‘Frightening' clip of Emmanuel Macron getting shoved in the face sending ‘wrong message'
Outgoing Liberal Senator Hollie Hughes has analysed footage of French President Emmanuel Macron being shoved in the face by his wife, Brigitte.
'I just think it's frightening footage – there's going to be more and more questions to be asked about this,' she told Sky News host Sharri Markson.
'It's sending the wrong message.'

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Perth Now
2 hours ago
- Perth Now
Liberal MP complaint referred to anti-corruption body
A Liberal MP has been referred to an anti-corruption body over an offer that could have deferred a former party's whopping legal bill in exchange for guaranteed preselection. A member of the public made a complaint about Victorian Liberal Moira Deeming to the state's Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission (IBAC) after reports of the proposed deal, which fell over. Anyone can make a referral to IBAC but that does do not automatically trigger a full investigation, with the body aiming to assess all complaints within 45 days. Former Liberal leader John Pesutto owes $2.3 million in legal costs to Mrs Deeming after the Federal Court found he defamed her by implying she was associated with neo-Nazis who gatecrashed a Melbourne rally she attended in 2023. Mr Pesutto faces bankruptcy and a forced exit from parliament unless the money is paid or a payment plan sorted out within weeks. On Wednesday, a member of the public who said he was "frankly outraged" by the reports of the proposed deal emailed Liberal MPs to notify them he had referred the matter to the corruption body. "If it takes people like me - outsiders - to initiate this kind of action and help uphold the standards of integrity that all political parties should meet, then I will continue to do so without hesitation," he wrote in the email, obtained by AAP. The man who made the complaint told AAP he is not a member of the Liberal Party but had been a member of three other political parties in the past. On Sunday, Mrs Deeming wrote to Mr Pesutto, his successor Brad Battin and Victorian Liberal president Philip Davis with a series of demands that would spare Mr Pesutto bankruptcy and see her endorsed for pre-selection ahead of the November 2026 election. In the letter, she said she was "dismayed" the Liberal Party was considering a request the state party assist Mr Pesutto meet his financial obligations to her. "It is because of the extraordinary support that I have received from rank-and-file members that I make this offer with the intention that the funds they have raised to fight the Labor Party remain solely directed to that important objective," she wrote. She demanded Mr Pesutto pay the roughly $760,000 he has raised so far, while the rest of the debt would be put on ice until 2027. Mrs Deeming's other requests included that the party release an unreserved apology to her. "I have suffered through a gruelling two and half years where almost every offer I made to negotiate a settlement was rejected," she wrote. "This is my final attempt to spare the Liberal Party further harm and to afford Mr Pesutto, and his family, the dignity that was denied to me, my husband and my children." A special resolution would have had to be passed to endorse preselection for her upper house seat. Traditionally, Liberal preselection is finalised through a vote of rank-and-file members. Mrs Deeming has been contacted for comment.


7NEWS
2 hours ago
- 7NEWS
Tasmanians heading to polls on July 19 after embattled premier Jeremy Rockliff's early election request granted
Tasmanians will go to the polls on July 19 after the embattled Liberal premier's request for an early election was granted. Jeremy Rockliff returned to Government House on Wednesday evening to meet with Governor Barbara Baker, six days after he lost the confidence of the parliament. In a statement after the meeting, Baker confirmed she would dissolve parliament and issue the writ for an election to be held on July 19. Know the news with the 7NEWS app: Download today It will be the fourth state election in seven years after early polls were also held in 2021 and 2024. 'Notwithstanding the recent 2024 election, the public interest in avoiding the cost of another election and the prevailing public mood against holding an election, I have granted Premier Rockliff a dissolution,' Baker said in the statement. 'I make this grant because I am satisfied that there is no real possibility that an alternative government can be formed.' Rockliff has resisted pressure to resign and insisted the backing of his party room remains solid, despite reports former senator Eric Abetz and ex-deputy premier Michael Ferguson were willing to be leader. 'I have a commitment from my team to support me as leader and I am not going anywhere,' he said earlier on Wednesday. Rockliff denied he was 'driven by ego' in not standing aside from leading the minority government. Liberal MP Jacquie Petrusma didn't directly answer when asked if the party was doing numbers to roll Rockliff. 'The premier is a fantastic leader and he has 100 per cent support of the PLP (parliamentary Liberal Party),' she said. Baker also met Labor leader Dean Winter on Wednesday afternoon. Labor, which has just 10 of 35 lower-house seats, had said it would not look to form a minority government with the Greens. 'In that meeting (with the governor) I reiterated my position that Labor will not be doing a deal with the Greens,' Winter said. Labor, whose no-confidence motion against Rockliff was backed by the Greens and three crossbench independents, had called on the premier to step down. 'We've gotten to this point because of Jeremy Rockliff and his refusal to resign,' Labor MP Shane Broad said. 'I come from a farm and no matter how much you love that old sheep dog, if you can't round up sheep anymore it's time to get a new one.' Rockliff claimed the no-confidence motion was a deceptive power grab, while Labor says it was because of the Liberals' poor budget and project mismanagement. The premier took a crack at Winter for failing to 'front up' and hold a press conference on Wednesday. The Liberals had already appeared to be in fully fledged campaign mode, visiting a hospital to announce a four-year elective surgery plan. They were returned to power in March 2024, winning 14 seats and cobbling together enough support from the crossbench to govern.

