Sussan Ley's chief of staff is a young, political animal
Few will lament last week's mercy-killing of the ABC's Q&A program. It had become a grim appointment for third-rate ministers to deliver party lines to a dwindling, ageing audience. But one unlikely person who has a soft spot for the show is opposition leader Sussan Ley 's chief of staff Dean Shachar.
Shachar appeared in the Q&A audience as a chirpy questioner not once, but twice. In 2013, the fresh-faced future politico was called on by Tony Jones to lob a question to Anthony Albanese about Kevin Rudd. A year later, there he was again asking Clive Palmer about his former Liberal allegiances.

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Perth Now
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Global doom and gloom sinks Aussie economic optimism
Tariffs and global conflict have knocked Australians' optimism in the economy and trust in the US to 20-year lows, a long-running poll by an independent think tank shows. Since it began in 2005, the Lowy Institute Poll of Australians' attitudes to the world has never been so bleak. Trade turmoil and ongoing cost-of-living pressures were having a negative impact on household confidence even before President Donald Trump's "liberation day" tariffs were announced on April 2, after the survey had been in the field. A little over half of respondents (52 per cent) said they were optimistic about Australia's economic performance over the next five years, the least since the poll began in 2005 and in line with attitudes during the COVID pandemic in 2020. Young Australians aged 18-29 felt the least optimistic about the economy, while Labor voters were more confident than Liberal and Greens-voting counterparts. Feelings of pessimism reflected a precarious moment, with the world order that had served Australia's interests well since the end of World War II beset on all sides, said Lowy Institute executive director Michael Fullilove. "Australians are clearly unsettled by what they've seen of the second Trump administration, with almost two-thirds (64 per cent) now holding little to no trust in the United States to act responsibly - the lowest level in the history of the Lowy Institute Poll," said Dr Fullilove. But Australians are even less trusting of China - the nation's largest trading partner - as military tensions over the fate of Taiwan ramp up. Only 16 per cent of respondents had confidence in Chinese President Xi Jinping to do the right thing, compared to a quarter who had confidence in Mr Trump. Ongoing distrust in China, which conducted navy live-fire drills off Australian waters shortly before the poll was conducted, was contributing to sustained belief in the importance of the Australia-US alliance, despite distrust in Mr Trump, Dr Fullilove said. Amid rising authoritarianism around the globe, Australians have never been more firm in their support for democracy, with 74 per cent believing it is preferable to any other kind of government. "Australians lean towards co-operation," Dr Fullilove said. "They feel most comfortable with fellow liberal democracies such as Japan and New Zealand, but remain circumspect towards two regional powers, India and Indonesia." Overwhelmingly Australians were in favour of making more goods in Australia, even if they cost more (83 per cent), and distrustful of social media's impact on democracy (70 per cent). Those figures will be encouraging for the federal government and its flagship policies to ban children from using social media and promote domestic manufacturing. The poll was conducted on behalf of the Lowy Institute by the Social Research Centre, which surveyed 2117 Australian residents aged 18 and above between March 3 and 16.

Sky News AU
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Penny Wong slammed for ‘naive' call for de-escalation between Israel and Iran
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Sydney Morning Herald
9 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
‘Someone will get hurt': Zoe Daniel feared for her safety in toxic election campaign
Zoe Daniel says the harder the struggle gets, the stronger she becomes. That's just her personality. But it doesn't mean she wasn't shocked, saddened and disappointed that the battle for the seat of Goldstein became so toxic that the former MP feared for her safety and was worried someone was going to attack her home. Sitting down with The Age for lunch at a cafe in Brighton East in the midst of packing up her electoral office, Daniel said she was, at times, scared for her personal safety during the election. 'I had the Australian Federal Police with me during the last week of the campaign,' she says. 'I was worried someone might attack our house.' The teal independent lost the seat in Melbourne's south-east to Liberal Tim Wilson by a margin of 175 votes after a recount. The close count further drew out a campaign that had already seen, Daniel says, bad behaviour online spill over into real life. During the campaign she says people screamed at her on the street calling her a 'c---' and a 'bitch', she reported harassment and stalking to police after a Facebook post identified her car in a private car park behind her electoral office, and she believes she was followed home in one instance. Daniel says advertising for her campaign did not target Wilson personally and was focused on policy. 'I won't go low, I don't go low,' Daniel says. 'The problem with not going low is that you just go under a barrage of attack.' Daniel says if voters in the electorate were driving down the highway seeing 'very personal' billboards targeting her, 'some of that will land'. She says fellow teal Monique Ryan also 'had it pretty hard during the campaign as well'. 'I thought one of us is going to get hurt eventually,' she says. Wilson said that after having had to make reports to state and federal police during election campaigns, he shared Daniel's concerns about safety. 