Peter Dutton is done with U-turns, Anthony Albanese is over questions about the fall
Welcome back to your daily election wrap. Brett Worthington will catch you up on news from the campaign trail.
The question was simple.
Announcing the Coalition's domestic violence policy, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton was asked what was his message to Australian men about their responsibilities in this "crisis".
The answer started well, before quickly highlighting the struggle male leaders seem to have confronting this national scourge.
Dutton, as he often does, spoke about his experiences as a police offer and the tragic scenes he'd witnessed.
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He added that men needed to provide good examples to their children and sons and not walk past violence in the workplace or home. His attention then turned to social media, the role of pornography and computer games.
In focusing on younger people, his efforts might go some way towards helping future generations, but offer few solutions to a problem that's here and now.
One woman is killed every four days on average in Australia.
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Brett Worthington looks at the camera wearing a blue blazer and glasses
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For all the talk about crime in this campaign, little of it has been about where women and children are most at risk — in their homes.
Dutton was right when he said domestic violence was an issue that has "bedevilled us as not just a country but as a world for generations and generations and that upsets me".
But as is so often the case with this policy area across the political spectrum, it's left to female politicians to carry the can, as was the case at his press conference.
Dutton watched on as frontbenchers Sussan Ley, Michaelia Cash and Kerrynne Liddle explained the bulk of the Coalition's plan.
Michaelia Cash and Sussan Ley took the lead explaining the Coalition's domestic violence policies.
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ABC News: Ian Cutmore
)
Dutton no longer backing down
That same press conference also offered a reminder that the reverse gear has been ripped straight out of the Dutton campaign car.
Gone are the days of chucking the campaign into R and reversing over its earlier announcements, like the work-from-home capitulation.
Instead, it's D all the way, even if it comes with a U-turn or three, as was the case at today's press conference.
Peter Dutton is in no mood for reversing with just days left in the campaign.
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ABC News: Ian Cutmore
)
Yesterday, Dutton seemingly suggested the Coalition had no plans to move the capital of Israel from Tel Aviv to West Jerusalem. A spokesperson later issued a statement making clear the policy
was
to move the capital back to West Jerusalem.
Asked about it today, he refused to admit he'd misspoken.
He offered the same justification for an about-turn on an electric vehicle (EV) tax break.
On Monday, when asked if he would scrap EV subsidies, he told reporters "we don't have any proposals to change those settings".
The Liberal campaign opted for a drop of red after the morning's press conference.
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ABC News: Ian Cutmore
)
Within days, the fringe benefit tax exemption had gone the way of the dodo, not that Dutton was willing to admit the reversal.
"I think we're better off just to accept we have a difference of opinion but there has been no change in policy," he said.
And on the public service (and the policy that has haunted the Coalition all campaign), Dutton insisted 41,000 public service jobs
The trouble is, that is at odds with what the ACT Liberal senator has been saying and by the time you exclude frontline, national security and defence employees, you're fast running out of Canberra workers to sack.
Tripping over lines about falling
The prime minister too found himself in a twist while campaigning in the west.
For reasons that no one seems to understand, Anthony Albanese initially tried to suggest he hadn't fallen off a stage early in the campaign.
And look, that might be what his press office was telling him. The prime minister's official photographer was the only one not snapping when the PM went down.
Anthony Albanese took his campaign back to WA, where he hopes to win the new seat of Bullwinkel.
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ABC News: David Sciasci
)
The Coalition has seized on his explanation as a clear demonstration of a man loose with the truth.
When asked why it was important to him that he initially described it as a step, not a fall, Albanese took aim at the media and said it showed something about the Coalition's character that it criticised him about it.
The Coalition hadn't criticised Albanese for falling, but rather the lengths he and his ministers went to insisting he hadn't.
Anthony Albanese speaking with Kerry Stokes at a breakfast event.