News.com.au
3 hours ago
- News.com.au
‘Moronic': Fury over Australia's tobacco prices
OPINION I don't know about you but when I'm doing something and it has unintended consequences, I usually stop. It seems like the sensible thing to do. I mean, if you took paracetamol to ease your headache and it made you chunder up your guts you'd probably look for another solution. Enter Treasurer Jim Chalmers. He doesn't look for another solution – he keeps doing the same thing, even if it's provably moronic. A far more practical Labor man, NSW Premier Chris Minns, this week stuck his neck out and said what I've been saying for years – that the tax on cigarettes is far too high and it has caused a massive market for illicit cigarettes which fund organised crime. Regular readers and viewers of my programmes on Sky News will know this has long been a bugbear of mine. I tried to warn just how bad this would be but no one seemed to take notice. With more than 100 tobacco shops firebombed in Victoria as warring gangs fight to control the black market and that war now spreading to Sydney, Mr Minns has had enough. He warned that police would have to be taken away from other important crimes, such as domestic violence, and diverted to illicit tobacco if there was any hope of stemming the rising tide of dodgy durry shops. But he'd rather not do that. He'd rather the federal government just took responsibility for the fact it caused this mess and cut the tobacco tax to neuter the illicit market. 'The massive excise increase to tobacco has meant that people haven't stopped smoking,' Mr Minns announced. 'They've just transferred their sales into illegal tobacco sales, which I don't think is helping New South Wales or any other state. 'So my view is, let's have a look at this policy, and is it working.' It's not. Senior police in Victoria, too, have raised the issue of cutting – or at least pausing – the tobacco excise with the federal government. Tin-earred Dr Chalmers said on Wednesday that he didn't 'think the answer here is to make cigarettes cheaper for people'. 'I think the answer here is to get better at compliance,' Dr Chalmers said. 'I'm not convinced that cutting the excise on cigarettes would mean that would be the end of illegal activity.' Does he honestly understand what he's saying? Reducing the tobacco tax, which has driven the price of legal ciggies to $50 or $60 a pack, wouldn't make cigarettes cheaper for people. They're already buying them for $15 or $20 under the counter in dodgy shops. He may have missed it but that's the point here. And of course it wouldn't be the end of illegal activity – people will always break the law – but it would help to reduce or, at least, stall the black market. This all or nothing approach is what has made illicit tobacco so lucrative for hardened criminals. As for compliance – why should it be the responsibility of the states to fix up the mess made by the feds? The federal government levies the tax that has made this crime so prolific – nearly 40 per cent of tobacco consumption last year and rising – but the states have to police the shops and sales. It's not Mr Minns' fault that Dr Chalmers and co are too stupid to admit they've inadvertently become the biggest mates of Middle Eastern crime gangs. Mr Minns would rather his coppers investigate murderers and wife-bashers. Dr Chalmers instead says the premier should run a protection racket for his extortionate tax on a legal product. Even in pure monetary terms Dr Chalmers must see that the massive excise has failed. An extraordinary $17.6 billion of tobacco tax has disappeared from the federal budget's forward estimates in the past year alone. Last year's federal budget projected $11.55 billion in tobacco tax this financial year. April's budget downgraded that to $7.4 billion – a 36 per cent reduction. Not because 36 per cent of smokers gave up in the past 12 months – they just moved to the illegal stuff. The tax take on tobacco has more than halved in five years despite the tax payable on a packet nearly doubling. Again, it's not because the number of smokers has halved in five years. Name me another tax in the history of Australia that has doubled, only for revenue to halve. The government knows all this but they're too embarrassed to reduce the excise because that would be to admit that at least a decade of 'public health' policy has been wrong. So nothing will change, this will only get worse and I will again be saying that I told you so.