logo
‘Not the Australian way': Victoria's ‘extremely divisive' Voice to Parliament discussed

‘Not the Australian way': Victoria's ‘extremely divisive' Voice to Parliament discussed

Sky News AU11 hours ago
Former Victorian Liberal Party president Michael Kroger discusses the Victorian government's Voice to Parliament.
'This is going to be extremely divisive,' Mr Kroger told Sky News host Paul Murray.
'We've just been through this, haven't we?
'This is not the Australian way; this is what Australians overwhelmingly rejected.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Australia news LIVE: Australian Defence Force facing sexual violence allegations; Victorian premier to visit East Melbourne Synagogue following antisemitic attack
Australia news LIVE: Australian Defence Force facing sexual violence allegations; Victorian premier to visit East Melbourne Synagogue following antisemitic attack

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Australia news LIVE: Australian Defence Force facing sexual violence allegations; Victorian premier to visit East Melbourne Synagogue following antisemitic attack

Latest posts Latest posts 8.00am 'It hurts': Australian Oscar Piastri misses out on victory after 10 second penalty By Emily Kowal Australian Formula One star Oscar Piastri has missed out on a first place victory at the British Grand Prix after a controversial penalty. The McLaren driver came from second place on the grid to lead, then incurred a 10-second penalty before seeing teammate and chief rival Lando Norris go clear to take the chequered flag. Find out how it played out here. 7.51am Opposition leader offers to work with PM to fast-track childcare reform By Emily Kowal Opposition Leader Sussan Ley is waiting to hear back from Prime Minister Anthony Albanese after writing to him to offer support for fast-tracking childcare reforms. It comes after horrific abuse allegations against Melbourne childcare worker Joshua Brown, accused of abusing children aged between five months and two years at the Creative Garden Early Learning Centre in Point Cook between April 2022 and January 2023. Speaking to Sunrise, Ley said she hoped that a collaborative approach would lead to faster law reform. 'I felt physically sick when I heard this,' she said. 'I have written to the prime minister in good faith to offer our constructive engagement in the lead-up to parliament returning so we can have legislation ready to go to actually act once and for all to do what I think every parent would expect, and every community member would expect, to make sure our children are safe in childcare settings.' 7.35am 'This is very dangerous': Fears Australia's relationship with United States is 'fraying' By Emily Kowal Former Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce has warned that Australia's relationship with the United States is 'not going well', with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese preparing to travel to China this week while yet to obtain a meeting with the United States president. 'This is very dangerous. This is very dangerous,' Joyce said, speaking to Sunrise this morning. 'You need to understand the United States is the cornerstone of our defence relationship. It is not going well; this is the fourth meeting he has had with the leader of China, but that is a totalitarian regime. Mr Trump has not had a meeting with the prime minister yet. I'm truly concerned about that,' Joyce said. 'If we can't extract the meeting between the prime minister and the president of the United States, we are on bad ground.' However, also speaking to Sunrise, Social Services Minister Tanya Plibersek rejected claims that Australia's relationship with the United States was fraying. 'The prime minister has spoken to the president on the phone, the defence minister met his counterpart recently, the foreign affairs minister has just been in the United States recently ... the United States is absolutely our foundational defence and security partner. The relationship is terrific,' Plibersek said. 7.07am 'I don't think there is any chance of it going back to what it was': Hannah Thomas' grim prognosis after eye injury By Emily Kowal A former Greens candidate who suffered a serious injury when police broke up an anti-Israel protest in Sydney last month has been told to be 'prepared for the worst', including the possibility she will never regain vision in her right eye, as she readies for a second round of surgery. Hannah Thomas, who ran against Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in Grayndler at the May election, suffered a gruesome eye injury on June 27, when she was arrested alongside four others. In her first interview since the arrests, Thomas said she has been warned that she will probably never regain full vision following the incident. Read what she said here. 6.56am 'We are seeing bodies recovered all over, up and down': Texas flood death toll rises as Trump declares major disaster By Michael Koziol Overseas, the death toll from catastrophic floods in central Texas has risen to 70, with many adults and children still missing, as US President Donald Trump declared a major disaster over what he called an 'unimaginable tragedy'. In the worst-affected region, Kerr County, authorities said 59 people were confirmed dead – 38 adults and 21 children – while 11 children and a counsellor from the Camp Mystic summer camp were still missing. Read the story by our US correspondent, Michael Koziol, here. 6.56am Victorian premier launches new anti-hate taskforce, set to visit firebombed synagogue By Kieran Rooney, Wendy Tuohy and Alexander Darling A new anti-hate taskforce will be assembled by the Allan government as it scrambles to beef up efforts to address antisemitism in Victoria following a new round of attacks on Friday, last week. In Melbourne's CBD on Sunday, pro-Palestinian protesters, including children, chanted 'Death to the IDF' at a demonstration that went ahead less than 48 hours after the antisemitic attacks, which included an attack on East Melbourne Synagogue while children and families were inside. Premier Jacinta Allan, is expected to visit East Melbourne Synagogue today and will announce that the new anti-hate taskforce will meet this week for the first time. Read the full story here. 6.56am This morning's headlines at a glance By Emily Kowal Good morning and welcome to today's national news blog. My name is Emily Kowal, and I will be getting our coverage started this morning. It's Monday, July 7. Here's what's making news this morning. After being ignored, sidelined and marginalised, brave women in Australia's armed forces are speaking up about Defence's failures to act on sexual violence against its own people. In NSW, former Greens candidate Hannah Thomas has been warned to 'prepare for the worst' after suffering a serious eye injury caused when police broke up an anti-Israel protest in Sydney last month. In Victoria, a new anti-hate taskforce will be assembled by the Allan government as it scrambles to beef up efforts to address antisemitism in Victoria following a new round of attacks on Friday. Overseas, the death toll from the devastating floods in central Texas has risen to 70, with many adults and children still missing, as US President Donald Trump declared a major disaster over what he called an 'unimaginable tragedy'.

