Home National Australia Australia news LIVE: Police probe CFMEU ‘inside job’ leak; Moira Deeming launches...

Australia news LIVE: Police probe CFMEU ‘inside job’ leak; Moira Deeming launches legal action; UNSW ordered to pay back staff

3
0

source : the age

Good morning and welcome to our national news live coverage for Friday, July 3. I’m Ellie Busby, and I will be bringing you the news from around Australia and the world as it happens this morning.

Here are our top stories so far today:

  • Police have launched urgent inquiries into a suspected “inside job” leak from the CFMEU’s Melbourne headquarters to the criminal underworld designed to encourage violent or other reprisals against a former union organiser.
  • Moira Deeming has launched legal action against the Liberal state president in a bid to prevent the party from disendorsing her as a candidate at November’s state election. She will face the Supreme Court on Friday morning.
  • NSW is facing a massive shortfall in its five-year housing target, tracking about 40 per cent behind the rate required to meet the state government’s commitments under the National Housing Accord.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has defended his government’s legislation on gambling advertising and criticised an “outrageous” delay to additional powers for the eSafety Commissioner.

Additional powers for the eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant, which would double the available fines and allow more information to be sought from social media platforms, are headed for an eight-week Senate inquiry.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese during question time on Thursday.Dominic Lorrimer

“It is outrageous, the delay,” Albanese told ABC Radio Sydney this morning.

“That will allow the platforms to go and just delete a whole lot of material, whereas if it was passed yesterday, that would have been the date from which these demands could be made by the commissioner, so then fines can be issued.”

Deputy Liberal leader Jane Hume has rejected the government’s attack on the Coalition for sending the expansion of the teen social media ban to a Senate inquiry as playing into the hands of big tech.

“The legislation was introduced yesterday at the end of the last sitting fortnight … Now we’re not in parliament for the next six weeks,” Hume told Sunrise. “Why not use that time to make sure that this legislation is right, that it’s going to work this time?

“[Communications Minister Anika Wells] has been sloppy from go to woah and has put children at risk because the legislation wasn’t right the first time.”

Jane Hume during a press conference at Parliament House on Thursday.Dominic Lorrimer

Health Minister Mark Butler, appearing alongside Hume on Sunrise, invoked a grieving father whose child died by suicide, who labelled the Coalition’s move as “absolutely pathetic”.

The Fair Work Ombudsman has ordered the University of NSW to pay $33 million to staff for almost a decade of underpayments to casual academics.

UNSW has been ordered to pay back underpaid staff.Edwina Pickles

The university paid casual academics and others, including professional staff, the wrong rates between 2014 and 2023, and also breached record-keeping and payslip requirements.

“UNSW self-reported the underpayments to FWO in 2020, which prompted the FWO to begin its investigation. FWO found that UNSW’s record-keeping failures were so extensive that they hindered the investigation into the underpayments,” it said in a statement.

UNSW must now make a contrition payment of $500,000 to Commonwealth Consolidated Revenue.

It comes weeks after UNSW was named Australia’s highest-ranking university in the prestigious QS worldwide rankings.

Washington: An Olympian was indicted on a felony charge in what US President Donald Trump has called vandalism of the Reflecting Pool.

David Hearn, a former canoe racer, was indicted on a single count of property destruction in a Washington, DC court.

Olympic paddler David Hearn has been accused of destroying government property.Getty Images

District of Columbia US Attorney Jeanine Pirro said Hearn ripped up recently installed sealant on the pool in “a deliberate act” that caused more than $1000 in damage. She accused him of “forcefully and violently” pulling up the bottom liner “with both hands” and acting belligerently towards an employee who told him to stop.

“This is a case with tremendous evidence,” she said, adding that authorities had made about six other misdemeanour arrests. Hearn, 67, didn’t immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

Good morning and welcome to our national news live coverage for Friday, July 3. I’m Ellie Busby, and I will be bringing you the news from around Australia and the world as it happens this morning.

Here are our top stories so far today:

  • Police have launched urgent inquiries into a suspected “inside job” leak from the CFMEU’s Melbourne headquarters to the criminal underworld designed to encourage violent or other reprisals against a former union organiser.
  • Moira Deeming has launched legal action against the Liberal state president in a bid to prevent the party from disendorsing her as a candidate at November’s state election. She will face the Supreme Court on Friday morning.
  • NSW is facing a massive shortfall in its five-year housing target, tracking about 40 per cent behind the rate required to meet the state government’s commitments under the National Housing Accord.