logo
Australia news live: white supremacist organisation reportedly listed as terror group; fatal stabbing of Sydney man investigated

Australia news live: white supremacist organisation reportedly listed as terror group; fatal stabbing of Sydney man investigated

The Guardian4 hours ago

Update:
Date:
Title: Welcome
Content: Good morning and welcome to our live news blog. I'm Martin Farrer with the best of the overnight stories before Rafqa Touma takes you through the day.
The Albanese government has reportedly listed white supremacist network Terrorgram as a terrorist organisation. Penny Wong announced sanctions on the group earlier this year. The home affairs minister, Tony Burke, will have more to say on that soon.
The big domestic political event of the day comes in Canberra with a joint Coalition party room meeting to discuss reforms and the federal election review. Our report this morning tells us that Sussan Ley will be seeking a more inclusive policymaking process in order to avoid the mistakes of the Dutton era. We'll have more coming up.
And as we reported earlier in the week, staffers from the offices of the New South Wales premier, Chris Minns, and the police minister, Yasmin Catley, have agreed to appear before a parliamentary inquiry into the Dural caravan 'fake terrorism plot' today – we'll have more on that.
Update:
Date: 2025-06-26T21:09:00.000Z
Title: Martin Farrer
Content: Thank you for getting the blog rolling this morning. I'll be updating you from here – let's go.
Update:
Date: 2025-06-26T21:02:52.000Z
Title: Sydney man dies from stab wounds in driveway
Content: NSW police are investigating after a man died from stabbing wounds in Sydney overnight.
Police were called to Pemulwuy in Sydney's west at around 10.45pm on Thursday, they said in a statement, after reports a man 'believed to be aged in his 20s' was found wounded in a house driveway.
He was treated by paramedics but was unable to be revived and died at the scene, police said.
Update:
Date: 2025-06-26T21:02:28.000Z
Title: Welcome
Content: Good morning and welcome to our live news blog. I'm Martin Farrer with the best of the overnight stories before Rafqa Touma takes you through the day.
The Albanese government has reportedly listed white supremacist network Terrorgram as a terrorist organisation. Penny Wong announced sanctions on the group earlier this year. The home affairs minister, Tony Burke, will have more to say on that soon.
The big domestic political event of the day comes in Canberra with a joint Coalition party room meeting to discuss reforms and the federal election review. Our report this morning tells us that Sussan Ley will be seeking a more inclusive policymaking process in order to avoid the mistakes of the Dutton era. We'll have more coming up.
And as we reported earlier in the week, staffers from the offices of the New South Wales premier, Chris Minns, and the police minister, Yasmin Catley, have agreed to appear before a parliamentary inquiry into the Dural caravan 'fake terrorism plot' today – we'll have more on that.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Donald Trump's thinly-veiled threat to Anthony Albanese over defence spending
Donald Trump's thinly-veiled threat to Anthony Albanese over defence spending

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Donald Trump's thinly-veiled threat to Anthony Albanese over defence spending

Australia should boost its defence spending in line with NATO partners, according to a new diktat from the White House which sets Anthony Albanese on a collision course with Donald Trump, who he is yet to meet. Members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation - which Australia is not a part of - agreed to lift their defence spending to 5 per cent of GDP over 10 years during a summit in The Hague, the Netherlands, this week. The move was triggered by pressure from the US President who had has long called for European allies to boost their defence spending. It was a win for Trump who had his ego massaged at the meeting of world leaders when Nato Chief Mark Rutte referred to him as 'daddy'. But now the US Commander-in-Chief has indicated he expects his allies in the Asia-Pacific - including Australia - to also increase their defence funding. 'Yeah, look, if our allies in Europe and our NATO allies can do that, I think our allies and our friends in the Asia Pacific region can do it as well,' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Friday. Ms Leavitt said she would leave the 'specific relations and discussions' for individual countries to Trump. This means that Albanese may be pressured to increase defence spending if he hopes to secure a carve-out from the punishing tariffs imposed by the US on imports, including a 50 per cent levy on steel and aluminium. He will also be hoping to shore up the $368bn AUKUS submarine deal, which is currently under threat from a 30-day review by the Pentagon. The Australian government is weighing up whether to increase its defence funding from 2 per cent of GDP but has so far resisted the 3.5 per cent US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth has been pushing for. Spain was the only NATO member not to agree to lift its defence spending above 2.1 per cent of GDP, with Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez arguing it was 'incompatible with our welfare state and our vision of the world'. This triggered Trump's ire, with the US President vowing to hit Spain with higher tariffs. 'They want a little bit of a free ride, but they'll have to pay it back to us on trade, because I'm not going to let that happen,' Trump said. Albanese's planned meeting with Trump at the G7 summit in Canada failed to eventuate when the US President had to dash back to Washington to deal with the Israel-Iran crisis. Many had expected him to go in Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles place to the NATO summit this week to secure a meeting but instead he stayed in Australian. Marles risked Trump's ire by insisting Australia would not follow NATO members by lifting its defence spending to five per cent of GDP. 'Look, obviously, a very significant decision has been made here in relation to European defence spending, and that is fundamentally a matter for NATO,' Marles said. 'We've gone through our own process of assessing our strategic landscape, assessing the threats that exist there, and the kind of defence force we need to build in order to meet those threats, to meet the strategic moment, and then to resource that. 'And what that has seen is the biggest peacetime increase in Australian Defence spending. 'Now that is a story which is... understood here and we'll continue to assess what our needs are going forward. And as our prime minister has said, we will resource that.' Marles did not speak directly with Mr Trump, nor US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, despite intensive efforts by government officials to tee up a first face-to-face meeting of an Australian minister with the US President. Opposition Defence spokesman Angus Taylor called on the government to lift defence spending by at least three per cent of GDP on Friday morning.

