
Australia politics live: Dutton to promise to halve fuel excise for a year; ‘major breach' of NSW court files
Show key events only Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature
Greg Jericho is writing about the budget today and he argues that Labor's tax cuts have left the opposition leader and shadow treasurer with limited options.
He applauds Jim Chalmers's decision to pass more of the pie to lower earners but says that more could have been done to help people on Jobseeker, which remains well below the poverty line.
He concludes:
Tax is now a major part of both the ALP's and LNP's election campaigns. And many of the other choices that would help the unemployed or reduce tax breaks to the rich will be likely left for someone else to worry about.
Read his full column here: Share
Peter Dutton is expected to promise tonight that the coalition will halve the fuel excise for 12 months if elected, AAP reports.
The policy would lower the rate on petrol and diesel from about 50 cents to 25 cents per litre.
The coalition voted against the tax cuts that passed parliament on Wednesday, saying they were too little, too late for struggling Australians.
Taxpayers will save up to $268 on their tax bills in 2026/27 and up to $536 every year after under Labor's proposal.
'What's obvious here is that a 70-cent-a-day tax cut in 15 months' time is just not going to help families today who are really suffering,' Dutton said.
'We do want to help families address the cost-of-living crisis, we do want to address the energy crisis.'
The opposition voted against Labor's tax cuts, with shadow treasurer Angus Taylor chastising Labor for producing a budget 'for the next five weeks, not the next five years,' referring to the imminent election campaign.
But he was attacked by the treasurer for voting against tax relief.
Taylor didn't rule out larger tax cuts being offered by the coalition. Share
Good morning and welcome to our live politics blog. I'm Martin Farrer, bringing the best of the early stories before Emily Wind guides you through the morning.
The setpiece of the day will be Peter Dutton's budget reply at 7.30 this evening in which he is expected to try to outflank Anthony Albanese on cost-of-living relief. The Coalition voted against Labor's income tax cuts yesterday and the opposition leader is preparing what has been called a 'very significant announcement' in tonight's speech. It appears that it's going to be a promise to halve the fuel excise for 12 months, which would see about 25c come off the price of a litre of petrol.
We will have full coverage of the buildup to his address and the rest of the budget fallout.
Despite Sarah Hanson-Young's best efforts yesterday when she waved a dead salmon in the Senate, the legislation to protect the Tasmanian salmon industry was passed through parliament last night. Coalition senators joined Labor to vote in favour of the bill after the government speeded the process by guillotining the debate to bring on a vote. More coming up.
Specialist cybercrime detectives are investigating how 9,000 documents from New South Wales's online court system were leaked into the public domain. NSW police's cybercrime squad was alerted on Tuesday to the breach of the state's Online Registry website, which provides access to civil and criminal court cases. Police said the documents include sensitive material such as apprehended violence orders and affidavits. More to follow. Share
Hashtags

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


The Guardian
9 hours ago
- The Guardian
Cost of net zero by 2050 may determine whether Coalition abandons emissions goal, shadow minister says
The financial cost to reach net zero by 2050 may shape the Coalition's decision on whether to retain or abandon the target, the new shadow minister, Dan Tehan, says, as he prepares to lead a heavily contested internal review of the policy. The opposition is poised for a protracted brawl over climate targets after the new Liberal leader, Sussan Ley, put all of its policies up for debate after the Coalition's federal election defeat. The Coalition remained deeply torn on net zero, with Nationals such as Matt Canavan and Barnaby Joyce campaigning for the commitment to be dumped and Liberals including Andrew Hastie – touted by some as a future leader – expressing fresh scepticism about the goal. In his first interview with Guardian Australia as the shadow energy and emissions reduction minister, Tehan said there was 'room for all voices to be heard' in the debate. Asked whether it was possible to land an agreed position, given such divergent views, Tehan said: 'That's the challenge that Sussan (Ley) has asked me to undertake. 'I mightn't have many capabilities but one I do have is dogged determination,' he said. Tehan said details about the review process would be released imminently, with the Coalition's position on the Paris agreement and gas reservation scheme also up for debate. Sign up to get climate and environment editor Adam Morton's Clear Air column as a free newsletter The Liberals and Nationals have already walked back the Peter Dutton-era nuclear energy plan, agreeing to pledge to lift the federal moratorium but stopping short of committing to building government-owned power plants. As the opposition weighs up the pros and cons of pursuing net zero, Tehan signalled the economic cost of decarbonising the economy would be the main consideration. 