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Labor to form government as coalition vote plummets

Labor to form government as coalition vote plummets

Canberra Times03-05-2025

"One fact I think we can all acknowledge and recognise is the Donald Trump factor. It was devastating in Canada for the Conservatives where the Canadian Conservative leader lost 20 points over the course of a few months," he told ABC, referring to the country's recent election.

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BTN Episode 16, 2025
BTN Episode 16, 2025

ABC News

time44 minutes ago

  • ABC News

BTN Episode 16, 2025

BTN Transcript: Episode 16 — 10/6/2025 Yaama. I'm Jack Evans and you're watching BTN. Here's what's coming up. We'll find out why Taylor Swift had to buy back her own music, learn more about this precious metal and hear about a competition to try and talk to animals. Tariffs Update Reporter: Jack Evans INTRO: But first up to something you've probably heard a lot about for, well, a while now and that's tariffs. We've told you before about the US President's controversial plans to tax goods coming in from other countries but since then, a lot has happened. Let's find out more. KING: Alright, what else is on the list of imports. RIGHT HAND: We've got Iced Tea imported from England. KING: Tariff. RIGHT HAND: Olives imported from Spain. KING: Tariff. RIGHT HAND: Towels imported from Turkey. KING: Tariff. RIGHT HAND: And turkey imported from Maine. KING: Tariff. JACK EVANS, REPORTER: When we last left our King, he was only getting started with this whole tariff thing. KING: I want Tariffs, that is my simple request. All things… RIGHT HAND: Tariffed. KING: Bigger and better is best. And just like this made-up kingdom, the real world has seen something similar. In case you need a reminder. A tariff is a tax or an extra cost that governments put on products that come from another country. Since first implementing tariffs earlier this year, US President Donald Trump, has put a tariff on just about every country, even places where there isn't anything to tariff. KING: Right, I've marked out all the kingdoms I plan to tariff. RIGHT HAND: But this is the whole map? KING: It's not the WHOLE kingdom. I left out there. On the 2nd of April, which President Trump declared as… DONALD TRUMP, US PRESIDENT: Liberation Day. He announced a baseline 10% Universal Tariff on imports from every country, except Canada and Mexico. As well as Reciprocal Tariffs of up to 50% on countries that Mr Trump said were engaging in unfair trade practices. DONALD TRUMP: Our country and its taxpayers have been ripped off for more than 50 years. But it is not going to happen anymore. It's not going to happen. Here in Australia, on top of the 10% universal tariff, we also got Reciprocal Tariffs including a 25% tariff on Steel and Aluminum, although recently Mr Trump said that Tariff would be doubled. The liberation day tariffs caused a massive ripple effect across the world and wiped billions of dollars from the stock market. But on the 9th of April when the Reciprocal Tariffs were meant to kick in Mr Trump announced a 90-day suspension for all countries. Oh, except China which ended up seeing Tariffs of up to 145%. To which China kicked back with its own tariffs that peaked at 147.6%. But before it could turn into an outright Trade War, the US and China agreed to a 90 day suspension on some tariffs. SCOTT BESSENT, US TREASURY SECRETARY: We have reached an agreement. RIGHT HAND: Are you sure we should be tariffing so much? KING: Of course, I'm using them as a tool for negotiation. RIGHT HAND: Like a hammer? KING: More like wrench, applying pressure on other kingdoms to enter trade agreements with us. Some, including Mr Trump, say that's partly what all these tariffs are about. DONALD TRUMP: Tariffs are very powerful both economically and in getting everything else you want RIGHT HAND: Oh, well that sounds tariff-ic. But also, do we need to be running this past the Court of International Trade or something? KING: Who? At the end of May the US Court of International Trade ruled that most of Trump's tariffs weren't allowed. Saying that the president had overstepped his authority. But the next day the president's team appealed the court decision and won which means for now the tariffs are still in place. DONALD TRUMP: Without the tariffs, our nation would be in peril. RIGHT HAND: Right, I think that's just about everything we can tariff. KING: Oh, well what about the moon? Is there anything we can tariff on the moon? News Quiz Lee Jae-myung has been elected president of which country? North Korea or South Korea? It's South Korea. Lee Jae-myung, from the Democratic Party, won the top job after months of political chaos. The former president, Yoon Suk Yeol, was removed from office after trying to bring in martial law, that's when the military takes control of a country's law and order. Mr Lee, a former lawyer, says he's focused on bringing back trust in democracy and boosting South Korea's economy. Australia's Fair Work Commission has announced a 3.5% increase of the minimum wage. It means Aussie workers who are over 21 and not under any other agreement will earn at least what? $14.95 an hour, $24.95 an hour or $30.95 an hour? It's 24.95 an hour. A pay rise is on the way for millions of Aussie workers earning the minimum what? One of the world's most famous, and most active, volcanoes has erupted. Where is Mt Etna