| | 07/12/2023 Lehrmann’s $450,00 payout, Hamas leader’s house ‘surrounded’, Taylor Swift speaks out |
| | | | Morning everyone. The Bruce Lehrmann defamation trial has gripped the nation in the past two weeks, and it has also brought to light other legal actions with court documents last night revealing that News Corp paid him $295,000 in damages for its original reporting of the rape allegation, which he has strenuously denied. We have all the details, plus the Israeli ambassador’s fears about antisemitism in Australia, and the latest developments from Gaza where Israel claims to be closing in on Hamas’s top leader amid house-to-house fighting. Plus, Taylor Swift, Time person of the year. |
| | | Australia | | Drilling fears | Environmental lawyers have raised concern the offshore petroleum regulator is attempting to avoid scrutiny by not publishing its reasons for approving seismic blasting and drilling for a major fossil fuel development in northern Western Australia. | Lehrmann trial | News Corp agreed to pay Bruce Lehrmann $295,000 to drop a defamation suit he brought against a news.com.au article in which Brittany Higgins alleged she had been raped by a Liberal staffer in Parliament House, according to documents filed in the federal court. Lehrmann denies the allegation. At the end of another dramatic day in his defamation case against Network Ten and Lisa Wilkinson, documents released by the court showed the ABC paid him $150,000 after it was accused of acting maliciously by broadcasting Higgins’ address to the National Press Club in February last year. | Centrelink pain | Two people are in jail after Centrelink used unlawful calculations to accuse them of over-claiming welfare benefits, a watchdog has revealed. | ‘Very sad’ | The Israeli ambassador says he is “very sad” about a rise in antisemitic incidents in Australia and has urged the government to “take all necessary measures” to ensure people of different faiths feel safe. | Jobs squeeze | A lack of suitable jobs and a trend towards insecure work is locking hundreds of thousands of people in poverty, according to a new report that finds there are 26 jobseekers for every entry-level position in Australia. |
|
| | | World | | Hamas leader’s house ‘surrounded’ | Israeli forces have surrounded the house of Hamas leader and suspected architect of the 7 October attacks Yahya Sinwaramid house-to-house battles along the length of the Gaza Strip. The focus of Israel’s offensive in Gaza is now Khan Younis, the enclave’s second-biggest urban area now being depicted as the “centre of gravity” for Hamas. | Boris Johnson | The former UK prime minister says he was not properly warned about the potential seriousness of Covid during early 2020 as he faced his first day of giving evidence to the UK Covid inquiry. He also claimed the UK handled the pandemic better than other European countries. | Defence advice | A former head of the British army has joined a lobbying firm run by the veteran Australian political strategist Sir Lynton Crosby as his CT Group seeks to capitalise on business deals in the defence industry. | Taylor Time | Taylor Swift has spoken of the psychological damage of her feud with Kim Kardashian and Kanye West, and lambasted the music industry over its treatments of young pop stars, in an interview with Time, which has named her their person of the year. | Selfie-inflicted mishap | A group of tourists fell into a murky, cold canal in Venice when the gondola in which they were travelling capsized after they failed to heed an order to stop taking selfies and sit down. |
|
| | | Lenore Taylor | Editor, Guardian Australia |
| |
| Thanks for subscribing to this newsletter. Before you move on, I wonder if you would consider making a contribution to our end-of-year fundraiser. As we look ahead to the challenges of 2024, we’re aiming to raise $300,000 to power more rigorous, independent reporting. This year, our journalism held the powerful to account and gave a voice to the marginalised. It cut through misinformation to arm Australians with facts about the referendum and exposed corporate greed amid the cost-of-living crunch. It sparked government inquiries and investigations, and continued to treat the climate crisis with the urgency it deserves. This vital work is made possible because of our unique reader-supported model. With no billionaire owner or shareholders to consider, we are empowered to produce truly independent journalism that serves the public interest, not profit motives. And unlike others, we don’t keep our journalism behind a paywall. With misinformation and propaganda increasingly rife, we believe it is more important than ever that everybody has access to trustworthy news and information, whether they can afford to pay for it or not. If this is work you value, please consider supporting more of it with a year-end contribution from $1. Every act of support, however small, gets us closer to our goal. Thank you. | Support us |