Australia news LIVE: Australian Defence Force facing sexual violence allegations; Victorian premier to visit East Melbourne Synagogue following antisemitic attack
Australia news LIVE: Australian Defence Force facing sexual violence allegations; Victorian premier to visit East Melbourne Synagogue following antisemitic attack

The Age

time2 hours ago

  • The Age

Australia news LIVE: Australian Defence Force facing sexual violence allegations; Victorian premier to visit East Melbourne Synagogue following antisemitic attack

Latest posts Latest posts 8.00am 'It hurts': Australian Oscar Piastri misses out on victory after 10 second penalty By Emily Kowal Australian Formula One star Oscar Piastri has missed out on a first place victory at the British Grand Prix after a controversial penalty. The McLaren driver came from second place on the grid to lead, then incurred a 10-second penalty before seeing teammate and chief rival Lando Norris go clear to take the chequered flag. Find out how it played out here. 7.51am Opposition leader offers to work with PM to fast-track childcare reform By Emily Kowal Opposition Leader Sussan Ley is waiting to hear back from Prime Minister Anthony Albanese after writing to him to offer support for fast-tracking childcare reforms. It comes after horrific abuse allegations against Melbourne childcare worker Joshua Brown, accused of abusing children aged between five months and two years at the Creative Garden Early Learning Centre in Point Cook between April 2022 and January 2023. Speaking to Sunrise, Ley said she hoped that a collaborative approach would lead to faster law reform. 'I felt physically sick when I heard this,' she said. 'I have written to the prime minister in good faith to offer our constructive engagement in the lead-up to parliament returning so we can have legislation ready to go to actually act once and for all to do what I think every parent would expect, and every community member would expect, to make sure our children are safe in childcare settings.' 7.35am 'This is very dangerous': Fears Australia's relationship with United States is 'fraying' By Emily Kowal Former Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce has warned that Australia's relationship with the United States is 'not going well', with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese preparing to travel to China this week while yet to obtain a meeting with the United States president. 'This is very dangerous. This is very dangerous,' Joyce said, speaking to Sunrise this morning. 'You need to understand the United States is the cornerstone of our defence relationship. It is not going well; this is the fourth meeting he has had with the leader of China, but that is a totalitarian regime. Mr Trump has not had a meeting with the prime minister yet. I'm truly concerned about that,' Joyce said. 'If we can't extract the meeting between the prime minister and the president of the United States, we are on bad ground.' However, also speaking to Sunrise, Social Services Minister Tanya Plibersek rejected claims that Australia's relationship with the United States was fraying. 'The prime minister has spoken to the president on the phone, the defence minister met his counterpart recently, the foreign affairs minister has just been in the United States recently ... the United States is absolutely our foundational defence and security partner. The relationship is terrific,' Plibersek said. 7.07am 'I don't think there is any chance of it going back to what it was': Hannah Thomas' grim prognosis after eye injury By Emily Kowal A former Greens candidate who suffered a serious injury when police broke up an anti-Israel protest in Sydney last month has been told to be 'prepared for the worst', including the possibility she will never regain vision in her right eye, as she readies for a second round of surgery. Hannah Thomas, who ran against Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in Grayndler at the May election, suffered a gruesome eye injury on June 27, when she was arrested alongside four others. In her first interview since the arrests, Thomas said she has been warned that she will probably never regain full vision following the incident. Read what she said here. 6.56am 'We are seeing bodies recovered all over, up and down': Texas flood death toll rises as Trump declares major disaster By Michael Koziol Overseas, the death toll from catastrophic floods in central Texas has risen to 70, with many adults and children still missing, as US President Donald Trump declared a major disaster over what he called an 'unimaginable tragedy'. In the worst-affected region, Kerr County, authorities said 59 people were confirmed dead – 38 adults and 21 children – while 11 children and a counsellor from the Camp Mystic summer camp were still missing. Read the story by our US correspondent, Michael Koziol, here. 6.56am Victorian premier launches new anti-hate taskforce, set to visit firebombed synagogue By Kieran Rooney, Wendy Tuohy and Alexander Darling A new anti-hate taskforce will be assembled by the Allan government as it scrambles to beef up efforts to address antisemitism in Victoria following a new round of attacks on Friday, last week. In Melbourne's CBD on Sunday, pro-Palestinian protesters, including children, chanted 'Death to the IDF' at a demonstration that went ahead less than 48 hours after the antisemitic attacks, which included an attack on East Melbourne Synagogue while children and families were inside. Premier Jacinta Allan, is expected to visit East Melbourne Synagogue today and will announce that the new anti-hate taskforce will meet this week for the first time. Read the full story here. 6.56am This morning's headlines at a glance By Emily Kowal Good morning and welcome to today's national news blog. My name is Emily Kowal, and I will be getting our coverage started this morning. It's Monday, July 7. Here's what's making news this morning. After being ignored, sidelined and marginalised, brave women in Australia's armed forces are speaking up about Defence's failures to act on sexual violence against its own people. In NSW, former Greens candidate Hannah Thomas has been warned to 'prepare for the worst' after suffering a serious eye injury caused when police broke up an anti-Israel protest in Sydney last month. In Victoria, a new anti-hate taskforce will be assembled by the Allan government as it scrambles to beef up efforts to address antisemitism in Victoria following a new round of attacks on Friday. Overseas, the death toll from the devastating floods in central Texas has risen to 70, with many adults and children still missing, as US President Donald Trump declared a major disaster over what he called an 'unimaginable tragedy'.

