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Coalition split will allow Liberals to modernise their policies

Coalition split will allow Liberals to modernise their policies

In announcing a split with the Liberals, National Party leader David Littleproud said the time apart was 'for us to be better' (' Coalition broken: Nationals split with Liberals ', May 20). Honest talking – it's not you, it's me. The Liberals will now be free to craft energy and climate-change policies that have a contemporary look and feel to them. All well and good, but what happens when the Nationals get lonely again and front up with more right-wing policies. I'll bet Sussan Ley just can't wait. Joe Weller, Mittagong
So it's official – the Liberal Party has cleaved from the National Party. I sincerely hope the anti-Labor political parties (for that is essentially what they are) can get their act together because Australia needs a credible opposition to avoid the dangers of a one-party state. Democracy is such a precious commodity that it must be guarded jealously by everyone on both sides of the political spectrum. Pasquale Vartuli, Wahroonga
Much has been said about the Liberals' difficulties with women. Watching the news conference with David Littleproud, these problems pale in comparison to the Nationals' stance. David Littleproud spoke in the most patronising way about Sussan Ley, as though she was a naughty girl needing to do her punishment and admit her transgressions before he would consider allowing the Liberals to rejoin a Coalition. He even referred to her as a 'lady' rather than the more respectful 'woman' at one stage. It was a master class in misogyny from the Nationals. Toni Lorentzen, Fennell Bay
So much for the Nationals' vow to listen to the people. Splitting over nuclear power was plain stupid because nuclear power was never going to happen. It's entirely possible that the Nationals will self-destruct. However, provided Sussan Ley is able to prevent a civil war in her party, the Liberals have a chance of recovering sooner rather than later. Graham Lum, North Rocks
The Nationals are now no more than an activist right-wing party with less power and influence than the Greens on the left. Shooting themselves in the foot is a predilection they have had for a while now. And well done, Sussan Ley, for standing your ground in answer to nonsensical demands. You are principled and so unlike Angus Taylor. The Nationals continue to be the party that keeps giving to a Labor Party determined to cement itself as the party representing middle Australia, wherever they live. Wendy Atkins, Cooks Hill
The split in the Coalition signals that the now more successful Nationals see their boat tethered to populist parties. Littleproud says they won't fight over crumbs, so you can bet they want the full buffet. This means they'll play for more fringe city seats with the hope of preferences from right-wing populists. Christopher Hill, Kensington
The Nationals are now on their own and therefore a minor party. The Greens are no longer the minor party but clearly the third force in parliament, with more members than the Nats. Looks like more was lost than first thought. Richard Lynch, Belbora
I agree with correspondent Brendan Jones that no party should view itself as the natural party of good government (Letters, May 20). We have heard this claim from the Coalition for decades and judging by recent comments from shell-shocked MPs, they still believe this. They had three years since 2022 to form a credible opposition and seemingly sat on their hands believing their Trumpian leader would bully the electorate into returning them to their rightful position in government. Well, the Nationals have taken a historic stand, so Liberals, it's time to keep quiet and concentrate on getting your house in order behind closed doors before you lose even more credibility. You were actually never the natural party of government. James Allison, Dover Heights
Israel outrage too little too late
Your headline reads (' Australia blasts Israel in joint statement demanding aid for starving Gazans ', May 20). This is not a blast. This is a bleat coming three months after Israel stopped all food entering into Gaza and weeks after the first pictures of emaciated children started appearing on our screens. It is widely accepted, including by the ICC, that Israel is committing war crimes in Palestine. To issue a 'statement' at this juncture appears to be more window-dressing so future generations will not judge their inaction, rather than any real desire to seek justice for Palestine. Gina Hay, Bayview