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ABC News: David Sciasci
)
Meanwhile, decked in his beloved Hermes tie, the PM was snapped kissing the ring of media tycoon Kerry Stokes, one of the most powerful voices in the west, at a breakfast event that Albanese spoke at on Thursday morning.
Read more about the federal election:
Want even more? Here's where you can find all our 2025
Good day for...
Nationals candidate Sue Gilroy in the NSW Hunter region. The One Nation how-to-vote policy change sees her now second, not fifth, on the party's preferences.
Bad day for...
Voters trying to follow those how-to-vote cards, which seem to have been updated with a pen rather than re-printed as ABC News discovered while reporting from the region.
Who needs a re-print when you can updated the how-to-vote cards by pen.
(
Supplied
)
What to watch out for
Coalition votes in electorates that would get nuclear power stations.
Speaking at the National Press Club today, Nationals leader David Littleproud (who would be deputy PM in a Coalition government), said it didn't matter that Dutton wasn't visiting the seven sites, including one in Labor-held Hunter, this campaign.
"There's no need to go in an election campaign where you have already won the votes," Littleproud said.
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The Advertiser
an hour ago
- The Advertiser
New Lambton resident slept in car after landslide evacuation
A New Lambton resident affected by the landslide said she was forced to sleep in her car for several nights after her home was evacuated and deemed unsafe. Cynthia Yang spent June 13 removing items from her home with the help of removalists after hearing through the media about evacuated residences being looted in the past week. She was at work when her home was evacuated due to the landslide on May 23, but was alerted by housemates when they heard "cracking sounds". "My housemate just texted me," she said. "I thought it must have been a neighbour having a party, so I didn't really pay attention. "It wasn't until later on they sent me a photo of the backyard that I knew something was serious." Ms Yang is a renter and said she wasn't contacted by authorities about the evacuation. When she returned she was told she couldn't go in the house. "So I was sleeping in the car for the first two nights," she said. "When they hosted the first community meeting, my name wasn't on the list, so they probably didn't even know I was a resident here." Emergency accommodation has now been sorted for Ms Yang, but she said the situation had been a "struggle". "They said initially it was for three weeks and we might get a chance to extend it, but I'm not 100 per cent sure," she said. "I haven't been told yet. "So every week we're just living week by week. I'm still trying to find property to rent, but until today they told me there was no access to get my stuff. "They have given us a few chances to go in, just for essential items but it's like 30 minutes minutes each time and they give you short notice. Also you have to really work around your work and study time. "I've actually spent more money than my regular week with moving - I've relocated to a motel where you can't cook, you can't do washing, you have to pay for it or you have to ask your friend to do a favour." Ms Yang was in the process of moving her belongings to a storage unit on June 13. "It is hard," she said. "I'm a migrant, so there's a lot of about the Australian system I don't really know. So, I'm just trying to find my way." The Newcastle Herald recently reported residents were facing months longer out of their homes as below-ground geotechnical assessment was expected to take about 20 weeks. An update on the City of Newcastle website on June 10 said the landslide said residents had been advised of the expected timeframe and process for the detailed engineering investigations that are required to determine a plan for the impacted properties. "We also confirmed that we will provide relevant information to insurers to support residents in their claims, including claims related to medium to long-term accommodation for the period while the investigations are carried out and recommendations are developed for the long-term safety and management of the site," the update said. "We will add further information when we can as we work through the emergency response, and as we transition to the recovery phase." A New Lambton resident affected by the landslide said she was forced to sleep in her car for several nights after her home was evacuated and deemed unsafe. Cynthia Yang spent June 13 removing items from her home with the help of removalists after hearing through the media about evacuated residences being looted in the past week. She was at work when her home was evacuated due to the landslide on May 23, but was alerted by housemates when they heard "cracking sounds". "My housemate just texted me," she said. "I thought it must have been a neighbour having a party, so I didn't really pay attention. "It wasn't until later on they sent me a photo of the backyard that I knew something was serious." Ms Yang is a renter and said she wasn't contacted by authorities about the evacuation. When she returned she was told she couldn't go in the house. "So I was sleeping in the car for the first two