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Australian news and politics live: Murray Watt says environment reform talks were very ‘Nature Positive’

Matt Shrivell and Peta RasdienThe Nightly
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Murray Watt told business leaders he won’t go back to the drawing board after taking over the environment portfolio from Tanya Plibersek.
Camera IconMurray Watt told business leaders he won’t go back to the drawing board after taking over the environment portfolio from Tanya Plibersek. Credit: The Nightly.

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Matt Shrivell

Wong says airspace is closed and it will be difficult to get Aussies out

Australia’s Foreign Minister Penny Wong says Australia would seek to continue to try and get people out of Iran, but acknowledged the fluidity of the Israel-Iran conflict made it difficult.

“It’s a very complicated situation . . . the airspace has been closed in both Israel and Iran,” she said.

“Obviously, the situation on the ground is fluid. Iran is a very complicated situation, a very risky situation.”

The government says evacuating Australians from Iran will be ‘risky’.
Camera IconThe government says evacuating Australians from Iran will be ‘risky’. Credit: Getty Images.

Read Ellen Ransley’s full story here.

Matt Shrivell

1500 Australians plea for help evacuating Israel, Iran

Another group of Australians are set to be evacuated from Israel in the coming hours, as the Government acknowledges it will be “complicated” and “risky” to get people out of Iran.

Since the Israel-Iran crisis began on Friday, 1500 Australians have registered for assistance to leave Iran and 1200 in Israel.

Penny Wong said a “small group” of people had been helped out of Israel and into Jordan via bus during a “small window” of opportunity on Wednesday.

Another bus is planned to leave Tel Aviv on Thursday (local time).

Is Trump oversharing? No president has ever revealed so much

Donald Trump assembled journalists to the White House lawn on Wednesday to witness the erection of two flag poles. When a reporter asked about his “mindset” on what might be the most important decision of his second presidency, whether to bomb Iran, Mr Trump ridiculed the questioner.

“You don’t seriously think I am going to answer that question?” he said. “Will you strike the Iranian nuclear component and what time? Will you please inform us so we can be there and watch? You don’t even know that I’m going to do it. Nobody knows what I’m going to do.”

Mr Trump’s refusal to share his views on the war was unusual: for better or worse, Mr Trump’s leads what may be the most communicative presidential administration in US history.

“We’ve never seen a president as accessible to the media as Trump,” says Bruce Wolpe, a former Democrat political adviser who published an anti-Trump book last year.

Read Aaron Patrick’s full story here.

Powell and Fed stay staunch as Cliffhanger President rages

On the brink of a Middle East conflagration that could jeopardise up to a quarter of the world’s energy supply, Donald Trump appears to have taken his eye off another cataclysmic economic event — his attempt to completely remake the global trading system.

The world cannot expect to receive any updraft from the US economy anytime soon, which, for Australia, means it will have to generate its own momentum. Unfortunately, there is little in the way of lift.

Fortunately, NAB chief economist Sally Auld says the Reserve Bank of Australia is in a “very different camp” to the Fed, with far fewer constraints.

Inflation is within the target band, unemployment is steady, and the labour market is broadly balanced. “They’re free to move policy back to neutral,” she said.

Still, the broader economy has underwhelmed. Ms Auld sees the domestic recovery as “more tortoise than hare” — a slow and uneven return to momentum.

Read the full story here.

Elisia Seeber

Iran missile strikes hit southern Israel’s largest hospital

Iran has targeted southern Israel’s largest hospital in missile strikes, having warned of a “punishment operation”, as conflict between the two countries enters its seventh day.

The Soroka Medical Centre is the main hospital in Israel’s south. Israel’s military said Israelis ran for shelter Thursday as sirens were blaring to alert them to a missile launch by Iran.

“Several hits were identified as a result of the missile barrage — one of them hitting the largest hospital in southern Israel,” the IDF said in a statement.

A spokesperson for the Soroka Medical Centre in Beer Sheba said the hospital suffered “extensive damage” in different areas and people had been wounded in the attack. The hospital has requested that people not come for treatment.

The the medical centre has over 1000 beds and provides services to the approximately 1 million residents of Israel’s south, according to the hospital’s website.

Read the full story here.

Urgent travel warning for Aussies at popular stop-over spot

An urgent warning has been issued for Australians headed to a Middle Eastern country widely used as a stop-over point for travel around the world.

Smartraveller has upgraded its advice level for Qatar, including capital Doha, urging people to exercise a high degree of caution.

It comes amid ongoing hostilities between Israel and Iran and the looming threat of an all out war that could draw in the entire region and, possibly, the US.