The ad hominem pile-on in response to Jamie Hyams's letter (Letters, May 20) simply shows how upset some people get when presented with facts that expose the flaws in their preferred narrative. That's hardly a surprise in today's polarised and increasingly uncivil public sphere, but I am surprised by how unwilling these letter writers seem to accept that Hamas bears any responsibility for the tragic plight of Gaza's civilians. Do those who condemn Israel and demand it refrain from further attacks really want Hamas to remain in control of Gaza and continue their long, sordid history of oppressing Gaza's people, stealing their aid and regularly starting disastrous wars? If not, how else do they propose the Hamas scourge be removed and replaced with an administration that rules for the benefit of Gaza's people, rather than pursuing, at all costs, a genocidal, terrorist ideology? Athol Morris, Forde (ACT)
Those who still press for a two-state solution should listen to Israel. In statement after statement, Israel has been adamant – they will not accept a two-state solution. We should believe them. So what options does that leave? There are only three. A one-state solution with equal rights for all – anathema to Israel given the demographics – or one state with unequal rights, which would be equally unpalatable. From Israel's point of view, it would seem the best option is to get rid of everyone in Gaza. With the relentless bombing, destruction of all infrastructure, the killing and terrorising of civilians, it seems obvious which option they have chosen. Yet, in the face of that, we stay silent. Shame on us. Hans Knutzelius, Balmain
Bradfield recount
We know democracy is a messy business, but if Gisele Kapterian had any sense of fair play she would concede defeat now (' Teal edges ahead in Bradfield ', May 19). If Liberal voters had known that she was being actively supported by a religious sect during the election, many may not have voted for her. So if she 'wins' it will be with the accusation that it was by dubious means. While she's a perfectly nice person, she was thrown in at the last minute under the tagline 'international lawyer'. Democracy is being sorely tested by the 50 per cent rule; candidates should have to get at least 60 per cent to achieve the unequivocal acceptance of their electorate. James Cryer, Castlecrag
Logging off
After reading the report on the loss-making state forest logging by Forestry Corp, I am pleased that the delays caused by months of rain up here were blamed (' MPs call for state government to end its 'fiscally irrational' logging ', May 19). I will now stop whining about the weather and hope it keeps them from logging. Congratulations to the crossbenchers, who are very sensibly opposing the practice in all native forests. Kris McKeon, Goonellabah
Berejiklian's rail fail
Sydney peak hour trains may well run late on a regular basis (' Rail fail as commuters hit by peak hour delays ', May 18) but the blowout in costs of the rail system, particularly the new Mariyung intercity commuter trains, can be sheeted home to the previous Liberal government, particularly to then-transport minister and former premier Gladys Berejiklian who, in a politically ideological agenda, had the new trains ordered as driver-only. The impasse with the rail union was only resolved when then-premier Dominic Perrottet was facing re-election. His government could hardly have had the then-opposition saying that he couldn't even get the trains to run, let alone on time. The decision to require a guard, responsible for monitoring the complex computerised operation of the train, along with providing first aid to passengers when required, meant that hundreds of millions of dollars are being spent to retrofit the new rolling stock. Saint Gladys? I don't think so. Murray McLachlan, Wyong
Bradley Wynne from Croydon must be pulling our leg (Letters, May 20). He lists a series of problems associated with transport projects, then has the temerity to suggest a whole new department will solve these, as if bureaucracy is the solution to all perceived ills. I, for one, am glad to be able to catch the CBD light rail to work every day. The Parramatta light rail is actually already operating. The Opal card has been extremely well received after the bungled T-Card before it. Sydney's ferries have excellent on-time running and performance. The trains that are 'too wide' are actually the width of every other train. The tunnels themselves were not to the network's standard, and have been widened. And the new airport with a new rail link, well, that will be the first major airport in Australia to open with one, and before Melbourne even gets one to boot. As for departments to review things, we already have one – the NSW Audit Office. Sydney should celebrate how far our transport system has come in the past decade, while acknowledging there is plenty more work to do. Sometimes doing big things is difficult and complicated, but not doing them leaves us far worse off. And there is clearly far more that needs to be done. Ash Roth, Sydney