nights," she said. "When they hosted the first community meeting, my name wasn't on the list, so they probably didn't even know I was a resident here." Emergency accommodation has now been sorted for Ms Yang, but she said the situation had been a "struggle". "They said initially it was for three weeks and we might get a chance to extend it, but I'm not 100 per cent sure," she said. "I haven't been told yet. "So every week we're just living week by week. I'm still trying to find property to rent, but until today they told me there was no access to get my stuff. "They have given us a few chances to go in, just for essential items but it's like 30 minutes minutes each time and they give you short notice. Also you have to really work around your work and study time. "I've actually spent more money than my regular week with moving - I've relocated to a motel where you can't cook, you can't do washing, you have to pay for it or you have to ask your friend to do a favour." Ms Yang was in the process of moving her belongings to a storage unit on June 13. "It is hard," she said. "I'm a migrant, so there's a lot of about the Australian system I don't really know. So, I'm just trying to find my way." The Newcastle Herald recently reported residents were facing months longer out of their homes as below-ground geotechnical assessment was expected to take about 20 weeks. An update on the City of Newcastle website on June 10 said the landslide said residents had been advised of the expected timeframe and process for the detailed engineering investigations that are required to determine a plan for the impacted properties. "We also confirmed that we will provide relevant information to insurers to support residents in their claims, including claims related to medium to long-term accommodation for the period while the investigations are carried out and recommendations are developed for the long-term safety and management of the site," the update said. "We will add further information when we can as we work through the emergency response, and as we transition to the recovery phase." A New Lambton resident affected by the landslide said she was forced to sleep in her car for several nights after her home was evacuated and deemed unsafe. Cynthia Yang spent June 13 removing items from her home with the help of removalists after hearing through the media about evacuated residences being looted in the past week. She was at work when her home was evacuated due to the landslide on May 23, but was alerted by housemates when they heard "cracking sounds". "My housemate just texted me," she said. "I thought it must have been a neighbour having a party, so I didn't really pay attention. "It wasn't until later on they sent me a photo of the backyard that I knew something was serious." Ms Yang is a renter and said she wasn't contacted by authorities about the evacuation. When she returned she was told she couldn't go in the house. "So I was sleeping in the car for the first two nights," she said. "When they hosted the first community meeting, my name wasn't on the list, so they probably didn't even know I was a resident here." Emergency accommodation has now been sorted for Ms Yang, but she said the situation had been a "struggle". "They said initially it was for three weeks and we might get a chance to extend it, but I'm not 100 per cent sure," she said. "I haven't been told yet. "So every week we're just living week by week. I'm still trying to find property to rent, but until today they told me there was no access to get my stuff. "They have given us a few chances to go in, just for essential items but it's like 30 minutes minutes each time and they give you short notice. Also you have to really work around your work and study time. "I've actually spent more money than my regular week with moving - I've relocated to a motel where you can't cook, you can't do washing, you have to pay for it or you have to ask your friend to do a favour." Ms Yang was in the process of moving her belongings to a storage unit on June 13. "It is hard," she said. "I'm a migrant, so there's a lot of about the Australian system I don't really know. So, I'm just trying to find my way." The Newcastle Herald recently reported residents were facing months longer out of their homes as below-ground geotechnical assessment was expected to take about 20 weeks. An update on the City of Newcastle website on June 10 said the landslide said residents had been advised of the expected timeframe and process for the detailed engineering investigations that are required to determine a plan for the impacted properties. "We also confirmed that we will provide relevant information to insurers to support residents in their claims, including claims related to medium to long-term accommodation for the period while the investigations are carried out and recommendations are developed for the long-term safety and management of the site," the update said. "We will add further information when we can as we work through the emergency response, and as we transition to the recovery phase." A New Lambton resident affected by the landslide said she was forced to sleep in her car for several nights after her home was evacuated and deemed unsafe. Cynthia Yang spent June 13 removing items from her home with the help of