Australia news LIVE: King's Birthday Honours list revealed; unrest in LA; bank sued for fraud protection failures
Latest posts
Latest posts
6.55am
The latest on unrest in the US
By Amber Schultz
United States National Guard troops have been deployed in Los Angeles, the first time in six decades a state's National Guard has been activated without a request from its governor.
US President Donald Trump ordered the US Northern Command to assume control of the National Guard and dispatch 2000 soldiers to the area 'for 60 days or at the discretion of the Secretary of Defence'.
The troops arrived following protests against immigration raids that swept through the city from late on Friday, as part of Trump's promise of mass deportations.
Rocks and chunks of cement were thrown at Border Patrol vehicles, and riot police used tear gas, flash-bang grenades and pepper balls to disperse the crowd.
On Sunday morning, the city remained quiet with no further major protests.
6.54am
Scott Morrison honoured
By Amber Schultz
Former prime minister Scott Morrison has been honoured in the King's Birthday Honours. He was made a Companion of the Order of Australia – the highest honour – for his leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic and his key role in the AUKUS nuclear submarine deal with Britain and the United States. All former prime ministers, except Paul Keating, have accepted being made a Companion since the inception of the honour.
Morrison called the award 'humbling' and called for the Coalition to continue focusing on economic security for Australians.
More than 800 people were recognised in the King's Birthday Honours: you can explore the full list via the interactive here.
Loading
6.52am
This morning's headlines at a glance
By Amber Schultz
Good morning, readers, and happy King's Day. I'm Amber Schultz, and I'll be keeping you up to date with the latest on today's blog.
The full list of the 830 Australians recognised in the King's Birthday Honours list has been revealed, including costume and production designer Catherine Martin and director Baz Luhrmann, former Federal Court justice and the special investigator into alleged war crimes committed by Australian soldiers in Afghanistan Mark Weinberg, and former prime minister Scott Morrison among those honoured.
United States National Guard troops have arrived in Los Angeles after protests erupted following federal immigration raids late last week. The raids are part of the Trump administration's push to fulfil promises of mass deportations.
The Women in Media Industry Insight Report has found financial pressure, stalled growth and a lack of progress on equity are driving women out of the workforce. Meanwhile, TV newsrooms are set to cut the salaries of TV's highest earners ahead of cutbacks across the industry in the new financial year.
Also in the US, a New York Times investigation delved into the life of Thomas Crooks, the man who almost killed Trump. Crooks, a 20-year-old college student, fired eight shots at Trump, grazing his ear. Crooks also killed a bystander and wounded two others before being shot dead by the Secret Service. The investigation found Crooks was intelligent and ambitious, but had declining mental health.
Unsafe conditions at Sydney's Northern Beaches Hospital have been laid bare by the ABC, with whistleblowers saying warnings about patient safety at Northern Beaches Hospital were ignored, with 'dangerously low staffing.'
HSBC banking customers have lost millions in scams, with warnings about the risk no heeded by the bank's own fraud experts. The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) is suing the local subsidiary of HSBC for 'widespread and systemic' failures to protect its customers.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Advertiser
12 minutes ago
- The Advertiser
Greens strike conciliatory tone on super tax changes
The Greens are "absolutely ready" to work with Labor to make proposed changes to superannuation, acknowledging the mandate voters gave the Albanese government at the election. Labor is looking to double the tax rate of super balances above $3 million to 30 per cent, in a bid to limit the number of wealthy people using their balances for tax deductions rather than their retirements. The coalition has vowed to oppose the changes, labelling them unfair. With the government lacking a majority in the Senate, it needs the Greens or the coalition to pass legislation through the parliament. Greens treasury spokesman Nick McKim said he expected to begin negotiations with Treasurer Jim Chalmers before the new parliament returns at the end of July. "We are absolutely ready to work with with the treasurer and with Labor to try and move the superannuation system a little bit back towards what its original intent was when it was set up," he told ABC's RN on Monday. "We want the system to be as fair and as strong as it can be in terms of providing for a dignified retirement for working Australians, and that'll be our aim." Senator McKim said Dr Chalmers was a "re-elected treasurer in a re-elected government" which had taken