“Conflicts in the Middle East could lead to an increase in tensions elsewhere in the region and may result in airspace closures, flight cancellations and other travel disruptions,” Smartraveller warns in its latest advice.

“Demonstrations and protest activity may also occur, and local security situations could deteriorate with little notice. Avoid all demonstrations and protests.”

Qatar has now moved from Level One advice to Level Two.

Read the full story here.

Matt Shrivell

Mushroom cook ‘panicked’ after illnesses: Court

Lawyers acting for alleged mushroom poisoner Erin Patterson have suggested her decision to leave hospital after five minutes has “only one reasonable explanation”.

Continuing his closing address to the jury, defence barrister Colin Mandy SC took the jury to Ms Patterson’s presentation at Leongatha Hospital two days after the lunch on July 31, 2023.

He told the court Ms Patterson attended thinking she had gastro and needed a bag of saline, remarking she was “not prepared for what she walked into”.

Erin Patterson, 50, has pleaded not guilty to three counts of murder and one count of attempted murder.
Camera IconErin Patterson, 50, has pleaded not guilty to three counts of murder and one count of attempted murder. Credit: Supplied.

Mr Mandy said there was immediately a “laser focus” on death cap mushrooms by hospital staff.

“It was an extremely intense five-minute interaction where she was told she’d be admitted and transferred to a hospital in Melbourne,” he said.

“She was not refusing treatment, she was saying there were things she needed to do... her brain was stuck on that.”

Stay up to date with all the latest here.

CBA kicks goals with massive $60m soccer deal

Commonwealth Bank has signed a historic six-year partnership with Football Australia, becoming the largest backer of the country’s most played team sport in a deal worth more than $10 million a year.

The agreement, which will run through 2031, builds on CommBank’s existing support of the Matildas and extends naming rights to nearly every national team — including the Socceroos, Pararoos, Olyroos and all youth championships — in what amounts to the deepest corporate partnership in Australian football history.

CommBank chief executive Matt Comyn said the deal was a long-term commitment to a sport with growing reach and cultural resonance.

“This is about a long-term partnership with the most active team sport Australia with more than 2 million (people) playing,” he said.

Mr Comyn said the investment recognised the changing face of Australia.

Football Australia have finally announced the Matildas have a new man at the helm. (James Ross/AAP PHOTOS)
Camera IconFootball Australia have finally announced the Matildas have a new man at the helm. (James Ross/AAP PHOTOS) Credit: AAP

Read the full story here.

Matt Shrivell

Can Malinauskas go from collecting Woolies trolleys to the Lodge?

South Australian Premier Peter Malinauskas is no stranger to the national spotlight, and while the popular leader says his sights are set on securing a second term for Labor in 2026 — insiders suggest Malinauskas’ talent could take him all the way to the Lodge.

The 44-year-old father of four has already proven he can take the lead on national issues.

His firm stance on the pervasive impact of social media on children’s lives put him at the heart of a fierce countrywide debate. His State’s ban on teenage access led to pressure which caused Anthony Albanese to pass laws banning social media for under-16s.

“I saw an opportunity there, because it wasn’t really being talked about much nationally, and I just got the sense that this is something that every parent across the country is really worried about,” Malinauskas told Dylan Caporn in an exlusive interview.

The “football nuffie” whose first step towards leadership was collecting Woolies trolleys has featured in an in depth conversation for The Nightly On Influence.

Watt says environment conference was very ‘Nature Positive’

Environment Minister Murray Watt has just wrapped up a “productive” first meeting with a broad range of stakeholders - from climate advocates to mining heavyweights, First Nations groups and business leaders - about reforming Australia’s environment laws.

The Government tried in the last term of Parliament to get the so called “Nature Positive” laws through the Senate, but the deal struck between former minister Tanya Plibersek and the Greens was scuppered at the last minute after WA Premier Roger Cook directly intervened.

Senator Watt - who wants laws passed in the first half of this term - said he was not about to start from the beginning, but that all stakeholders were acutely aware the country’s laws were out of date and not working.

Senator Murray Watt has hosted talks on Australia’s environmental laws in Canberra
Camera IconSenator Murray Watt has hosted talks on Australia’s environmental laws in Canberra. Credit: AAP

“I thought the meeting was conducted in a very healthy, respectful spirit, with people being really open to listening to different perspectives and considering that in terms of forming their own positions,” he said, noting there was broad agreement across the three pillars to the reform process.

The minister said it was unlikely everyone would be completely happy with where the legislation finally landed, but he was serious about working with all stakeholders to make the laws as good and strong as possible.

“The more agreement we can have around these laws, then the more likely they are to stand the test of time,” he said.

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