Your daily digest of the top headlines and must-reads from Australia and around the world, along with sport, culture, lifestyle, opinion and more
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The Guardian Today Australia
Headlines
Invasion Day rallies begin across country; WA woman charged with alleged murder of retirement village roommate
Australia news live  
Invasion Day rallies begin across country; WA woman charged with alleged murder of retirement village roommate
Follow live
US  
Trump again demands to buy Greenland in ‘horrendous’ call with Danish PM
Israel-Gaza war  
‘They survived hell’: Israel hails the homecoming of freed female soldiers
Agriculture  
‘We’ve been dumbed-down’: farmers want the right to repair their own tractors again
Honours system  
Neale Daniher, former AFL player and motor neurone disease advocate, named Australian of the Year
Tennis  
Madison Keys stuns Aryna Sabalenka to win thrilling Australian Open final
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The rural network
‘We’ve been dumbed-down’: Australian farmers want the right to repair their own tractors again
Farming  
‘We’ve been dumbed-down’: Australian farmers want the right to repair their own tractors again
Right to repair laws could boost agricultural productivity by $97m by removing costly and time-consuming trips to fix machinery issues, lobbyists say
Full Story podcast
Full Story  
Where did our attention spans go, and can we get them back? – Full Story podcast
Where did our attention spans go, and can we get them back? – Full Story podcast
Sport
Good Ange is now Bad Postecoglou and caught in the Premier League doom spiral
Good Ange is now Bad Postecoglou and caught in the Premier League doom spiral
Women's Ashes  
Mooney’s cool head and sheer class runs England ragged
Cricket  
Bigger challenges than a debut with nothing to lose await Konstas in Sri Lanka
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Culture
Australian books  
Unfinished Business by Shankari Chandran review – page-turning political thriller from Miles Franklin winner
Unfinished Business by Shankari Chandran review – page-turning political thriller from Miles Franklin winner
Triple J’s Hottest 100  
Just one original Australian song tipped for top 10 as overseas pop reigns
Books  
Edmund White on lust, love and literature: ‘I’d had sex with 3,000 men. A peer asked: “Why so few?”’
Opinion
Today could be a day for soul-searching. Instead we cling to a distant monarchy in denial of our racist past
Today could be a day for soul-searching. Instead we cling to a distant monarchy in denial of our racist past
Need some help facing the year ahead? Here are some dates to look forward to
Everyone loves the horrible smelly plant Putricia! Is it the only good thing left in this world?
Lifestyle
Insect bites  
Ditch the itch: what’s the best way to soothe mosquito bites?
Ditch the itch: what’s the best way to soothe mosquito bites?
The moment I knew  
He hugged me and I didn’t want to let go
Technology
Trump inauguration  
‘The reign of terror is over’: my weird weekend partying with the triumphant tech right
‘The reign of terror is over’: my weird weekend partying with the triumphant tech right
Science
Microbiology  
Scientists point to Andes potato pathogen as origin of Irish famine
Scientists point to Andes potato pathogen as origin of Irish famine
Environment
Tasmania  
Swarm of jellyfish swimming in bioluminescence looks ‘magical’ – but it’s a warning sign
Swarm of jellyfish swimming in bioluminescence looks ‘magical’ – but it’s a warning sign
Plants  
Putricia the corpse flower: would you wait 3.5 hours to smell a rotten carcass? - video
Video
'Vastly different agendas': Australian PM Anthony Albanese makes early election pitch – video
'Vastly different agendas': Australian PM Anthony Albanese makes early election pitch – video
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A message from Lenore Taylor editor of Guardian Australia

I hope you appreciated this newsletter. Before you move on, I wonder if you would consider supporting our work as we prepare for a pivotal, uncertain year ahead.

The course of world history has taken a sharp and disturbing turn in 2024. Liberalism is under threat from populist authoritarianism. Americans have voted to install a president with no respect for democratic norms, nor the facts that once formed the guardrails of public debate.

That decision means an alliance critical to Australia’s national and economic security is now a series of unpredictable transactions, with a partner no longer committed to multilateralism, nor efforts to curb global heating, the greatest threat we face. We just don’t know where this will lead.

In this uncertain time, fair, fact-based journalism is more important than ever – to record and understand events, to scrutinise the powerful, to give context, and to counter rampant misinformation and falsehoods.

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Lenore Taylor
Editor, Guardian Australia

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