time rightly enraged members pushing to improve the party's parliamentary gender representation. Those comments landed right as CBD was hearing gripes about the fate of the Margaret Guilfoyle Network, a forum for Liberal women that many didn't even know existed. The network, named after Australia's first female cabinet minister, was quietly launched last year, despite being a recommendation of an internal review into the Liberals' 2022 election loss. No doubt there will be an announcement about another one of those soon. Loading Party sources were flabbergasted that the network had held just a handful of Zoom meetings and networking events since kicking off. And that Liberal women were expected to pay literal money to solve a problem caused by men. Indeed, membership costs a modest $150 a year for non-party members, $100 for those in the party and $50 for under 35s. But a party spokesman wanted to set the record straight. 'The Margaret Guilfoyle Network has held events in almost every state and territory, and held multiple Zoom events including briefings on the Queensland election, the US election and guest speakers including NZ Finance Minister Nicola Willis,' he said. 'Now that the election's over, the MGN will deliver even more events for its members.'

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