Twist as street cleaner sacked for refusing to do an Acknowledgement of Country was out playing GOLF while his fed-up boss completed mandatory racism modules on his behalf
Twist as street cleaner sacked for refusing to do an Acknowledgement of Country was out playing GOLF while his fed-up boss completed mandatory racism modules on his behalf

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Twist as street cleaner sacked for refusing to do an Acknowledgement of Country was out playing GOLF while his fed-up boss completed mandatory racism modules on his behalf

A street cleaner who won an unfair dismissal claim after being sacked for objecting to an Acknowledgement of Country never completed mandatory racism modules for the council because he was on leave playing golf at the time. Shaun Turner was dismissed by the Darebin City Council in Melbourne 's inner north after he questioned why the ceremony was being performed at his weekly meeting. 'If you need to be thanking anyone, it's the people who have worn the uniform and fought for our country to keep us free,' he said. But the Fair Work Commission's Deputy President Richard Clancy found Mr Turner's statements were not delivered in the manner or tone alleged by the council. The decision from Mr Clancy, included yet another alarming detail. The council used a 'Record of Learning Report' in its defence to show Mr Turner had completed online training modules, including on racial discrimination, in relation to the council's Equal Employment Policy and Code of Conduct in March 2023. But Mr Turner disputed this, with unchallenged evidence revealing the street cleaner was on leave playing golf when the training allegedly took place. Instead, his team leader allegedly completed the modules for him after growing 'annoyed' by notifications sent to him outlining that they had not yet been completed. Mr Turner told the commission 'he could not have completed these e-courses... because he did not have access to a computer while on leave'. The council maintained that the 'Record of Learning Report' could only have been generated as a result of the use of Mr Turner's private credentials at the specific times and dates. 'Mr Turner's response to this was that his team leader knew his password,' the decision noted. The new details come as workplace legal expert Andrew Stewart slammed the council's behaviour as a 'case study in how not to go about a dismissal'. 'The council really should have been aware that this was likely to be pursued and should have been more careful about the way they went through the process,' Mr Stewart told The Australian. 'But clearly the commission wasn't satisfied that they even reached the point of establishing a valid reason for dismissal, let alone went about the dismissal in a fair way.' Daily Mail Australia has contacted Darebin City Council about the Record of Learning Report and to ask whether Mr Turner has been reinstated. It was during the toolbox meeting on April 17, 2024, that Mr Turner reportedly said people should be thanking veterans rather than performing the Acknowledgement. 'It's getting out of hand and people are losing it, it is now being done at the opening of a postage stamp,' he said. Council officers investigated Mr Turner's alleged 'serious misconduct', but he doubled down. 'As far as I know half of us are born here, I don't need to be welcomed to my own country. If people don't want to be there, they can leave,' Mr Turner told council officers. Mr Turner also told officers that an Acknowledgement of Country should be reserved for more formal or international occasions. At another meeting, Council Chief People Officer Yvette Fuller told Mr Turner that there was a firm expectation for an Acknowledgement of Country to precede all formal meetings. 'Why didn't we do it in this meeting then?' Mr Turner hit back. 'I won't disrupt it but I want to be asked if I would like you to give me the courtesy to step outside,' he replied. In his termination letter, Darebin City Council alleged during the May 21, 2024 meeting that Mr Turner had said 'the Acknowledgement of Country is not necessary'. The council further alleged Mr Turner said Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders 'do not deserve an acknowledgement at the start of meetings'. But Mr Clancy was not persuaded Mr Turner said either 'The Acknowledgment of Country is not necessary' or that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders 'do not deserve an acknowledgment at the start of meetings'. 'I am satisfied, however, that Mr Turner made a comment to the effect that if anyone was to be acknowledged or thanked at a toolbox meeting, it should be the servicemen and women who had fought for this country (i.e. Australia),' he said. 'But I do not consider that expressing such an opinion constitutes a valid reason for dismissal.' In his testimony, Mr Turner claimed he was 'being made out to be a racist'. 'I've got to say that I was brought up in Broadmeadows. I come from a family of eight. My best friends out at Broadmeadows happen to be Aboriginal [people], one of them marrying my sister,' he said. 'I have a niece and great-niece and nephews who are all Aboriginal.' The Fair Work Commission will hold a subsequent hearing to consider Mr Turner's request for reinstatement and determine the remedy for the unfair dismissal.

Teenage boy charged with murder after allegedly stabbing man during Brisbane house party
Teenage boy charged with murder after allegedly stabbing man during Brisbane house party

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Teenage boy charged with murder after allegedly stabbing man during Brisbane house party

A teenager has been charged with murder after a man was allegedly stabbed in an upmarket inner city Brisbane suburb during a house party. The boy, 15, is accused of attacking the 58-year-old at a large home in Clayfield on Thursday night. When Queensland police went to the house in the leafy, tree-lined street they found a large group of teenagers, as well as the body. The man and boy were known to each other, police will allege. The boy was charged with one count of domestic violence-related murder and refused police bail to appear in a children's court on Friday. More details soon … In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is on 13 11 14 and the national family violence counselling service is on 1800 737 732. In the UK, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123 and the domestic abuse helpline is 0808 2000 247. In the US, the suicide prevention lifeline is 988 and the domestic violence hotline is 1-800-799-SAFE (7233). Other international helplines can be found via

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