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Australia news LIVE: Teals to form new party; ASIO boss criticises terror threat level

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source : the age

Good morning, and welcome to our national news live coverage for Thursday, June 25. We’ll be keeping you up to date with today’s news.

Here are today’s main headlines.

Teal independents to form new political party: Teal independents Zali Steggall and Allegra Spender will form a new political party, Community Strong Australia, in a much-anticipated move set to further destabilise the two-party system, and an attempt to grab disaffected One Nation voters.

ASIO boss criticises terror threat level: The nation’s domestic spy boss has revealed he is working with the government to overhaul the decade-old terror threat warning system, as he warns that the current threat level underestimates the seriousness of the dangers Australians face.

Warning over Labor’s union procurement changes: New federal laws that would allow businesses with union-backed enterprise agreements to be favoured for taxpayer-funded work have sparked warnings they could create a fresh corruption risk in Commonwealth contracts, drawing comparisons with practices exposed in the CFMEU scandal.

Trump cancels event, demands voter ID laws ahead of midterms: President Donald Trump’s deteriorating relationship with the US Congress has reached new lows after he cancelled a planned event on Capitol Hill and refused to sign a bipartisan housing bill until lawmakers passed stricter voter ID laws.

Meanwhile, in the media world, Today show host Karl Stefanovic will leave Nine following his incendiary podcast interview with far-right British activist Tommy Robinson, potentially defusing a major advertiser boycott.

The last of the Islamic State-linked Australian women stranded in a detention camp in Syria has been granted a permit to return to Australia, Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke has revealed.

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke.Alex Ellinghausen

The Sydney woman, Hodan Abby, was blocked from boarding a flight in Damascus in May under a temporary exclusion order issued by the federal government.

She was later believed to have disappeared with her young disabled daughter inside the Syrian prison system.

Burke said that Abby had formally requested to return to Australia, and the government could no longer prevent her from returning to the country.

Teal independent Nicolette Boele has welcomed the arrival of Zali Steggall and Allegra Spender’s new political party Community Strong Australia, but has maintained that she will remain an independent.

Teal independent Nicolette BoeleJames Brickwood

“Today is a significant day, and a hopeful one. Many Australians want climate action, integrity, and politics that is done with them and for them. Community independents have offered exactly that – but only to the electorates lucky enough to have one on the ballot. What launches today could open that door to a great many more,” Boele said in a statement.

“For now, I am remaining independent. That is the mandate Bradfield gave me, and any decision to change that belongs to my community, not to a press conference. I am still working through what this party would allow me to do for the people I represent that I cannot already do as a community independent – and until I am certain, I will not pretend otherwise.”

Boele, the teal with the slimmest electoral margin of the cohort, said she was “genuinely excited” about the party’s potential impact on the Australian political landscape. She said she expected to work with the party “often”.

“Community Strong Australia represents the kind of brave, hopeful politics our country needs more of, and I look forward to seeing where it goes.”

Defender Jacob Italiano has been ruled out of the Socceroos’ World Cup clash against Paraguay and is expected to miss the rest of the tournament, further exposing the lack of available depth in what has been the team’s long-term problem position.

Jacob Italiano celebrates Australia’s win over Turkey.Getty Images

In a sizeable blow to Australia’s hopes, Italiano injured his groin at training on Monday (US West Coast time) and is unlikely to play any further part in their campaign, according to sources with knowledge of his fitness status.

Coach Tony Popovic confirmed the news on the eve of their Group D showdown with Paraguay, saying the extent of the 24-year-old’s injury was still to be determined by scans in the coming days.

It is the second forced change Popovic will need to make to his starting line-up, with Mathew Leckie (hamstring) also unable to back up from Australia’s 2-0 defeat to the United States.

Italiano’s absence leaves a big hole on the right side of Australia’s defence.

Vince Rugari explains more here.

France has confirmed its first case of Ebola after a doctor who returned from humanitarian work in the Democratic Republic of Congo tested positive.

France has identified its first case of Ebola.Reuters

The news was confirmed by the French Health Ministry, which identified five possible contacts who should isolate.

The patient – who has not been named – is the first Ebola case to be identified outside the region in the current outbreak. He is in stable condition and is receiving care at a specialised facility, the ministry said.

The rare Bundibugyo strain of Ebola has sickened more than 1100 people in Congo and Uganda and killed almost 280. Health officials have struggled to contain the outbreak in a region beset by insecurity, displacement and hunger.

Household electricity usage is forecast to almost halve over the next 25 years due to Australia’s booming adoption of rooftop solar panels and batteries, but overall grid demand could double because of businesses’ power usage and energy-hungry data centres.

Data centres, such as this one pictured in the US state of Virginia, consume enormous amounts of electricity.Bloomberg

The Australian Energy Market Operator has modified its 25-year road map for the transition of the power grid to reflect a transformative surge in the number of home battery installations and growing demand for data centres to power AI tools.

There are already more than 600,000 homes around the nation with their own battery systems, allowing them to stash their rooftop solar power during the day and discharge it to power their homes after sunset.

Millions more are expected to install batteries by 2050, which the market operator now says will slash household electricity consumption by 44 per cent, despite homes having more electric appliances and electric vehicles.

Read more in this story by Mike Foley and Nick Toscano.

King Charles was cooled by an aide with a hand-held fan at a palace event on climate change in London on Wednesday, as Britain sweltered in its highest-ever June temperature.

Charles gets fan assistance from senior aide Vice-Admiral Sir Tony Johnstone-Burt at the St James’ Palace reception.Getty Images

France recorded its hottest-ever day for the second day running, as Western Europe remains gripped by a heatwave that has claimed dozens of lives, disrupted power supplies, and shut schools.

Forecasters warn that the current “heat dome” means extreme temperatures could persist until the end of the week.

The King was pictured receiving fan-assistance from the master of the royal household, Vice-Admiral Sir Tony Johnstone-Burt, while greeting delegates at a St James’ Palace event on super pollutants during London Climate Action Week.

AP/Reuters/AAP

Good morning, and welcome to our national news live coverage for Thursday, June 25. We’ll be keeping you up to date with today’s news.

Here are today’s main headlines.

Teal independents to form new political party: Teal independents Zali Steggall and Allegra Spender will form a new political party, Community Strong Australia, in a much-anticipated move set to further destabilise the two-party system, and an attempt to grab disaffected One Nation voters.

ASIO boss criticises terror threat level: The nation’s domestic spy boss has revealed he is working with the government to overhaul the decade-old terror threat warning system, as he warns that the current threat level underestimates the seriousness of the dangers Australians face.

Warning over Labor’s union procurement changes: New federal laws that would allow businesses with union-backed enterprise agreements to be favoured for taxpayer-funded work have sparked warnings they could create a fresh corruption risk in Commonwealth contracts, drawing comparisons with practices exposed in the CFMEU scandal.