located? Iceland, Italy or Hawaii? It's in Italy, on the island of Sicily, to be exact. Eruptions are nothing new for Mt Etna. This latest one happened after part of the volcano's southeast crater collapsed, triggering an explosive reaction. Music Rights Reporter: Wren Gillett INTRO: Now, to some big news in the music world. Last week, Taylor Swift officially bought back all of her old music. If you're wondering how or why she didn't own it in the first place, well, Wren can fill you in. WREN GILLETT, REPORTER: So, you've made it. You wrote a surprisingly catchy song about… ROCKSTAR: Highlighters. Random, anyway, you manage to hit number 1 on the charts, announce a global tour, and people everywhere are asking for your autograph. But ahh, while you might have achieved fame, the fortune part isn't necessarily guaranteed. ROCKSTAR: WAIT WHAT. WHY? Look, there's a bit to unpack here. So, ahh, buckle up. While your favourite artists might have big fan bases these days, there was likely a time when nobody knew who they were. Like this guy. RECORD LABEL: Don't worry, I'll get your name out there. Enter the record label. Record Labels are basically companies with money and connections in the music industry. When they see potential in an artist, they invest time, money and other resources into hopefully making them a big success. RECORD LABEL: I see it. 'You light up my page' that's our first album title. Bang. They might help to cover the costs of recording, producing, advertising, and making sure the artist's music is actually played and heard by people. They also help with a lot of the legal stuff, like copyright, and helping the artist navigate the music world. Every time the artist's music is sold, streamed, played, or used, they're paid a share of profits, called royalties. But quite often, it's the label that owns the recording, because of all the help they provided at the start. Meaning they get to keep more of the money. RECORD LABEL: I'd give more of this to ya, but ahhh, you owe me. Remember? NIC KELLY, MUSIC JOURNALIST: It's not always split evenly, and especially once the artist has made back the money that the label has loaned them in the first place, then things start to feel a little bit unfair. Yeah, sometimes it can actually be pretty hard for artists to make money from their own music. Streaming services don't always pay artists a whole lot of money, and quite often, a lot of what they do earn goes to their labels. It's why some artists create their own record labels, why a lot of your favourite singers will go on tour, release merch or perfumes, and why some artists like Taylor Swift decide to re-record their music. TAYLOR SWIFT: I think that artists deserve to own their work, I just feel very passionately about that. Back in 2019, Taylor Swift's former label, Big Machine, sold the recordings of her first six albums. Taylor wanted to own them, but says she wasn't given the chance to buy them directly. So, she started releasing Taylor's Version, a re-recording of her old albums that she could fully own and control. But now, after years and years of trying, Tay Tay has finally bought back her early music, for a measly ahh 360 million buckaroonies. These days, a lot of artists are trying to hold onto more of their independence, which, thanks to new tech and social media, has never been easier. NIC KELLY: No longer do you have to ask a record label to put your song out and beg them to give you the funding to record it. Things can be recorded on a phone or a laptop that you can buy for 1000 or 2000 dollars, and you can upload that song to every single platform on the Internet for free. There are also calls for artists to be treated better by their labels. CHAPPELL ROAN: I would demand that labels in the industry profiting millions of dollars off of artists would offer a liveable wage and health care, especially to developing artists. NIC KELLY: There's definitely a really exciting opportunity now for these relationships between these record labels, who are still a massive and deeply important part of the music ecosystem and the artists that they represent to have fairer conversations, fairer splits. So, artists like you can continue doing what ya love. ROCKSTAR: THANK YOU EVERYONE. Quiz Which of these albums has Taylor Swift not re-recorded? Lover, Midnights or The Tortured Poets Department? Ah sorry, it's a trick question. None of these albums have been re-recorded by Taylor Swift because she owns the rights to them. Gold Price Reporter: Tatenda Chibika INTRO: Now to a precious metal that's particularly precious right now. Gold. Gold prices have gone up so much that several old mines in Queensland may soon reopen. Tatenda digs into why this shiny metal has held such high value throughout history. Take a look. Dora and the Lost City of Gold: We're on to something big Dora, an ancient city made of gold. Finding Ohana: My kids are inside a mountain looking for some Spanish gold?. Uncharted: It's the biggest treasure that's never been found, five billion easy. Tatenda Chibika, Reporter: Gold isn't just something people are obsessed with in movies. Right now, it's so valuable, just a kilo costs around $160,000 dollars. While there are rarer metals out there, experts say gold has properties that make it unique. Professor Rick Valenta, UQ Sustainable Minerals Institute: It doesn't tarnish. It doesn't oxidise if you have a piece of gold now, you can leave it out in the backyard, in the