Thanks for reading the national news blog. That concludes our coverage for today.
Here’s a look back at some of the biggest stories we have covered today:
- Federal MPs have voted for a motion to condemn antisemitism following more than an hour of debate after independent MP Allegra Spender, the member for Wentworth, put the motion shortly after noon. It was passed unanimously in the House of Representatives at 1.25pm “on the voices” without MPs being counted for or against.
- NSW Premier Chris Minns will be forced into his first major cabinet reshuffle after Transport Minister Jo Haylen resigned over a taxpayer-funded driver scandal which has triggered a new ban on ministerial vehicles being used exclusively for private purposes. Haylen, a close ally and factional heavyweight who helped secure Minns the Labor leadership in 2021, quit following fresh revelations she used a ministerial driver for a 13-hour, 446-kilometre Hunter Valley wine tour with her husband.
- Greens leader Adam Bandt has said the minor party are in discussion with Labor, as they offer a compromise to legislate a watered-down ban on gambling ads. The Greens’ proposal is to ban gambling ads an hour before and an hour after a sports broadcast and limit the number of ad slots during any other time on TV.
- Antoinette Lattouf has hit out against ABC chair Kim Williams, telling the Federal Court during the second day of her unfair dismissal hearing that he “took swipes” at her and derided her on live television at the National Press Club. During the proceedings, Lattouf was brought to tears on multiple occasions during the second day of tense cross-examination, admitting she had sometimes drank until she passed out, relied on sleeping aids, and at points suffered from paranoia.
- China has slapped tariffs on U.S. imports in a rapid response to new U.S. duties on Chinese goods, renewing a trade war between the world’s top two economies as President Donald Trump sought to punish China for not halting the flow of illicit drugs.
- The Coalition has dismissed Labor’s criticism of its promise to allow small businesses to claim tax deductions for business lunches. The policy attracted plenty of attacks from Labor during question time today, who claim it could cost the budget $10 billion a year. The cost of the policy has yet to be revealed, but it is understood a preliminary costing has been done by the independent Parliamentary Budget Office.
Thanks for your company and I hope you enjoy your evening.