Australia news live: assistant treasurer warns against X becoming ‘a playground for criminals and cranks’ | Coronavirus

‘More determined to remove journalists than criminals’: assistant treasurer on social media giants

Assistant treasurer Stephen Jones has accused social media giants of being “more determined to remove journalists from their platform than criminals”. Speaking to ABC RN, he said:

For platforms like Meta to be more determined to take journalists off their platform than they are criminals means they’ve got a real moral problem at the epicentre of that company, and it can’t continue.

Jones said a mandatory code for social media giants was needed this year, and accused X (formerly Twitter) of being “a factory for trolls and bots and misinformation”.

For parts of industry, not all of it, to say ‘don’t worry, just leave it to us and we’ll put in place voluntary codes’ – give me a break.

They’ve had forever to put in place mechanisms that would work and, as I’ve said, [because they are] more determined to remove journalists from their platform than criminals I think we know where the priorities lie, and it’s not in protecting the users of Facebook and Instagram and Twitter and places like this …

None of these places are above the law. They’re not a sovereign state. They can’t be a lawless program, a playground for criminals and cranks. And new laws need to be put in place, and this government is determined to do that.

Assistant treasurer Stephen Jones.
Assistant treasurer Stephen Jones. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
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Key events

Waverly mayor says candlelight vigil for Bondi Junction victims ‘very sombre’

Waverly mayor Paula Masselos said last night’s candlelight vigil for the victims of the Bondi Junction attack was “extremely emotional” and “very sombre”.

She said between 5000 and 7000 people attended the vigil, including the prime minister, premier and governor, as well as Inspector Amy Scott.

Speaking to ABC News Breakfast, Masselos said:

There is going to be quite a journey of healing, because people heal at various times… We are working with the state government [on] a permanent, in-place memorial, which will also be a part of the healing process. That’s going to take just a little bit longer… But rest assured, we are here for the community and we will be with the community as they go through their own grieving process.

The mayor said she had the opportunity to speak with Faraz Tahir’s community, who showed up in large numbers to honour the security guard who lost his life in the attack.

I know that a lot of people also embraced them and were supporting them. So last night it really was an opportunity to also acknowledge the bravery and heroism of a number of people.

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FA announces host states for Women’s Asian Cup

The Matildas’ route to potential Asian Cup success is a step closer to being finalised, AAP reports, after Football Australia revealed the host states for matches at the 2026 edition of the tournament.

FA confirmed on Monday that NSW, Queensland and Western Australia had been nominated as the preferred locations for the continental competition.

Twelve teams across three groups will take part in the tournament, which was last won by China in 2022.

After being the only AFC member to enter an official bid, Australia was in March recommended as host – following on from the success of last year’s Women’s World Cup.

FA said expressions of interest for potential venues began prior to the start of the World Cup, with all states and territories invited to make their pitch.

Victoria is the most notable absentee from the list of nominated states, having also missed out on hosting games beyond the quarter-finals of the World Cup due to the AFL season.

Next month’s A-League All Stars games will be hosted in Victoria, though, while the Matildas and Socceroos have played several matches in Melbourne in recent years.

The Matildas during last year’s Women’s World Cup. Photograph: Darren England/AAP
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Assistant treasurer ‘incredibly disappointed’ by Elon Musk’s response to takedown directive

Stephen Jones said it is “incredibly disappointing” that X boss Elon Musk is ‘making fun’ of the direction to remove content relating to last week’s stabbing at a church in Sydney, rather than complying.

Jones told ABC RN just earlier this morning:

We believe it is incredibly disappointing that Elon Musk, instead of complying with a lawful direction, has decided to make fun of it.

Decency can’t be dead and I think any Australian looking at that would go ‘oh come on’. Like, it’s a pretty simple and straightforward request, it’s a lawful request, and it’s one that [most] Australians would think it was the right [and] decent thing to do.

And instead of complying with that, he decides to make fun of it and says ‘I’ll see you in court’. I think that goes to the values that are at the heart of some of those operations and they’re way out of step with the Australian community and I’d say more broadly than that, way out of step with the way that these places need to operate.

Assistant treasurer Stephen Jones. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Will the government meet Must in court? Jones responded: “We will fight it”.

But at the same time, we’re looking at all of the laws across these areas to ensure that our regulators have the power to do what is necessary to keep our online platforms safe.