rain and the cold weather and the hot weather and bury it in the dirt and dig it up again and it will still be shiny. Gold has been a part of many civilisations throughout history. The Sumerians moulded it into jewellery, like these earrings gifted from King Shulgi. Egyptian Pharaoh's like Tutankhamun were buried with it believing it was the "Flesh of the Gods". And the Mali Empire's Mansa Musa is considered one of the wealthiest people in history because of how much gold he had. The precious metal has also been used as a form of currency for ages. From the 1870s to the 1920s, many countries around the world adopted the gold standard where the value of money was directly linked to real gold held in the vaults of banks. It was called the Gold Standard, and it ensured cash was worth the same as something that had a lot of value like gold. While the policy was used here in Australia because of our ties with Britain our history with Gold was shaped in the mid-1800s. Although people had discovered gold before then, authorities didn't trust the convict population, so they kept it a secret. But their attitudes changed when the California gold rush began. It brought a lot of money to America but lured much needed workers away from Australia. So, governments in New South Wales and Victoria, offered rewards to anyone who found a gold deposit big enough to be mined. In 1851, Edward Hargraves and a group of prospectors discovered a bunch of gold flakes in a town near Orange in New South Wales. Edward showed the gold to officials and was eventually given 10,000 pounds for the discovery which he didn't share with the others. Word of the discovery quickly spread and within months, hundreds of diggers flocked to the area. It sparked the beginning of Australia's Gold Rush which brought hundreds of thousands of migrants to the country and helped make the nation rich. Today, Australia is the third-highest gold producer in the world behind China and Russia. As for the value of gold nowadays. Professor Rick Valenta: The price of gold is very high right now. There's no doubt about that. The last time the gold price was this high was in 1980. Experts say when things aren't going well in the global economy gold prices tend to go up. Professor Rick Valenta: People can't print more gold coins. You have to go find more gold. So, people look at that and they say it's you know, it's something that has a tangible value of a value that you can sort of rely on. So, are we entering modern gold rush era? Well Professor Valenta says while things are going well now people shouldn't get too carried away. Professor Rick Valenta: One of the most dangerous things always to say is 'ohh this time is different'. This time probably isn't different. It's probably the same as other gold price spikes in the in the past and it's probably gonna come back. Animal Communication Reporter: Wren Gillett INTRO: Ever wished you could have a conversation with an animal? Well, it's something scientists have been working on and now, a major competition is offering a huge cash prize for anyone who can crack the code of interspecies communication. Here's Wren. PRINCESS: If you listen closely, you'll hear their voices, their songs. Ahh, music to my ears. Oh, hello there, how are you? BIRD: Yeah, I'm good mate how are you? PRINCESS: Oh, I wasn't expecting that accent. WREN GILLETT, REPORTER: Okay, while talking to animals might seem like something only fictional characters can do. It's an idea scientists are taking seriously. Over the years we've discovered lots about the ways animals communicate. Take octopuses for example. They can change the colour and texture of their skin to communicate mood. PRINCESS: Other animals use their voices, like us. Male humpbacks sing long, detailed songs during mating season. And some animals even use names. Like elephants and dolphins. A while ago, scientists worked out that each individual dolphin whistles something completely unique to them. Something called a signature whistle. LAELA SAYIGH, PROFESSOR OF ANIMAL BEHAVIOR: So, these are these individually specific whistles that are very much like our names. This is Laela. She's been researching dolphins for 40 years. And recently, her research team won the first phase of a competition called the Coller Dolittle Prize. It's a massive competition, offering hundreds of thousands of dollars to scientists who can help us get closer to… BIRD: Talking to us animals. PRINCESS: Yes. What he said. LAELA SAYIGH: So, the whistles have very distinctive shapes that we call contours, and they really are just so distinctive. Laela says when dolphins aren't busy saying their own names, the other whistles they make might actually mean something. She thinks these non-signature whistles could work a bit like words that dolphins use to talk to each other. Like for instance, sounding an alarm. LAELA SAYIGH: So, when I first saw that, I honestly thought I was going crazy. I just thought I've never seen anything like this. I almost thought nobody was going to even believe me that I was seeing it. But there's still so much we don't know. Which is why some researchers are enlisting the help of AI. Like Yossi, he's part of the team who started the Dolittle Prize, and recently, he's been studying the language of bats. YOSSI YOVEL, PROFESSOR IN ZOOLOGY: So, we put bats in large cages for a short period of several months and then we release them. But during this period, we video them