New polling puts Victorian Labor on track to secure historic fourth term, with support for Coalition falling amid string of controversies
New polling puts Victorian Labor on track to secure historic fourth term, with support for Coalition falling amid string of controversies

Sky News AU

time2 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

New polling puts Victorian Labor on track to secure historic fourth term, with support for Coalition falling amid string of controversies

Two separate polls have indicated that if a state election were held today, the Victorian Labor government would cruise to victory, despite the majority of voters preferring Opposition Leader Brad Battin as Premier. A Redbridge poll, obtained by The Herald Sun, showed the Victorian Labor Party was in a prime election winning position, leading the Coalition 51.5 to 48.5 on a two-party preferred count. This would translate to an unprecedented fourth election victory for Labor if the current vote held, with the ALP experiencing a four-point bump to its primary vote. The development comes as Labor grapples with a mounting $149 billion debt pile, a budget crisis with the risk of a credit downgrade, delays and cost blowouts to critical infrastructure projects, and surging youth crime rates among other issues. Support meanwhile for Mr Battin's Coalition has plunged to 38 per cent, five points lower than when he was appointed leader in December. The poll of 1,183 Victorians represents a significant shift, with the Coalition having led Labor 51–49 on a two-party preferred basis eight months ago shortly before John Pesutto was dumped as leader. The Coalition has lost the support of almost all demographics, including every age group, tertiary educated and women voters, signifying a major blow to Mr Battin's leadership amid the tumultuous legal feud between MP Moira Deeming and Mr Pesutto. The opposition has also lost the support of migrant voters and those residing in Melbourne's inner, middle and outer suburbs, leading Labor only in rural areas. Only 26 per cent of Victorians polled said they believed the opposition was worthy of governing. However, support for Premier Jacinta Allan had similarly taken a hit, with only 27 per cent of those surveyed saying they had confidence in a re-elected Labor government. A Newspoll conducted for The Australian also showed that Ms Allan would cling to government, with Labor leading the Coalition 53–47 on a two-party preferred basis. Ms Allan's personal popularity and voter satisfaction suffered a bruising and trails Mr Battin 41-36 as preferred Premier. A resounding 59 per cent of voters polled said they did not believe Labor deserved to be re-elected, with 61 per cent stating they were unhappy with Ms Allan's leadership style. Victorians are equally dissatisfied with the Coalition, with 60 per cent stating they did not believe the opposition was ready to take the reins after 11 years in the wilderness. Labor secured 37 per cent of the primary vote, with the Coalition sitting at 34.40 per cent and the Greens at 11.50 per cent. The poll further uncovered that support within the major parties rank and file had plummeted, with 44 per cent of Labor supporters and 23 per cent of Liberal voters turning away from their respective parties. Although Labor is well short of achieving it's thumping 2022 result, Redbridge co-director Kos Samaras said preference flows from minor parties would comfortably deliver Labor a record fourth term. 'Labor is racking up support in fast-growing urban electorates within diverse Melbourne and highly educated constituencies,' he said. 'While the Coalition is piling up votes in ageing, shrinking seats they already hold.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store