the proposal to the May poll. Striking a more conciliatory tone, the Greens have previously been criticised for delaying Labor's housing bills during a crisis. The minor party lost three of its four lower house seats to Labor in a near wipe-out in the House of Representatives. Former Greens leader Adam Bandt also lost his seat after 15 years in parliament. The vast majority of Australians are unlikely to feel the impact of Labor's proposal, with the median super balance for 60 to 64-year-olds sitting at about $200,000 for men and $150,000 for women. Deputy Nationals leader Kevin Hogan said the coalition remained strongly opposed to taxing unrealised gains. "I don't know of many examples around the world that do that, and it's very damaging," he told ABC's RN. "The non indexation of that makes an exceptionally penalising policy as well." The Greens are "absolutely ready" to work with Labor to make proposed changes to superannuation, acknowledging the mandate voters gave the Albanese government at the election. Labor is looking to double the tax rate of super balances above $3 million to 30 per cent, in a bid to limit the number of wealthy people using their balances for tax deductions rather than their retirements. The coalition has vowed to oppose the changes, labelling them unfair. With the government lacking a majority in the Senate, it needs the Greens or the coalition to pass legislation through the parliament. Greens treasury spokesman Nick McKim said he expected to begin negotiations with Treasurer Jim Chalmers before the new parliament returns at the end of July. "We are absolutely ready to work with with the treasurer and with Labor to try and move the superannuation system a little bit back towards what its original intent was when it was set up," he told ABC's RN on Monday. "We want the system to be as fair and as strong as it can be in terms of providing for a dignified retirement for working Australians, and that'll be our aim." Senator McKim said Dr Chalmers was a "re-elected treasurer in a re-elected government" which had taken the proposal to the May poll. Striking a more conciliatory tone, the Greens have previously been criticised for delaying Labor's housing bills during a crisis. The minor party lost three of its four lower house seats to Labor in a near wipe-out in the House of Representatives. Former Greens leader Adam Bandt also lost his seat after 15 years in parliament. The vast majority of Australians are unlikely to feel the impact of Labor's proposal, with the median super balance for 60 to 64-year-olds sitting at about $200,000 for men and $150,000 for women. Deputy Nationals leader Kevin Hogan said the coalition remained strongly opposed to taxing unrealised gains. "I don't know of many examples around the world that do that, and it's very damaging," he told ABC's RN. "The non indexation of that makes an exceptionally penalising policy as well." The Greens are "absolutely ready" to work with Labor to make proposed changes to superannuation, acknowledging the mandate voters gave the Albanese government at the election. Labor is looking to double the tax rate of super balances above $3 million to 30 per cent, in a bid to limit the number of wealthy people using their balances for tax deductions rather than their retirements. The coalition has vowed to oppose the changes, labelling them unfair. With the government lacking a majority in the Senate, it needs the Greens or the coalition to pass legislation through the parliament. Greens treasury spokesman Nick McKim said he expected to begin negotiations with Treasurer Jim Chalmers before the new parliament returns at the end of July. "We are absolutely ready to work with with the treasurer and with Labor to try and move the superannuation system a little bit back towards what its original intent was when it was set up," he told ABC's RN on Monday. "We want the system to be as fair and as strong as it can be in terms of providing for a dignified retirement for working Australians, and that'll be our aim." Senator McKim said Dr Chalmers was a "re-elected treasurer in a re-elected government" which had taken the proposal to the May poll. Striking a more conciliatory tone, the Greens have previously been criticised for delaying Labor's housing bills during a crisis. The minor party lost three of its four lower house seats to Labor in a near wipe-out in the House of Representatives. Former Greens leader Adam Bandt also lost his seat after 15 years in parliament. The vast majority of Australians are unlikely to feel the impact of Labor's proposal, with the median super balance for 60 to 64-year-olds sitting at about $200,000 for men and $150,000 for women. Deputy Nationals leader Kevin Hogan said the coalition remained strongly opposed to taxing unrealised gains. "I don't know of many examples around the world that do that, and it's very damaging," he told ABC's RN. "The non indexation of that makes an exceptionally penalising policy as well." The Greens are "absolutely ready" to work with Labor to make proposed changes to superannuation, acknowledging the