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‘More determined to remove journalists than criminals’: assistant treasurer on social media giants

Assistant treasurer Stephen Jones has accused social media giants of being “more determined to remove journalists from their platform than criminals”. Speaking to ABC RN, he said:

For platforms like Meta to be more determined to take journalists off their platform than they are criminals means they’ve got a real moral problem at the epicentre of that company, and it can’t continue.

Jones said a mandatory code for social media giants was needed this year, and accused X (formerly Twitter) of being “a factory for trolls and bots and misinformation”.

For parts of industry, not all of it, to say ‘don’t worry, just leave it to us and we’ll put in place voluntary codes’ – give me a break.

They’ve had forever to put in place mechanisms that would work and, as I’ve said, [because they are] more determined to remove journalists from their platform than criminals I think we know where the priorities lie, and it’s not in protecting the users of Facebook and Instagram and Twitter and places like this …

None of these places are above the law. They’re not a sovereign state. They can’t be a lawless program, a playground for criminals and cranks. And new laws need to be put in place, and this government is determined to do that.

Assistant treasurer Stephen Jones. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
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‘An attitude they’re above the laws of a nation’: Bill Shorten on X

Bill Shorten was also asked about X (formerly Twitter) boss Elon Musk’s decision to challenge an order to remove content on the site relating to last Monday’s Sydney church stabbing.

Asked if there should be a boycott of the social media platform, Shorten said he didn’t know about this but labelled the behaviour as “very arrogant”.

There’s almost an attitude they’re above the laws of a nation.

I think it is entirely unexceptional of a nation to say we want to take down some of the most violent and shocking footage, and somehow for them to say we’ve got freedom of speech, but we’re allowed to pollute the metaphorical airwaves with horrible vile and imagery – no one gets to vote for X. They do vote for governments and governments are accountable. So I do think what the eSafety commission has done [is] exactly right. It is about protecting citizens.

The minister for the NDIS, Bill Shorten. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian
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NDIS minister defends scheme from critics, asks what alternative would be

The minister for the National Disability Insurance Scheme, Bill Shorten, has defended the scheme against criticism from a former productivity commission boss.

In an article in the Financial Review, Gary Banks said the organisation got it wrong when recommending the NDIS and warned that Labor’s proposed overhaul would do little to reduce its budget trajectory. Banks said in a speech:

In retrospect, the commission clearly underestimated the incentives for ‘overservicing’ that such a scheme presents and, in particular, was too optimistic about the prospects of an eventual payback to the economy.

Speaking on ABC RN this morning, Shorten said at its inception there was an “overarching faith” the NDIS should be left to the market to fix any issues, but there hasn’t been enough “market stewardship”.

If you’re going to give resources for disability, you’ve got to make sure that there are rules around how it’s used and the nature of the services provided, and there just wasn’t enough work done about making sure we had enough workforce, making sure that we had service providers who were to doing what they’re saying they’re doing, [or] even qualified to do what they’re doing.

But I don’t share Mr Banks’ negativity about just wrapping up the scheme. The alternative to having the scheme is to go back to what existed beforehand, and that was a disaster where you had to have a worst set of circumstances today than yesterday to move up the queue and get resources, and even had to be more diabolical situations tomorrow, that’s not the way to allocate resources.

Shorten questioned that NDIS critics “must understand the consequence of what they say”, because “what is the alternative? Just give up?” He called on critics to meet with him to discuss their concerns, rather than “commenting in the paper”.

We’ll have to work on fixing this together, us and the Coalition.

The minister for the NDIS, Bill Shorten. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian
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Treasury downgrades growth forecasts ahead of budget

Global financial uncertainty has prompted the Treasury to downgrade its growth forecasts for major economies ahead of the federal budget, AAP reports.

Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East as well as a slowdown in China has led to the rethink on global economies, with the treasurer, Jim Chalmers, warning of a “fraught and fragile” outlook internationally.

China’s growth has been downgraded by 0.25 percentage points in 2025 to 4.25%, according to Treasury forecasts. The downgrade would mean China’s growth would be the weakest period since the Asian nation opened its economy up in the 1970s.

The UK’s economy’s forecast has also been downgraded by 0.5 percentage points to 1.25% in 2025, and Japan has had its growth revised to just 0.75% in 2024, down by 0.25 percentage points after weaker than expected consumption.

The treasurer Jim Chalmers. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

Ahead of May’s federal budget, Chalmers has been meeting with G20 counterparts in Washington, and said global uncertainty had led to the revised expectations:

Events in the Middle East are casting a shadow over the global economy, compounding the concerns about lingering inflation and weaker growth.