continuously and record everything. Yossi and his team recorded 15,000 vocalisations of bats, along with who was making the call, who to, and what the bats were doing when they made the call YOSSI YOVEL: Then we fed this into an AI machine. So, AI is a big advantage in that indeed it is very good at trying to identify patterns that might be hidden. What they found after it was given the detailed data, was that the AI was able to take a random sample and say who was calling, the context of the call, whether the bats were fighting or playing, and in some instances who the call was addressed to. YOSSI YOVEL: But again we're humans and often we don't understand exactly what the animal is doing. So, I mean collecting data and filtering the data and annotating the data. That's all very, very challenging. Right now, researchers say it will be a long time before humans, not just fairytale princesses, can properly talk to animals. But they say everything we're learning is important. LAELA SAYIGH: I think that the more we learn about animals, it can only increase everyone's empathy for them. BIRD: Alright. I'll see ya round. PRINCESS: Oh of course, I'll speak to you later. goodbye now. Did You Know? Did you know honeybees communicate with a "waggle dance" to tell hive-mates where food is located. Sport It was a big win for Carlos Alcaraz against Jannik Sinner concluding a five-hour final at the French Open, the longest ever. And in the women's, after a rocky start, Coco Gauff turned it around to defeat Aryna Sabalenka making her the first American to take home the title since Serena Williams a decade ago. Phwoah. Now let's keep that win streak going with our Australian Olympic champion, Jess Fox, who's snagged her 34th gold in the C1 at the Women's Canoe World Cup leg in Spain. And let's finish with a plunge into a different kind of win with the 11th annual AFL Big Freeze. Every year, well-known Aussies dressed in costume of course, take to the slide and the icy cold waters at the bottom all to raise awareness for the fight against motor neurone disease. This year's dress code: "Iconic Australians". Gee, you get cold just watching it, don't you? Dino Footprints Reporter: Tatenda Chibika INTRO: Now to rural Queensland, where some school kids have found out more about a very special rock that sits in their foyer, which, apparently, has one of the highest concentrations of dinosaur footprints ever seen in Australia. Here's Tatenda with more. STUDENT: I was absolutely shocked; I thought this boulder was fake. STUDENT: I was pretty shocked that the fossil was really important STUDENT: I had no clue. It's honestly just another rock to me STUDENT: I just thought it was a normal display in the office, nothing important really. From a distance, this slab of rock at Biloela State High isn't much to look at. David Hall, Deputy Principal: You walk past it every day, you talk to kids every day and you have very different conversations and it's just a backdrop to everything we do in our school. In the early 2000s, a Geologist saved it from being destroyed in a nearby mine and donated to the school. But that's not what makes this old rock interesting. If you look closely, there are dinosaur footprints on it a lot of them. Dr Romilio, Palaeontologist: Hi, my name is Dr Anthony Romilio. I'm a palaeontologist from the University of Queensland. And when he finds out about it Dr Romilio drove 6 hours to get a look. Dr Romilio: The rock itself is around 200 million years old, so in the lower part of the Jurassic. He used a silicon mould to make a copy of the fossil and studied it in his lab. That's where he discovered the slab had 66 footprints on it he says they came from an Anomoepus scambus dinosaur. Dr Romilio: Overseas, they've kind of done the hard work for us where they've done the Cinderella effect where they've matched the Dinosaur foot bones to this particular shape of footprint and so that's why we know these were made by a bipedal, a two legged, small dinosaur known as an Ornithischian. Dr Romilio reckons these guys were moving at around six kilometres per hour and used the slab like a highway. Dr Romilio: Most of them are heading this direction or that direction which kind of indicates to us that they were either crossing a river this way or that way or maybe they were going up and down a river. This discovery is a pretty big deal because it's rare to find Dinosaur fossils from the early Jurassic period and it's not only palaeontologists who are excited about uncovering this part of our dino history. The school is working with Dr Romilio to make a copy of the fossil so they can share this find with even more people. STUDENT: It's so exciting that our school has been recognised for such a such an old fossil and now it's just I want to know more about what dinosaurs were here and how many more. STUDENT: There's no way that they just disappeared and there's no other continuation of where their footprints are. So, I think that if you were to dig deep enough or go looking hard enough, you'd definitely find some. STUDENT: We should all start a big search for more fossils because I'm just quite excited that this could bring the community together. Closer Well, that's all we have for you, but we'll be back next week with more. In the meantime, you can catch Newsbreak every weeknight right here in the studio and there's plenty to see and do on our website. Have an awesome week and I'll see you next time. Bye.