mandate voters gave the Albanese government at the election. Labor is looking to double the tax rate of super balances above $3 million to 30 per cent, in a bid to limit the number of wealthy people using their balances for tax deductions rather than their retirements. The coalition has vowed to oppose the changes, labelling them unfair. With the government lacking a majority in the Senate, it needs the Greens or the coalition to pass legislation through the parliament. Greens treasury spokesman Nick McKim said he expected to begin negotiations with Treasurer Jim Chalmers before the new parliament returns at the end of July. "We are absolutely ready to work with with the treasurer and with Labor to try and move the superannuation system a little bit back towards what its original intent was when it was set up," he told ABC's RN on Monday. "We want the system to be as fair and as strong as it can be in terms of providing for a dignified retirement for working Australians, and that'll be our aim." Senator McKim said Dr Chalmers was a "re-elected treasurer in a re-elected government" which had taken the proposal to the May poll. Striking a more conciliatory tone, the Greens have previously been criticised for delaying Labor's housing bills during a crisis. The minor party lost three of its four lower house seats to Labor in a near wipe-out in the House of Representatives. Former Greens leader Adam Bandt also lost his seat after 15 years in parliament. The vast majority of Australians are unlikely to feel the impact of Labor's proposal, with the median super balance for 60 to 64-year-olds sitting at about $200,000 for men and $150,000 for women. Deputy Nationals leader Kevin Hogan said the coalition remained strongly opposed to taxing unrealised gains. "I don't know of many examples around the world that do that, and it's very damaging," he told ABC's RN. "The non indexation of that makes an exceptionally penalising policy as well."

ABC News
29 minutes ago
- ABC News
Trump's ‘dangerous escalation' of National Guard troop deployment in Los Angeles
California Governor Gavin Newsom says he has "formally requested the Trump administration rescind their unlawful deployment of National Guard troops in Los Angeles county," and return them to his command. Donald Trump sent the soldiers there without the governor's permission to break up clashes between police and protesters over the weekend. Tear gas, flash bangs and rubber bullets have been used to disperse crowds as residents of the predominantly Latino Paramount district clashed with those agents over the weekend. Those protests broke out after Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers, or ICE agents as they are known, conducted immigration raids in LA as part of the president's crackdown on illegal immigrants. ABC NewsRadio's Sarah Morice spoke with Raul Reyes, an attorney and immigration analyst who was born and raised in Los Angeles.


West Australian
an hour ago
- West Australian
Greens strike conciliatory tone on super tax changes
The Greens are "absolutely ready" to work with Labor to make proposed changes to superannuation, acknowledging the mandate voters gave the Albanese government at the election. Labor is looking to double the tax rate of super balances above $3 million to 30 per cent, in a bid to limit the number of wealthy people using their balances for tax deductions rather than their retirements. The coalition has vowed to oppose the changes, labelling them unfair. With the government lacking a majority in the Senate, it needs the Greens or the coalition to pass legislation through the parliament. Greens treasury spokesman Nick McKim said he expected to begin negotiations with Treasurer Jim Chalmers before the new parliament returns at the end of July. "We are absolutely ready to work with with the treasurer and with Labor to try and move the superannuation system a little bit back towards what its original intent was when it was set up," he told ABC's RN on Monday. "We want the system to be as fair and as strong as it can be in terms of providing for a dignified retirement for working Australians, and that'll be our aim." Senator McKim said Dr Chalmers was a "re-elected treasurer in a re-elected government" which had taken the proposal to the May poll. Striking a more conciliatory tone, the Greens have previously been criticised for delaying Labor's housing bills during a crisis. The minor party lost three of its four lower house seats to Labor in a near wipe-out in the House of Representatives. Former Greens leader Adam Bandt also lost his seat after 15 years in parliament. The vast majority of Australians are unlikely to feel the impact of Labor's proposal, with the median super balance for 60 to 64-year-olds sitting at about $200,000 for men and $150,000 for women. Deputy Nationals leader Kevin Hogan said the coalition remained strongly opposed to taxing unrealised gains. "I don't know of many examples around the world that do that, and it's very damaging," he told ABC's RN. "The non indexation of that makes an exceptionally penalising policy as well."