Wendy Cousins of Balgownie raises an issue dear to the hearts of most people in regional areas (Letters, May 20). Try getting to Tenterfield. You can get a daily train to Armidale from Sydney – in eight hours – but if you want to go further north forget it. The line from Tenterfield to Armidale has not been operational for 22 years. Residents needing to see a doctor, dentist or even get to a boarding school need someone to drive them to Armidale. With the 2032 Games looming, even people south of Tamworth are keen to see the line reopened to Wallangarra and on to Brisbane. Governments need to work together to remedy this woeful situation. Deni McKenzie, Armidale
Help the homeless
It is deeply disturbing to read about the extraordinary wealth in so few hands when so many Australians are homeless (' What you need to earn to be in the top 1 per cent in your Sydney suburb ', May 20). As a Sydneysider, I feel ashamed to see young and old alike sleeping rough under bridges and in shop doorways in the city. Close to my home, the homeless live in cars and vans near the beach while others live in makeshift camps in the bush, from where council moves them on from time to time. It gets worse each year. No one deserves to live like this. It's high time our government overhauled our tax system to share this wealth a little more equitably. Ingrid Haydon, Long Jetty
Biden was better
In his article (' Biden diagnosed with cancer', May 20), Michael Koziol relates that in the book Original Sin about the failure of Joe Biden's 2024 presidential campaign 'five people were running the country and Joe Biden was at best a senior member of the board'. Sounds like utopia to me compared to the scatterbrain amateurs now running the country and fiddling while countries burn. It is a sad outcome for a true gentleman. Lance Dover, Pretty Beach
Speak of the devil
What perfect timing. The very day after Ross Gittins' exquisite skewering of big business on the issue of productivity (' What businesspeople say about productivity is usually thinly disguised rent-seeking' ', May 19), we get Bran Black of the Business Council arguing that government needs to cut red tape, increase R&D tax incentives, address our retrograde taxation system and pursue fair and balanced industrial relations reform to make productivity progress (' Cutting red tape is essential for productivity boost ', May 20). Not a word from Mr Black about businesses being entrepreneurial and taking risks in the pursuit of profit – only ways for the government to 'help' big business be entrepreneurial and take risks. In other words, feather the big business nest. Ross Christ, Normanhurst
Big brothers
In his article on Australia becoming a hub for US AI, Peter Hatcher mentions unexplained communication devices found in Chinese made solar power equipment allowing outside control (' Australia could be a hub for US AI ', May 20). I wonder how many of the plethora of Chinese-made vehicles flooding our roads also have these instruments? Tesla is not our only big brother. John Elder, Brisbane (Qld)
Brimming with compliments
And here I am thinking how the PM was the only sensible person there in Rome wearing a hat under that sun (Letters, May 20). Elaine Hoyle, Avalon Beach
You correspondent failed to notice that many hats were worn at that service held in the blazing sun of Rome. Australia is the skin cancer capital of the world. Common sense is not cringeworthy – not protecting against skin cancer is. Selwyn Glynn, Paddington (Qld)
Rather than being criticised for donning an Akubra hat while sitting in the hot Roman sun, the prime minister should be applauded for showing the rest of the balding men attending the confirmation the importance of protecting their scalps from skin cancer. Jennifer McKay, Ashbury
Further to the 'cringeworthy' hat our PM wore, did you see the funny hats the Catholics were wearing? Wayne Fitness, Rankin Park
Unlike your correspondent who found Albo's headwear in Rome 'cringeworthy', I was pleased to see our dashing PM facing the world in such a stylish and sun-safe Australian way. Jill Merrin, Austinmer
Who needs enemies?
