Plus: Putin praises Trump
͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌     
Labor’s bill bonanza, Albanese nature negative, Putin praises Trump | The Guardian

Support the Guardian

Help us raise $500,000 to power independent journalism into 2025

Morning Mail - The Guardian
The Senate chamber
29/11/2024

Labor’s bill bonanza, Albanese nature negative, Putin praises Trump

Martin Farrer Martin Farrer
 

Morning, everyone. We had to wait until about 11.15pm last night but the Senate passed the world’s first attempt at legislation banning young people’s use of social media. Along with migration and housing measures it was quite the night, and may go a long way to defining this government. We have news and analysis, plus how Nature Positive laws were stymied, echoes of Joh Bjelke-Petersen in Queensland’s crime crackdown, and Vladimir Putin saying Donald Trump will “find a solution” to the Ukraine war.

Australia

Tanya Plibersek speaks at question time

Exclusive | Tanya Plibersek struck a deal in writing with both the Greens and independent senator David Pocock on supporting her nature positive legislation before Anthony Albanese vetoed it hours later in a private meeting with Adam Bandt and Sarah Hanson-Young.

Labor’s bill bonanza | A late final sitting in the Senate for the year has seen more than 30 bills pass the upper house, including controversial migration laws that allow the government to pay third countries to take non-citizens and ban travellers from specified countries. The world’s first attempt to ban under-16s from social media platforms went through as well, although much of the detail is yet to be worked through. Despite the trade-offs, the marathon effort in the upper house has done a lot to cement Labor’s first-term agenda with wins on housing especially.

Privacy breach | A property investment company breached privacy laws by sharing the names and addresses of people going through a divorce or financial distress with its clients, the information watchdog found.

Safer Queensland? | The new state government has acknowledged that its signature youth crime legislation will “directly discriminate” against children, by limiting their protection from “cruel treatment”. A veteran human rights lawyer who took on Joh Bjelke-Petersen sees shades of those times in David Crisafulli’s crackdown.

Rubbish deal | Macquarie Bank has launched a near-$1.4bn offer to buy the London-listed waste management company Renewi in its latest tilt at UK assets.

Advertisement

World

Emergency service workers lift part of an intercepted Russian cruise missile

Putin praise | Vladimir Putin has threatened to strike “decision-making centres” in Kyiv with powerful missiles, and has praised “intelligent” Donald Trump as someone who will “find the solution” to the Ukraine war.

Trump caution | A political scientist who predicted Trump’s election win says voters were disgruntled about a weak economy and have not necessarily given the president-elect a mandate to make radical changes. Trump’s putative defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, has placed anti-Muslim rhetoric at the centre of several of his published books, according analysis of his output.

‘Hands on the trigger’ | Hezbollah has vowed to continue resisting Israel and is monitoring the Israeli army’s withdrawal from south Lebanon “with [our] hands on the trigger”, the militia said as a fragile truce held.

Spy trap | A former British soldier whose prison escape sparked a huge manhunt in 2023 has been convicted of spying for Iran but cleared of carrying out a bomb hoax. But was he an amateurish fantasist or a consequential spy?

Survival story | A 20-year-old hiker given up for dead has been found alive by two oil workers after surviving 50 days in the Canadian wilderness.

Full Story

Mike Ticher, Patrick Keneally and Bridie Jabour

Newsroom edition: do voters still care about the climate during a cost-of-living crisis?

Bridie Jabour talks to Mike Ticher and Patrick Keneally about the challenges the Labor government faces when selling its climate credentials at this time.

The Guardian Podcasts

In-depth

Power-generating windmill turbines

The political classes may have been more focused on the passage or otherwise of legislation yesterday, but the huge dump of information about how the government is managing the climate crisis is arguably just as important. Our environment editor has been sifting through the data and comes up with six things you need to know about what is happening – from emissions on a downward trend (but not enough) to why the government needs to set even more ambitious targets.

Advertisement

Not the news

Sarah J Maas addresses a book signing

From the nitty gritty of politics and climate to the unabashed pleasures of an increasingly popular fiction genre: “romantasy”. Emily Mulligan explains that books such as the A Court of Thorns and Roses series by Sarah J Maas “know exactly what the girls want”, including “detailed descriptions of outfits and interiors, hundreds of pages of crackling sexual tension, and the notion that in the right circumstances we too would be good at archery”.

Sport

Clare Polkinghorne of the Matildas applauds the crowd

Football | Brazil crashed Clare Polkinghorne’s farewell match for the Matildas with a 3-1 win in Brisbane but Australia have another crack at the visitors on Sunday night.

Rugby union | Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii has won his battle to be fit for Australia’s final Test of their British Isles tour and will hope to bow out against Ireland in the spectacular fashion that he began on his debut against England.

AFLW | Brisbane Lions will back their strong collective identity as they head into a sixth grand final – even if they are considered underdogs against North Melbourne.

Tennis | Five-time grand slam champion Iga Swiatek has accepted a one-month suspension after testing positive for the banned substance trimetazidine but will be able to play in the Australian Open in January.

Media roundup

An emergency US funding plea for Virginia-class submarines is sparking fresh Aukus concerns, the ABC reports. NSW has removed targets on results and attendance for public schools, the Sydney Morning Herald claims. The Commonwealth Bank is using AI to resolve payment disputes and its boss, Matt Comyn, tells the Financial Review there is a lot more to come. And the Courier-Mail has called the Queensland government’s axing of the path to treaty a “heartless, destructive decision”.

What’s happening today

Sport | A parliamentary inquiry will examine decisions made about the 2026 Commonwealth Games.

Shopping | Black Friday sales are under way.

Sign up

Enjoying the Morning Mail? Then you’ll love our Afternoon Update newsletter. Sign up here to finish your day with a three-minute snapshot of the day’s main news, and complete your daily news roundup.

And check out the full list of our local and international newsletters, including The Stakes, your guide to the twists and turns of the US presidential election.

Brain teaser

And finally, here are the Guardian’s crosswords to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow.

Contact us

If you have a story tip or technical issue viewing this newsletter, please reply to this email.

If you are a Guardian supporter and need assistance with regards to contributions and/or digital subscriptions, please email customer.help@guardian.co.uk

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 contributing to our end-of-year fundraiser 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.

As we enter an Australian election year, we are deeply conscious of the responsibility to accurately and impartially report on what is really at stake.

The Guardian is in a unique position to do this. We are not subject to the influence of a billionaire owner, nor do we exist to enrich shareholders. We are here to serve and listen to you, our readers, and we rely on your support to power our work.

Your support keeps us independent, beholden to no outside influence and accessible to everyone – whether they can afford to pay for news, or not.

If you can, please consider supporting us with just $1, or better yet, support us every month with a little more. Thank you.

Lenore Taylor
Editor, Guardian Australia

Get in touch
If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email australia.newsletters@guardian.co.uk
https://www.theguardian.com/uk
You are receiving this email because you are a subscriber to Morning Mail. Guardian News & Media Limited - a member of Guardian Media Group PLC. Registered Office: Kings Place, 90 York Way, London, N1 9GU. Registered in England No. 908396