The fraught and fragile global outlook was a big feature of discussions in Washington DC and will be a big factor as we put the finishing touches on the budget.

Further revisions on growth forecasts are expected following the release of US GDP figures on Thursday, as well as similar data for the EU later in May.

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International travel closer to pre-pandemic levels than domestic at Sydney Airport

International traffic is now closer to pre-pandemic levels than domestic flights at Sydney Airport.

In the airport’s traffic and operational performance report for the first 2024 quarter, it shows international travel has had a 96.6% recovery rate to pre-pandemic levels (that is, in comparison with the first quarter of 2019). Domestic and regional travel, by comparison, had a 91.9% recovery rate.

The airport suggests this is due to lower levels of domestic business travel. Sydney Airport CEO Scott Charlton said:

The Q1 passenger data shows us that on the domestic front, higher airfares, lack of capacity and a downturn in discretionary business travel has affected demand.

This is contrasted with relatively higher seat capacity and competition on major international routes which underpinned strong international passenger volumes for the quarter.

Photograph: Loren Elliott/Reuters
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Ben Smee

Ben Smee

Bowen hits back at Dutton while announcing tender for renewables

The federal opposition leader, Peter Dutton, has argued in favour of building nuclear power stations to replace retiring coal-fired generators. On the ABC’s Insiders program on Sunday, Dutton queried the impact of renewables projects and said they required a “social licence”.

We can’t turn the old system off until the new one is ready. I know people want to pretend wind and solar can go around the clock, it can’t.

In a statement announcing the new renewables tender (see last post), Bowen appeared to clap back at Dutton’s comments:

The rain doesn’t always fall, but we always have water on tap because we store it for when we need it – our energy plan does just the same thing for reliable renewables.

Our plan is delivering the certainty and confidence the market needs to deliver the energy we need, when we need it.

This is in stark contrast to the Coalition’s risky reactor plan which won’t do a thing to plug the electricity gap as 90% of the existing coal fleet retires over the next ten years.

The minister for climate change and energy Chris Bowen. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian
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Albanese government announces ‘largest-ever’ tender for renewable energy projects

Ben Smee

Ben Smee

The Albanese government has announced Australia’s “largest-ever” tender to build renewable energy projects, which will be underwritten by the commonwealth.

The climate change and energy minister, Chris Bowen, says the release of a tender for 6GW of new power generation includes a new renewables deal with New South Wales that will provide at least 2.2GW of power supply for the state.

In November, the government announced an ambitious 32GW plan to underwrite renewables in pursuit of Australia’s target of 82% renewable generation by 2030, amid an “alarming” slowdown in private investment. The tender aims to trigger a first tranche of projects.

In addition to 2.2GW of power earmarked for NSW, 300MW has been earmarked for projects in South Australia, subject to an agreement between governments.

The government says it plans to release tenders from its capacity investment scheme about every six months until 2027. Selected projects will be offered long-term underwriting agreements that include agreed “floor” and “ceiling” revenue for investors.

The minister for climate change and energy, Chris Bowen. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian
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Good morning

Emily Wind

Emily Wind

And welcome to a new week on the Australia news live blog. I’m Emily Wind, and I’ll bring you our rolling coverage for most of today.

The Albanese government has announced the country’s “largest-ever” tender to build renewable energy projects, to be underwritten by the commonwealth. The climate change and energy minister, Chris Bowen, says the release of a tender for 6GW of new power generation includes a new renewables deal with NSW to provide at least 2.2GW of power supply for the state. More on this soon from Ben Smee.

International traffic is now closer to pre-pandemic levels at Sydney Airport, more so than domestic. In a statement, the airport said this is due to lower domestic business travel. Sydney Airport’s CEO, Scott Charlton, said:

The Q1 passenger data shows us that on the domestic front, higher airfares, lack of capacity and a downturn in discretionary business travel has affected demand.

This is contrasted with relatively higher seat capacity and competition on major international routes which underpinned strong international passenger volumes for the quarter.

Sydney Airport’s international travel has had a 96.6% recovery rate to pre-pandemic levels, compared to domestic and regional, which has had a 91.9% recovery rate.

See something that needs attention on the blog? You can get in touch via X, @emilywindwrites or you can send me an email: emily.wind@theguardian.com.

Let’s get started.

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