Barbara Chapman's comment, based on Freud's research, that the 'most intense enmity occurs ... between people(s) with a great deal in common' could also be applied to political parties. Tony Brownlow, Glebe
Gough the deep end
Correspondent Les Sisley's comment about a possible stroll across Lake Burley Griffin by the prime minister (Letters, May 20) brings to mind a story (possibly apocryphal) that Gough Whitlam related in the 1970s. Whitlam was bemoaning the constant negative press he was receiving at the time and to combat this he invited members of the press to watch him walk across Lake Burley Griffin. Headlines the following day screamed 'Whitlam can't swim!' Ken Webb, Epping
Yes, Les Sisley, but if Albo were to walk on Lake Burley Griffin, you can bet that the 'other paper' would be reporting 'Albo can't swim'. Ryszard Linkiewicz, Caringbah South

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The scrapping of a $2500 solar panel sweetener has been defended by a state energy minister after critics labelled the move a "slap in the face". As a federal battery subsidy kicks in on July 1, NSW will replace its home battery installation rebate with a smaller incentive to create more virtual power plants. The move comes as other states power down their own battery incentives. Virtual power plants connect solar-powered batteries owned by households and small businesses to the grid, allowing owners to generate ongoing revenue by selling the excess energy stored in their battery when demand is high. The NSW government argues households and businesses will benefit by stacking the new scheme - worth up to $1500 - on top of the federal program, which slashes up-front costs by about 30 per cent. "The real value of virtual power plants is that we don't waste energy that's in the batteries," NSW Energy Minister Penny Sharpe told AAP on Thursday. 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In Western Australia, solar battery customers are still able to receive both federal and state battery subsidies starting from July. But NSW follows other states turfing battery sweeteners. Victoria ended an interest-free solar battery loan worth $8800 in May while Queensland closed its $4000 battery rebate in December. Australia has the highest take-up of rooftop solar in the world, with panels on more than two million homes providing about 13 per cent of electricity needs for the national grid in the past year. The nation could slash $4 billion a year off power bills by the end of the decade if households embrace solar batteries in larger numbers, a Climate Council report found. The scrapping of a $2500 solar panel sweetener has been defended by a state energy minister after critics labelled the move a "slap in the face". As a federal battery subsidy kicks in on July 1, NSW will replace its home battery installation rebate with a smaller incentive to create more virtual power plants. The move comes as other states power down their own battery incentives. Virtual power plants connect solar-powered batteries owned by households and small businesses to the grid, allowing owners to generate ongoing revenue by selling the excess energy stored in their battery when demand is high. The NSW government argues households and businesses will benefit by stacking the new scheme - worth up to $1500 - on top of the federal program, which slashes up-front costs by about 30 per cent. "The real value of virtual power plants is that we don't waste energy that's in the batteries," NSW Energy Minister Penny Sharpe told AAP on Thursday. But renewable energy advocacy group Solar Citizens said ditching the state battery subsidy on June 30 was a "slap in the face" for solar panel owners. They were promised up to $2500 in addition to the federal program if they invested in a home battery. "This surprise decision is a blow to solar-home owners planning to buy a home battery in coming months," the group's chief executive Heidi Lee Douglas said. She described the rebate's removal as a "betrayal" of the Labor government's election promise of the federal Cheaper Home Batteries program, which can be topped up with state rebates. "We designed the Cheaper Home Batteries program to be stackable with state incentives, and it is," a spokesperson for Energy Minister Chris Bowen told AAP. The $2.3 billion federal government scheme will subsidise the up-front cost of installing eligible small-scale battery by about 30 per cent from July 1. In Western Australia, solar battery customers are still able to receive both federal and state battery subsidies starting from July. But NSW follows other states turfing battery sweeteners. Victoria ended an interest-free solar battery loan worth $8800 in May while Queensland closed its $4000 battery rebate in December. Australia has the highest take-up of rooftop solar in the world, with panels on more than two million homes providing about 13 per cent of electricity needs for the national grid in the past year. The nation could slash $4 billion a year off power bills by the end of the decade if households embrace solar batteries in larger numbers, a Climate Council report