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Coalition must bring the ‘right policy' to parliament on net zero for the Australian people
Coalition must bring the ‘right policy' to parliament on net zero for the Australian people

Sky News AU

time15 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Sky News AU

Coalition must bring the ‘right policy' to parliament on net zero for the Australian people

Sky News host Chris Kenny discusses the pressure mounting on the Coalition as Opposition to bring coherent net zero policies to the Australian people. 'I just want to play a clip from Matt Canavan earlier today talking about the net zero debate and what it means for the country and for the Coalition,' Mr Kenny said. 'A lot of people focussing on the fact he is saying the Coalition is irrelevant, well, in numerical terms in parliament you kind of are at the moment, he is right isn't he, it doesn't matter how ugly or divisive this debate looks … the Coalition just actually has to get the work done and come up with the right policy that it can take to the people of Australia.'

‘Intimidate and keep away': TV host slams planned Sydney Harbour Bridge pro-Palestine protest
‘Intimidate and keep away': TV host slams planned Sydney Harbour Bridge pro-Palestine protest

Sky News AU

time15 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Sky News AU

‘Intimidate and keep away': TV host slams planned Sydney Harbour Bridge pro-Palestine protest

Sky News host Chris Kenny slams plans for a pro-Palestine march to take place on the Sydney Harbour Bridge. 'So, the pro-Palestinian mob, the anti-Israel mob want to march across the Sydney Harbour bridge,' Mr Kenny said. 'And while a pride march in Gaza would almost certainly end in death at the hands of the Hamas Islamist extremists, this sort of march is a legacy that the pro-Palestinian mob are keen to leverage now. 'Yep, unity is the last thing this protest would foster. "The protesters were there to intimidate and keep away, grieving Jewish Australians.'

‘There is no starvation in Gaza': Benjamin Netanyahu denies famine claims
‘There is no starvation in Gaza': Benjamin Netanyahu denies famine claims

Sky News AU

time15 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Sky News AU

‘There is no starvation in Gaza': Benjamin Netanyahu denies famine claims

Sky News host Chris Kenny discusses the current situation in Gaza relating to the population's starvation, saying the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu denies that Gazans are starving. 'International pressure is growing on Israel,' Mr Kenny said. 'But around the world, people are not accepting the information coming from Israel; they are forming their views based on other sources.'

‘Had a gutful': Pauline Hanson clashes with Sky News host over Acknowledgement of Country snub
‘Had a gutful': Pauline Hanson clashes with Sky News host over Acknowledgement of Country snub

News.com.au

time6 days ago

  • Politics
  • News.com.au

‘Had a gutful': Pauline Hanson clashes with Sky News host over Acknowledgement of Country snub

Sky News host Chris Kenny has taken Pauline Hanson to task after One Nation Senators turned their back on the Acknowledgement of Country. Ms Hanson and the three other One Nation Senators — Malcolm Roberts and newly elected Warwick Stacey and Tyron Whitten — all turned their back on the Indigenous ceremony during the opening of parliament on Tuesday. The One Nation leader has previously turned her back on the Welcome to Country and Acknowledgement of Country, as debate grows over their use in a wide range of settings from classrooms and official ceremonies to corporate events and sporting matches. Ms Hanson spoke to Kenny from Canberra on Wednesday night, with the host asking, 'Why be so impolite?' 'I haven't just done it recently, and it wasn't the first time yesterday, I've been doing it for the past three years,' Ms Hanson said. 'The other two Senators that have now joined me, they are of the same opinion. They have had a gutful of this welcome to parliament on the floor every morning, plus also around the country.' Tuesday marked the first time Mr Roberts had joined his leader in turning his back. Ms Hanson claimed the reaction from the public on social media had been 'overwhelming'. 'People are actually saying, 'Good on you, you're standing up for us, we're fed up with this, we voted against the Voice, we don't want this, it's overdone,'' she said. 'I have had enough and I do not want a Welcome to Country and to be disenfranchised from my own country that I was born here.' Kenny pushed back, telling Ms Hanson, 'I know you'll get a lot of support for this, I know I'll get a lot of criticism for my stance'. 'I agree that the Welcome to Country is overdone,' he said. 'It's ridiculous how often we see it at the start of various meetings and online forums and the like, but I think it's a really good initiative in the right place at the right time — the start of the Grand Final, the start of some Indigenous events.' Kenny argued 'surely a place when you're opening parliament and getting down to proceedings, it's just a respectful way to acknowledge the land that we all live on and the people that were here first and the culture that is ongoing'. 'It's just polite,' he said. 'Sorry, Chris, no,' Ms Hanson said. 'I'm past being polite when I feel disenfranchised from my own country. Kenny asked, 'How are you disenfranchised just to recognise our history?' Ms Hanson argued 'we see it go further than that' with 'kids being indoctrinated in the educational system' and Indigenous people granted 'more rights over the land than the Australian people'. 'This is causing division; it's divisive,' she said. 'I'm not turning my back on the Australian people. That's why I'm doing it and that's why Australians are backing me, because you've got someone with the guts to actually stand up and say we've had enough of this. Governments will keep feeding this division if someone doesn't stand up to it.' Kenny reiterated that 'a lot of this stuff is overdone and of course there are Indigenous activists who over-claim', but again asked why a simple Acknowledgement to open parliament was 'not just polite and inclusive and a general recognition of our country's shared history'. 'Chris, this is not about the opening of parliament,' Ms Hanson said. 'This happens every morning parliament is sitting … as other people, even the street sweeper, the council worker, he had a gutful because it's before they go out and do their job. This is bloody ridiculous. So whether it's his job or my job, I'm saying I'm fed up of putting up with it as well.' She insisted 'it's not being disrespectful'. 'I'm not turning my back on Australians, I'm turning my back on these policies and ideologies that are dividing our nation and the tokenism that's going on,' she said. 'It's about time. I've been speaking about this for the last 30 years and look at the state of this country, it's in one hell of a bloody mess. I'm not pulling a stunt, I'm sticking to my values and my principles and what I believe in. I want to see a united country as one nation.' Ms Hanson went on to insist the Welcome to Country and Acknowledgement of Country were a recent invention. 'That was introduced by Ernie Dingo in the 1970s, it is not a custom of the Aboriginal people, that's rubbish,' she said. 'Sure, but it's a nice idea and it's inclusive,' Kenny replied. 'I believe it's sad that you're doing that.' But Kenny agreed that the case of Darebin Council worker Shaun Turner highlighted where 'that overreach is so damaging because people are doing too much of this stuff, you get a backlash now where people want none of it'. 'I think that's very sad,' he said. During the election campaign, former opposition leader Peter Dutton had taken aim at the ceremonies, calling them overdone. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Tuesday said the Welcome to Country was 'not controversial today, nor should it be'. 'What a Welcome to Country does is hold out, like a hand warmly and graciously extended, an opportunity for us to embrace and to show a profound love of home and country,'' Mr Albanese said, per The Australian.