removalists after hearing through the media about evacuated residences being looted in the past week. She was at work when her home was evacuated due to the landslide on May 23, but was alerted by housemates when they heard "cracking sounds". "My housemate just texted me," she said. "I thought it must have been a neighbour having a party, so I didn't really pay attention. "It wasn't until later on they sent me a photo of the backyard that I knew something was serious." Ms Yang is a renter and said she wasn't contacted by authorities about the evacuation. When she returned she was told she couldn't go in the house. "So I was sleeping in the car for the first two nights," she said. "When they hosted the first community meeting, my name wasn't on the list, so they probably didn't even know I was a resident here." Emergency accommodation has now been sorted for Ms Yang, but she said the situation had been a "struggle". "They said initially it was for three weeks and we might get a chance to extend it, but I'm not 100 per cent sure," she said. "I haven't been told yet. "So every week we're just living week by week. I'm still trying to find property to rent, but until today they told me there was no access to get my stuff. "They have given us a few chances to go in, just for essential items but it's like 30 minutes minutes each time and they give you short notice. Also you have to really work around your work and study time. "I've actually spent more money than my regular week with moving - I've relocated to a motel where you can't cook, you can't do washing, you have to pay for it or you have to ask your friend to do a favour." Ms Yang was in the process of moving her belongings to a storage unit on June 13. "It is hard," she said. "I'm a migrant, so there's a lot of about the Australian system I don't really know. So, I'm just trying to find my way." The Newcastle Herald recently reported residents were facing months longer out of their homes as below-ground geotechnical assessment was expected to take about 20 weeks. An update on the City of Newcastle website on June 10 said the landslide said residents had been advised of the expected timeframe and process for the detailed engineering investigations that are required to determine a plan for the impacted properties. "We also confirmed that we will provide relevant information to insurers to support residents in their claims, including claims related to medium to long-term accommodation for the period while the investigations are carried out and recommendations are developed for the long-term safety and management of the site," the update said. "We will add further information when we can as we work through the emergency response, and as we transition to the recovery phase."


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- ABC News
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Sydney Morning Herald
5 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Government relying on Latham for workers' compensation reforms
Maverick MP Mark Latham has indicated he is open to supporting the government's workers' compensation reforms, but only with a raft of amendments, while the Coalition hopes it can roll back a tightening of criteria for long-term payouts. The public accountability and works committee received a confidential briefing from Treasurer Daniel Mookhey and bureaucrats on Thursday, aiming to allay concerns about the drivers of Labor's plan to curtail access to compensation for psychological injuries. Two years after Premier Chris Minns refused to work with Latham, the dynamics of the seven-person committee have left the rogue MP with the casting vote on whether the legislation will return for a vote during budget week, in late June, or whether the inquiry continues indefinitely. After the government's reforms were referred for a second interrogation by a parliamentary inquiry, their fate hinged in part on Thursday's briefing. Mookhey has said that without reform the system will collapse while rising premiums push businesses under. But the Coalition, Greens and upper house independents have questioned government efforts to jam the legislation through parliament, particularly given a key plank of the reforms would cut off compensation for some of the state's sickest workers. Loading The second inquiry was established to allow crossbenchers to interrogate assumptions underpinning Mookhey's reforms. A public hearing will take place on Tuesday, a month after a snap inquiry heard only 27 of the hundreds of employees impaired by workplace psychological injury each year would be eligible to claim long-term benefits under the minimum 31 per cent Whole of Person Impairment (WPI) rating proposed by the government. Describing Thursday's briefing as 'fairly useful', Latham said some aspects of the workers' compensation reforms introduced by the Victorian Labor government in March 2024 were superior as they dealt with the long-term structural problem of nebulous claims, where the link between injury and a claimant's work is unclear. While he would prefer the bill to be voted on by June's end, Latham said he would not rubber stamp the legislation, seeking to amend it to include the 'best of the Victorian reforms', including tightening definitions around bullying and harassment to restrict claims.