Violent clashes in Los Angeles
Violent clashes in Los Angeles

ABC News

time4 hours ago

  • ABC News

Violent clashes in Los Angeles

Annie Guest: First, California's Governor Gavin Newsom has announced he'll sue the Trump administration for deploying the National Guard in Los Angeles without consulting him first. As protests continue for the third day on the streets of LA over Donald Trump's immigration policy, tensions flared when the President brought in soldiers from the US Armed Forces Reserve. Legal experts argue the President is authorised to do so under certain circumstances, but this is different. Kathleen O'Connor reports. Kathleen O'Connor: Gunshots echo through the streets of Los Angeles as thousands of angry protesters respond to President Donald Trump's extraordinary deployment of 2,000 National Guard troops in downtown LA. Protesters blocked a major freeway and set fire to numerous cars. Police fought back, using tear gas and rubber bullets in an attempt to control the crowd. Channel 9's US correspondent Lauren Tomasi was among the chaos and was shot in the leg live on TV. The ABC spoke to her afterwards. Lauren Tomasi: Look, I did get hit by a rubber bullet and we were caught on the side. We were standing out of police way. But unfortunately, you know that we are reporting from the scene. But we are safe now. Kathleen O'Connor: Lauren Tomasi says it's still an unfolding situation. Lauren Tomasi: I'm in the heart of downtown LA now and there are still protesters who are lining the overpass of the highway right now. I'm looking at a few dozen riot police standing at the entrance to the 101 freeway. It's a major freeway in the heart of LA and it runs right up California. It's been shut down because protesters were on there. It feels like things may have cooled off a little bit at the moment. At one stage, there were three vehicles that were burning as police were trying to push these protesters back. But it's just been so much emotion and so much anger in LA. Kathleen O'Connor: The clashes came on the third day of demonstrations against immigration raids carried out as part of Donald Trump's crackdown. But things escalated when President Trump deployed the National Guard, something he says was necessary to uphold law and order. Lauren Tomasi: There is just so much pushback right now against the Donald Trump administration because it is the US president who ordered in the National Guard and Los Angeles residents very much for the most part are against that. This is a democratic city pushing back against a Republican government. Kathleen O'Connor: Typically, a state's National Guard force is activated by the president at the request of the governor. According to American think tank the Brennan Center for Justice, this deployment marks the first time in six decades a state's National Guard was activated without a request from its governor. Political leaders are divided mainly along party lines over whether the president was justified in bringing them in. Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass says it's a dangerous escalation. Karen Bass: What we're seeing in LA is chaos caused by the administration. People should exercise their right to protest. That's their First Amendment right. Kathleen O'Connor: California Governor Gavin Newsom called the National Guard deployment unlawful and formally requested that the Trump administration withdraw its troops. He spoke on television network MSNBC. Robert Brokenshire: Donald Trump needs to pull back. He needs to stand down. Donald Trump is inflaming these conditions. Kathleen O'Connor: President Trump is only allowed to request the National Guard in certain circumstances. President Trump claims the protests in Los Angeles constitute a rebellion against the authority of the government of the United States. Jean Reese is the co-director of the University of South California's Immigration Clinic and an associate professor of law. Jean Reese: The last time that the federal government deployed the National Guard without the request of that state was in 1957 in order to segregate schools where the governor of Arkansas has said, I'm not going to follow federal law. This is a very different situation. So it is likely unlawful to deploy. And I think this is part of kind of creating a spectacle and narrative for the Trump administration to make an example of Los Angeles. Kathleen O'Connor: Los Angeles police say they've made dozens of arrests in the days since the protests began. Annie Guest: Kathleen O'Connor reporting.

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