'The cost will be one of the most significant factors that will drive our decision,' Tehan said, accusing the government of obscuring the cost of signature climate policies, including the capacity investment scheme. The government does not have a dollar figure for achieving net zero by 2050. However, in response to a recent Senate estimates question on notice that sought such a number, climate department officials warned of the significant cost of 'climate inaction' for Australia. The response – dated 29 May – referenced the 2023 intergenerational report, which estimated the commonwealth could be forced to spend an extra $130bn on disaster payments by the 2060s due to climate-fuelled disasters including bushfire and floods. Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion Tehan wants to focus the wider climate and energy debate around economics, vowing to apply more scrutiny to the cost of Labor's renewables-focused path to net zero than it was subjected to during the election. Senior Coalition MPs have conceded Dutton's campaign was too slow to counter Labor's attacks on its supposed $600bn nuclear reactors, allowing that claim to overshadow questioning of the price tag for the government's approach. 'What I'm going to do is, I'm actually going to say to Anthony Albanese and Chris Bowen, 'what are the true costs of your approach,'' Tehan said. 'I will hold them to account on that. And that, I think, will make us very competitive at the next election. They might actually find that they're going to be held to account in the same way they tried to hold us to account.' Along with the proposed taxpayer-funded nuclear power plants, Dutton's plan for an east coast gas reservation scheme represented a significant government intervention that caused unease among free-market Liberals MPs. Tehan said while government intervention was appropriate in cases of 'market failure', the priority should be to stimulate private investment. If Albanese secures a face-to-face meeting with Donald Trump on the sidelines of the G7, Tehan said the prime minister should confront the US president about his intention to pull out of the Paris agreement and what impact that might have on Australia. Tehan said Albanese should also ask Trump if he would attend next year's UN climate summit if Australia won the hosting rights.


The Guardian
16 hours ago
- The Guardian
WA senator Dorinda Cox accuses Greens of being ‘deeply racist' and says ‘I am not a bully'
The former Greens senator Dorinda Cox has accused the Greens of being 'deeply racist' and insisted that she has never been a bully. Cox, a Noongar Yamatji woman and Western Australian senator, announced last Monday she had defected to Labor, saying her views were more closely aligned with Labor than the Greens. In a resignation letter sent to Greens leader Larissa Waters' office on Tuesday night, Cox claimed the party had 'cultural problems they refuse to acknowledge or address' and that she had experienced an 'unremitting campaign of bullying and dishonest claims'. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email 'I have seen and survived trauma, discrimination and harassment in previous work environments. I have seen the impact of psycho social violence on my family and my community. I am not, and have never been, a bully. I do not perpetrate it,' she said. Cox has been the subject of a number of workplace behaviour complaints, as first reported by the Nine newspapers last October. At the time, the WA senator apologised for 'the distress this may have caused' but said there had been 'significant missing context' in the reports of bullying allegations within her office. Cox said in her letter that at the time she resigned, there were no grievances pending against her in the party's conflict resolution process, and none had been put to her during the period she was a senator. 'The Greens failed me as its last First Nations MP, and continue to fail First Nations people,' Cox wrote. 'In my experience, the Greens tolerate a culture that permits violence against First Nations women within its structures. In this respect, the party is deeply racist. 'Instead of dealing with its toxic culture, the Greens sought to shut me down. The Greens failed in their duty of care for my staff and me, and disregarded the reported and obvious impact of what was occurring.' Cox accused the federal and Western Australian Greens' leadership for embracing 'untrue' claims and amplifying them. The WA Greens announced an external inquiry into grievances it received against Cox in mid-January by former staff members within the party after the allegations were publicly reported. The inquiry has now ceased. The WA Greens said 'the co-convenors of Greens (WA) went to great lengths to ensure the process was culturally safe and delivered due process to all parties'. An Australian Greens spokesperson said the claims were 'disappointing' and ignored the 'substantive work undertaken by the party to find a resolution to the complaints made both by and against Senator Cox, and to address the breakdown in her relationship with Greens' First Nations members'. 