|
|
| |
|
| Full Story | | Labor’s preventive detention minefield The federal government has passed legislation designed to toughen Australia’s immigration law, dubbed “preventative detention”. Paul Karp tells Laura Murphy-Oates about the moral and legal minefield surrounding these new powers. | |
| | | In-depth | | The arrest and charging of the American conspiracy theorist linked to the Wieambilla shooters has helped to shine more light on the end-of-days religious ideology that appears to have influenced Gareth, Nathaniel and Stacey Train. Donald Day, who is accused of inciting violence in relation to the deadly standoff in Queensland, was prolific on social media where he called on fellow off-gridders to resist the “monsters” who he claimed would introduce forced vaccinations and ban Christianity and private property. Eden Gillespie examines a community readying itself to “fight and die well”. |
| | | Not the news | | It’s the Olympics of opera: Richard Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen – colloquially, the Ring Cycle. With a 15-hour running time and split into four shows, it’s a bold show for Opera Australia to stage and the performances running in Brisbane during December are the first to have fully-digital backgrounds and scenery. Even so, it still took 27 semi-trailers of hardware to set them up and tickets are pricey. But our reviewer Olivia Stewart says her attention never wavered and was “cast under its spell”. What’s not to love about a show that ends with a Götterdämmerung? |
| | | Sport | | Matildas | Australia can celebrate the success of the Matildas after a spectacular 2023 – but the pressure will be greater come the Olympics. | Australian Open 2024 | Emma Raducanu has missed out on the initial batch of wild card entires for the Australian Open and the British former US Open champion must now try to enter through the qualifying rounds. | Premier League | It’s another big football schedule in England with Manchester City visiting Aston Villa and Manchester United hosting Chelsea. Follow the action live. |
|
| | | Media roundup | Amid angst about Sydney’s new underground motorway system, a traffic expert writes in the Sydney Morning Herald that it is working exactly as planned.The Age catches up with the 34-year-old station announcer who has become a cult hero at Melbourne’s Flinders Street. The Cairns Post looks at four different scenarios for Cyclone Jasper as it heads towards Queensland’s north-east coast. |
| | | What’s happening today | Canberra | Bill Shorten addresses the National Press Club about the NDIS. | Media | Lisa Wilkinson sues Ten for costs of the Lehrmann defamation suit at the NSW supreme court. | Perth | Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska launches a legal challenge against sanctions placed on him by the Australian government. |
|
| | | Brain teaser | And finally, here are the Guardian’s crosswords to keep you entertained throughout the day – with plenty more on the Guardian’s Puzzles app for iOS and Android. 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 |
| |
| Power high-impact journalism into 2024 | In 2023, Guardian Australia journalism exposed misinformation, held the powerful to account and gave a voice to the marginalised. Our work armed Australians with facts about the referendum, exposed corporate greed amid the cost-of-living crisis, and helped spark numerous investigations and inquiries. Now, as we look to the momentous challenges ahead, we are aiming to raise an additional $300k to support more independent, rigorous journalism. Here are three good reasons to make the choice to support us today. | 1 | Our quality, investigative journalism is a scrutinising force at a time when the rich and powerful are getting away with more and more. |
| 2 | We are independent and have no billionaire owner controlling what we do, so your money directly powers our reporting. |
| 3 | It doesn’t cost much, and takes less time than it took to read this message. |
| If you can, make the choice to support us with a year-end contribution from $1. Whether you choose to give a little or a lot, your funding will power our journalism in 2024 and the years to come. Thank you. | Support us |
|
|
| |
|
|
|