Thanks for reading the national news blog. This is where we’ll end today’s coverage.
To conclude, here’s a look back at the day’s major stories:
Children will be blocked from social media under sweeping national plans, announced late last night, to shield young people from online harm by mandating strict age barriers in federal law and punishing tech giants that break the rules.
Treasurer Jim Chalmers may drive through the biggest overhaul of the Reserve Bank in a generation with support from the Greens after the Coalition walked away from months of negotiations and concessions aimed at winning bipartisan approval for the changes.
Property values around the country have surged to record highs, data released today showed. The average Australian home is now worth more than $970,000 as values soar across NSW, but slide down in Victoria.
In NSW, two boys have been found dead in a Blue Mountains home. Their mother is under police guard in hospital with self-inflicted wounds after being arrested.
In Victoria, police will have their budget increased by up to $15 million to deal with mass protests this week outside a weapons expo, which thousands of people have vowed to disrupt and blockade tomorrow.
In Queensland, LNP leader David Crisafulli says he would push wide-ranging, tough new youth justice laws through parliament, with at most two weeks of public scrutiny, if elected in October.
In Western Australia, the teen driver of a car that allegedly reached 135 km/h before it crashed in July, killing an 18-year-old passenger, has asked a court for permission to drive tractors on his family’s farm as part of his bail conditions.
- In business news, the Australian sharemarket lost some steam in the afternoon but still closed in the green after being buoyed by a healthy lead from Wall Street, which rebounded from its worst week in almost 18 months.
Thanks again for your company. Have a lovely night.