'As the IPSC [Independent Parliamentary Standards Committee] and PWSS [Parliamentary Workplace Support Service] are the bodies created by Parliament to address complaints from staff, they can continue to investigate ongoing matters. This is unchanged by the senator's decision to move to a party that continues to destroy First Nations cultural history through approving coal and gas projects.' Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion Anthony Albanese was asked about historical bullying complaints against Cox last Monday. The prime minister said Labor had 'examined everything that had been considered in the past' and felt that the 'issues were dealt with appropriately'. In October 2024, Cox said she took responsibility for 'any shortcomings' in her office and apologised for any distress that may have been caused but said there had been 'significant missing context' in the reports of bullying allegations within her office. Cox said she had an 'immense amount of respect and gratitude to my team who prepare and support me for the work I undertake' and that she had 'always taken a proactive approach to staff wellbeing, including my own' and had undertaken executive coaching and mentoring from former MPs. Cox's former colleague, Lidia Thorpe, revealed last week she was one of the people to complain to the parliamentary watchdog about Cox, disputing Albanese's claim that allegations about Cox had been 'dealt with'. Thorpe, a former Greens senator who is now independent, said she raised a complaint against Cox in late 2022 to the Greens' leader's office and PWSS. Thorpe formally submitted the complaint to the PWSS in March 2023. Thorpe said on Wednesday her case remained unresolved because Cox declined to attend a mediation. Thorpe, a Gunnai, Gunditjmara and Djab Wurrung senator, told ABC on Wednesday morning she had also experienced racism in the Greens. 'There's a lot of work that the Greens and many other organisations need to do to stamp [racism] out, particularly the parliament of this country,' she said.


The Herald Scotland
20 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
Spirit of Tasmania ferry scandal threatens to sink government
For six months, the Tasmanian Government has wrestled with its decision spend £450m on two new ferries to link it with Australia, despite not having ports large enough to accommodate them. In a startling mirror-image of Scotland's own ferry fiasco, costs to build the both the dual-fuel ferries and their berths have ballooned since the plan was laid down – and now the ports are not expected to be ready till next year at the earliest. Since December, one of the ferries – Spirit of Tasmania IV – has languished at the Port of Leith in Edinburgh, at a cost of £22,000 per week to the Tasmanian taxpayer. And this week the bill came due for the state's Liberal premier Jeremy Rockliff, who faced the collapse of his 'rainbow coalition' and lost a no confidence vote, with the ferries one of several reasons he had lost the faith of parliament. In October, the scandal cost the frontbench position of the government's Treasurer and Deputy Premier Tasmanian Liberal Michael Ferguson. Tasmania's ferry fiasco is not too dissimilar to Scotland's woes (Image: Jane Barlow) Now the state stands poised to head to the polls if a new deal cannot be worked out and a replacement for Mr Rockcliff be found. Meanwhile, it has emerged that the Spirit of Tasmania in Scotland isn't going anywhere soon. While Spirit IV was docked at Leith, its state-owned operator, TT-Line, searched for an someone to lease it until the port was completed in Tasmania. But negotiations collapsed in early March. The state government told TT-Line to bring Spirit IV back to Tasmania and it was due to depart on 26 May, before being delayed by poor weather. During that time, engineers found technical problems with the ship's liquefied natural gas systems. 'The government is awaiting further details in relation to a new expected departure date, but it is understood that this work will take some time,' the state's transport minister, Eric Abetz, said last week. READ MORE: Huge fiasco ship mothballed in Scotland at a cost of £23k a week 'Farcical': Newly-built ferry to be mothballed in Edinburgh 'for two years' When questioned about the delays in parliament, Abetz accused the Labor opposition of 'talking [the ferry] down all the time'. 'I say thank goodness for the weather, because she might have been well into the deep oceans and then suffer a mechanical issue, the full extent of which I am not appraised of,' Abetz said. 'We want to make sure the ship is safe and, even more importantly, the crew is safe. We will do whatever is necessary to ensure the protection of the crew.' However, the ship has become something of a tourist attraction in Edinburgh, despite its status as a national embarrassment Down Under. Ian Stirling, who founded a whisky distillery right next to where the Spirit of Tasmania is docked, told the Guardian his long-term nautical neighbour has delivered patrons, with a side of political drama.