Sky News host Chris Kenny tells off Pauline Hanson live on air
Sky News host Chris Kenny tells off Pauline Hanson live on air

Daily Mail​

time6 days ago

  • Politics
  • Daily Mail​

Sky News host Chris Kenny tells off Pauline Hanson live on air

Sky presenter Chris Kenny has slammed Pauline Hanson 's impolite and disrespectful behaviour during parliament's Acknowledgement of Country. The four One Nation senators turned their backs in protest in the chamber when the statement of respect for Indigenous Australians was read out as part of the traditional ceremonial opening of Parliament on Tuesday. Hanson defended the action on Wednesday, saying she had been doing it for three years because she had had a 'gutful of this Welcome to Parliament every morning'. 'I have had enough and I do not want a Welcome to Country and to be disenfranchised from my own country that I was born here,' she said on Sky News. But Kenny jumped in, interrupting Hanson to say that he believed the ceremony was 'overdone', but that turning her back was 'impolite'. 'I think it's a really good initiative in the right place, at the right time,' he said, as Hanson sighed deeply. 'When you're opening parliament... it's just a respectful way to acknowledge the land that we all live on, and the people that were here first, and the culture that is ongoing. It's just polite.' But Hanson, visibly shaking in fury, repeatedly said 'No' to Kenny, adding that she was 'past being polite when I feel disenfranchised from my own country'. Kenny pushed back, interrupting again to ask the senator how she is disenfranchised 'just to recognise our history.' The senator claimed it was 'divisive,' diverting onto a tangent that children are 'indoctrinated' with the ceremony in schools. 'This is causing division, it's divisive. I'm not turning my back on the Australian people. That's why I'm doing it and that's why Australians are backing me—because they've got someone who has the guts to say we've had enough of this. 'This happens every morning before Parliament is sitting—if it's just the opening of Parliament I would accept that.' Hanson said she was not being disrespectful. 'I'm not turning my back on Australians. I'm turning my back on these policies and ideologies that are dividing our nation and the tokenism that's going on. 'I've been speaking about this for the last 30 years and look at the state of this country, it's in one bloody hell of a mess. I'm not pulling a stunt. I'm sticking to my values, my principles and what I believe in. I want to see a country united as one nation, not this division that's happening. 'I am Australian and I welcome people that are born here and people who actually come from overseas to migrate here -0 I welcome everyone that has a right to this land.' Later in the interview, Kenny raised the issue of hypocrisy, noting Hanson did not protest the Lord's Prayer, which was also read in the Senate on Tuesday. 'Not everybody in the Senate is Christian, yet people show their respect to that tradition,' Kenny said. But Hanson insisted that the Christian prayer is 'tradition.' '(It's) something that's done right from the educational system and it's been part of our history, Christian values that we have, and that's been part of it,' she said. '(It's) not something that's been made up, that's been pushed down our bloody throats. 'It's saying that we acknowledge these people as the traditional owners to repay them respect as the past, present and emerging. Why should I pay someone respect if I don't know who they are—because some of these elders I wouldn't give them the time of day. People have to earn respect.' Yawarllaayi/Gomeroi elder Barbara Flick Nicol told NITV in 2020 that a protocol to welcome and acknowledge visitors has existed among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities for thousands of years. 'It's always been something that we did as a people, understanding and observing the fact that when you are in somebody else's country, that you acknowledge them,' she said. Welcome to Country ceremonies and land acknowledgements have been at the centre of a right-wing culture war after a group of neo-Nazis booed a Welcome to Country address during an Anzac Day dawn service in Melbourne earlier in 2025. Labor has backed Welcome to Country ceremonies, with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Tuesday celebrating the tradition as a powerful way to begin the new parliament and reflect on Australia's history. Albanese also took a veiled swipe at the stance of former Opposition leader Peter Dutton and some coalition MPs who branded Welcome to Country and Acknowledgement of Country proclamations as divisive and overdone. 'Like a lot of the more positive things about our nation, we shouldn't take it for granted,' Albanese said. 'It is not controversial today.' Opposition Leader Sussan Ley said the ceremony 'set the tone as we re-commit ourselves to the taking of practical action to improve lives and expand opportunity for Indigenous Australians in every part of our great country'. Welcome to Country is conducted by Traditional Owners, while Acknowledgement of Country is a statement of respect for Traditional Owners and connection to land, which can be given by an Indigenous or non-Indigenous person.

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