found. The scrapping of a $2500 solar panel sweetener has been defended by a state energy minister after critics labelled the move a "slap in the face". As a federal battery subsidy kicks in on July 1, NSW will replace its home battery installation rebate with a smaller incentive to create more virtual power plants. The move comes as other states power down their own battery incentives. Virtual power plants connect solar-powered batteries owned by households and small businesses to the grid, allowing owners to generate ongoing revenue by selling the excess energy stored in their battery when demand is high. The NSW government argues households and businesses will benefit by stacking the new scheme - worth up to $1500 - on top of the federal program, which slashes up-front costs by about 30 per cent. "The real value of virtual power plants is that we don't waste energy that's in the batteries," NSW Energy Minister Penny Sharpe told AAP on Thursday. But renewable energy advocacy group Solar Citizens said ditching the state battery subsidy on June 30 was a "slap in the face" for solar panel owners. They were promised up to $2500 in addition to the federal program if they invested in a home battery. "This surprise decision is a blow to solar-home owners planning to buy a home battery in coming months," the group's chief executive Heidi Lee Douglas said. She described the rebate's removal as a "betrayal" of the Labor government's election promise of the federal Cheaper Home Batteries program, which can be topped up with state rebates. "We designed the Cheaper Home Batteries program to be stackable with state incentives, and it is," a spokesperson for Energy Minister Chris Bowen told AAP. The $2.3 billion federal government scheme will subsidise the up-front cost of installing eligible small-scale battery by about 30 per cent from July 1. In Western Australia, solar battery customers are still able to receive both federal and state battery subsidies starting from July. But NSW follows other states turfing battery sweeteners. Victoria ended an interest-free solar battery loan worth $8800 in May while Queensland closed its $4000 battery rebate in December. Australia has the highest take-up of rooftop solar in the world, with panels on more than two million homes providing about 13 per cent of electricity needs for the national grid in the past year. The nation could slash $4 billion a year off power bills by the end of the decade if households embrace solar batteries in larger numbers, a Climate Council report found. The scrapping of a $2500 solar panel sweetener has been defended by a state energy minister after critics labelled the move a "slap in the face". As a federal battery subsidy kicks in on July 1, NSW will replace its home battery installation rebate with a smaller incentive to create more virtual power plants. The move comes as other states power down their own battery incentives. Virtual power plants connect solar-powered batteries owned by households and small businesses to the grid, allowing owners to generate ongoing revenue by selling the excess energy stored in their battery when demand is high. The NSW government argues households and businesses will benefit by stacking the new scheme - worth up to $1500 - on top of the federal program, which slashes up-front costs by about 30 per cent. "The real value of virtual power plants is that we don't waste energy that's in the batteries," NSW Energy Minister Penny Sharpe told AAP on Thursday. But renewable energy advocacy group Solar Citizens said ditching the state battery subsidy on June 30 was a "slap in the face" for solar panel owners. They were promised up to $2500 in addition to the federal program if they invested in a home battery. "This surprise decision is a blow to solar-home owners planning to buy a home battery in coming months," the group's chief executive Heidi Lee Douglas said. She described the rebate's removal as a "betrayal" of the Labor government's election promise of the federal Cheaper Home Batteries program, which can be topped up with state rebates. "We designed the Cheaper Home Batteries program to be stackable with state incentives, and it is," a spokesperson for Energy Minister Chris Bowen told AAP. The $2.3 billion federal government scheme will subsidise the up-front cost of installing eligible small-scale battery by about 30 per cent from July 1. In Western Australia, solar battery customers are still able to receive both federal and state battery subsidies starting from July. But NSW follows other states turfing battery sweeteners. Victoria ended an interest-free solar battery loan worth $8800 in May while Queensland closed its $4000 battery rebate in December. Australia has the highest take-up of rooftop solar in the world, with panels on more than two million homes providing about 13 per cent of electricity needs for the national grid in the past year. The nation could slash $4 billion a year off power bills by the end of the decade if households embrace solar batteries in larger numbers, a Climate Council report found.

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