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    Politics

    Federal

    Today

    Strata title reform is on the agenda for WA.

    Build-to-rent plan risks ‘repelling investors’

    Labor has been warned to redesign key elements of its plan to boost affordable rental stock around Australia.

    • 1 hr ago
    • Tom McIlroy and Campbell Kwan
    Lizzeth Neira is an international student from Colombia studying English and Marketing on the Gold Coast.

    ‘Careful what you wish for’: The hidden hit in foreign student caps

    Foreign student enrolments in Canada plunged far more than expected after the government capped visas, in a salutary tale for Australia.

    • 1 hr ago
    • Julie Hare
    Authorities say a cyber incident happens once every six minutes in Australia.

    Companies to face fines for failing to disclose cyber ransom payments

    Legislation due to be introduced to federal parliament within weeks will require businesses with a turnover of $3 million or more to report payments to hackers.

    • 1 hr ago
    • Tom McIlroy

    David Rowe cartoons for August 2024

    David Rowe is a multiple Walkley award-winning cartoonist. He draws a daily political cartoon and one for the Chanticleer column.

    • Updated
    • David Rowe

    Big four consultants’ ‘land and expand’ strategy hammered by scandals

    The big four consulting firms secured about $90 million worth of contract extensions from Canberra last year, down from a record $252 million the year before.

    • Ronald Mizen
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    Andy Yin

    Fear and loathing in the NSW Liberals

    A preselection candidate has gone to the Federal Court, alleging he was rejected by the NSW branch for the last state election because of his race.

    • Max Mason and Myriam Robin
    Japan’s former ambassador to Australia, Shingo Yamagami, wasn’t afraid to ruffle feathers.

    Greens’ gas demands would weaken Japan, former envoy claims

    Japan would be weakened and Australia’s reputation shattered, if export gas was redirected for domestic use, says Shingo Yamagami.

    • Phillip Coorey

    Yesterday

    The NSW government is expected to lease more property with its McKell building already fully occupied

    NSW to lease more offices for public servants ordered back

    NSW is ready to lease extra office space after declaring it was time to end pandemic work-from-home conditions for its 80,000 public servants.

    • Tom Burton
    There are calls for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to provide ASIO director-general Mike Burgess with extra resources to deal with the rising risk of politically motivated violence.

    Warnings over ASIO workload because of heightened terror threat

    The ASIO chief admits the spy agency is “stretched” as it deals with twin challenges of politically motivated violence and foreign espionage.

    • Andrew Tillett
    Plans to cap international students are both reckless and unworkable, a Senate hearing has been told.

    Foreign student crackdown is ‘economic self-sabotage’: uni chiefs

    The policy change is over-reach, interventionist, Draconian and probably unworkable, scores of experts told a a Senate inquiry.

    • Julie Hare

    Kim Beazley is utterly wrong, says Paul Keating

    Former prime minister Paul Keating writes on WA’s risk from China; other writers on uranium mining in Jabiluka; Ismail Haniyeh’s death; lack of AUKUS transparency; and NSW eviction laws.

    This Month

    The University of Sydney will have to shed over 12,000 overseas students to meet the government’s proposed cap of 40 per cent enrolments.

    Unis to be capped at 40pc overseas students

    The federal government will limit universities to 40 per cent international enrolments and bring numbers back to 2019 levels.

    • Julie Hare
    Iran’s ambassador to Australia, Ahmad Sadeghi.

    PM not tough enough on Iranian envoy: Libs

    Ambassador Ahmad Sadeghi has hit out a “Zionist plague”, describing Hamas’ commitment to the “wiping out” of Israel by 2027 as a “heavenly and divine promise”.

    • Phillip Coorey
    Australia’s ambassador to Ukraine Paul Lehman.

    Australian ambassador shared work space with TikTok and a dog trainer

    Australia’s ambassador to Ukraine worked out of a WeWork building in Warsaw amid fears Russian missile attacks make it too unsafe to go back to Kyiv.

    • Andrew Tillett
    The NSW government is calling for employees to return to the office full-time.

    NSW public servants ordered to return to office

    Updated guidelines call for more than 400,000 public servants to be in offices “across the whole working week”.

    • Campbell Kwan
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    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, ASIO Director-General Mike Burgess (centre) and Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus today.

    The politics of grievance has become something more sinister

    Ever since 9/11, terror alerts and politics have been inseparable, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t substance behind them either.

    • Phillip Coorey
    Iron ore at BHP’s Jimblebar facility in the Pilbara.

    Beazley names state ‘most vulnerable and worthwhile’ to attack

    The former defence minister says a nuclear submarine is vital to protecting the resources industry, urging an even harder line on blocking Chinese investment in critical minerals.

    • Brad Thompson
    Sean Gordon, managing director of the Gidgee Group, says the Indigenous economic plan has potential.

    PM’s Indigenous economic plan ‘not enough’

    Businessman and Voice advocate Sean Gordon says many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities are not well placed to benefit from renewables development.

    • Tom McIlroy
    Former minister Linda Reynolds arrives at the Supreme Court in Perth for the defamation trial, with husband Robert Reid, left, and lawyer Martin Bennett.

    Reynolds’ claims ‘retraumatising’ Higgins, court told

    Lawyers for Brittany Higgins have hit back at claims she cast Senator Linda Reynolds as a villain in an imaginary fairytale, calling them “harassing”.

    • Tom Rabe
    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese with ASIO director-general Mike Burgess.

    Extremism rising across the board makes terror attack ‘probable’

    Security officials are alarmed by Australians embracing more extreme ideologies over issues such as pandemic lockdowns, the war in Gaza and economic hardship.

    • Andrew Tillett