'There is no place for conduct that makes candidates feel unsafe, and should it occur the best thing to do is report it to the police,' he said. The campaign in Goldstein featured billboards along the Nepean Highway, trucks driving around and digital advertising calling on residents not to vote for Daniel. She was also subject to attack ads run by third party proxy groups, including Australians for Prosperity and Repeal the Teal. One, a giant billboard opposite the Kingston City Hall displayed a photo of Daniel's head in a balloon. 'All hot air: Vote for change,' it stated. 'Blocked: Local voices. Disinterested: In local crime. Zero Delivery: On cost of living.' It was authorised by Australians for Prosperity, headed by former Liberal MP Jason Falinski, who describes himself as Wilson's 'good friend' and was behind Wilson's tilt at the Liberal leadership. At pre-poll booths, flyers were handed out with a photo of Daniel and the headline: 'Repeal the Teal'. They stated: 'Teals… Not open. Not accountable. Not independent. Not worth it. Put Zoe Daniel last.' Repeal the Teal is an initiative of the Jewish activist network J-United, with the material authorised by Harriet Warlow-Shill, a Melbourne lawyer who hosted an online event in March headlined, 'Does my teal support terror? One Woman's Journey to find out'. Warlow-Shill said the Repeal the Teal campaign was not linked to the Liberal Party, and that she resigned as a Liberal Party member in February. A spokesman for the Liberals said neither Wilson nor the party engaged Australians for Prosperity or Repeal the Teal. Daniel says much of the abuse towards her was 'opportunistic'. 'If you are a woman, they threaten to rape you or go after your children,' she says. 'As that kind of stuff continued to escalate, then people were getting those disgusting letters in their inboxes saying it was like 1930s Germany. I was really frightened of that.' The letters were sent anonymously to some residents with Daniel corflutes outside their homes, accusing them of being antisemitic and hating Jews. They claimed many in the Jewish community were considering their future in Victoria and Australia, and said Daniel's supporters were 'an active participant in our decisions to uproot our families and leave'. The letters, signed off 'Your Jewish neighbour', said the writers were not connected with any political party. Goldstein has a large Jewish population, with the latest census data showing 7.1 per cent of residents identify Judaism as their religious affiliation. The only debate between Daniel and Wilson during the campaign was before members of the local Jewish community at the Brighton Hebrew Congregation, where Wilson wore a yarmulke and declared he was a Zionist. He criticised Daniel for accepting funding from Climate 200, which he described as 'racist and antisemitic'. Daniel asked Wilson where his funding had come from and noted that he declared zero dollars in funding after the last election. 'I think it's incredibly unfortunate to see a political party weaponise people's grief and trauma for political gain,' Daniel says. 'I thought it was disgusting.' Daniel points to her advocacy for the Jewish community during her time as an MP, including helping to organise repatriation flights, establish an antisemitism envoy, introduce stronger laws criminalising hate crimes and support anti-doxxing laws. During the campaign, Liberal senator James Paterson accused Daniel of 'abandoning' the Jewish community and participating in the 'vilification' of Israel. 'It's just an outright lie, but it's also designed to inflame and, for me, that was at a point where I was starting to feel really concerned,' Daniel says. 'It's really irresponsible. You just shouldn't be saying that.' Daniel says she is proud of what she and her team achieved in Goldstein and believes the future is bright for the independent and teal movement, even though only eight of the 35 candidates supported by Climate 200 won seats this election. 'The independents got really close in lots of seats,' she says. 'There are various ways to measure success. I mean the presence of those independents now has the Liberal Party on its knees because the Liberal Party had to throw resources at so many seats that it previously would not have had to.' Loading Daniel says the independents and teals have delivered a 'massive change' to Australian politics. 'I don't think you can only judge it based on who won and who lost because I think what you need to look at is the erosion of the major parties, and just how that's changing the political landscape.' Daniel says there is a clear pathway for an independent in the future in Goldstein. 'Will it be me? I'm not sure,' she says. 'Do you want to have a look through my emails? Every single email is 'Please run in 2028', 'Please run in 2028', 'We'll be there', 'We'll be there'.' Daniel thought she had won on election night and claimed victory at a celebratory party at the Elwood Bowls Club, but a surge in postal votes got Wilson across the line. She says her supporters are disappointed but also proud and willing to keep going. 'I have the kind of personality where the harder it gets, the stronger I become. Not to say I'm not disappointed and generally pissed off.' Daniel says anything can happen in the next three years, in terms of domestic politics, international politics and what unfolds for her workwise. 'I am not 'in the foetal position' as the former member described himself after his loss in 2022, and for him to be telling all and sundry that he hopes I 'find peace' is the height of arrogance,' she says. 'His feelings are his own to wrestle with, not mine. I will write my own story and Tim Wilson does not dictate when my chapters begin and end.' Wilson said he thanked Daniel for her service to the community. 'The election is now over, the people of Goldstein have made their decision. As Australians, we must accept the results of elections and move on,' he said. Daniel is sanguine about what is next for her. 'I'm not dead,' she says. 'I'm not a career politician, so I've got other options, unlike my predecessor. I've done lots of different things in my life, and I've been really lucky with the opportunities that I have had. So I need to find the right path.'