And: Trump delays Mexico tariffs
͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌     
Sam Kerr in court, Dutton poll boost, Trump delays Mexico tariffs | The Guardian

Support the Guardian

Power independent journalism into 2025

Morning Mail - The Guardian
Sam Kerr arrives at Kingston crown court in south-west London on Monday.
04/02/2025

Sam Kerr in court, Dutton poll boost, Trump delays Mexico tariffs

Martin Farrer Martin Farrer
 

Morning everyone. The long-awaited trial of Sam Kerr on charges of racially aggravated harassment began in London overnight with the court hearing that the incident stemmed from an altercation in a police station in the early hours. We have a full report, plus how more voters are increasingly seeing Peter Dutton as in touch with their concerns than Anthony Albanese, how Mexico’s president has talked Donald Trump down from his tariff threat – for now – and Cate Blanchett on the “distressing” aftermath of #MeToo.

Australia

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Leader of the Opposition Peter Dutton during a Last Post ceremony at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra, Monday, February 3, 2025. (AAP Image/Mick Tsikas) NO ARCHIVING

Exclusive | More voters see Peter Dutton as in touch with ordinary Australians, decisive and better in a crisis than Anthony Albanese, with the opposition leader’s standing improving on key leadership indicators in our latest Guardian Essential poll.

‘Stupid and white’ | Sam Kerr called a Metropolitan police officer “fucking stupid and white” after he doubted her claim of being abducted by a taxi driver, a court in London heard overnight. The Matildas star is accused of causing racially aggravated intentional harassment after a row with a cab driver ended up with an altercation with the officer at a police station.

Shark attack | A teenage girl has died after being bitten by a shark off Bribie Island near Brisbane, at a spot popular with surfers.

‘Dark money’ | Almost $70m of “dark money” flowed to the major parties and the Greens in the past financial year, our analysis reveals, as the Albanese government pushes to pass laws to overhaul the opaque political donations regime.

Exclusive | The Greens have offered to water down their demands on the gambling ads bill in a challenge to Labor to push through legislation that was shelved last year.

Advertisement

World

Nasdaq Stock Market opens as Trump threatens with tariffs on various countriesepa11872996 Stock market numbers are displayed outside the Fox News studio in New York, New York, USA, 03 February 2025. Filling up to a campaign promise, President Trump signed an executive order issuing tariffs on goods coming into the U.S. from Canada, Mexico and China. The U.S. is planned to start collecting tariffs from Canada on 04 February 2025. EPA/SARAH YENESEL

Tariff ‘pause’ | Donald Trump and his Mexican counterpart, Claudia Sheinbaum, have announced a one-month “pause” in threatened US tariffs after what she described as a “a good conversation” between the two leaders. The US president is having talks with Canada’s prime minister, Justin Trudeau, this morning as well. The news helped financial markets recover after they had been rocked amid concerns about US tariffs hurting the global economy. France’s president, Emmanuel Macron, said the bloc would stand up for itself if its interests were targeted. Former US Senate leader Mitch McConnell called the tariffs a “bad idea” but he is a lone voice as Republicans fall in behind Trump.

Moscow bomb | Armen Sarkisyan, a pro-Russia paramilitary leader from eastern Ukraine, has been killed along with his bodyguard after a bomb went off in the lobby of a Moscow apartment building.

Kiss off | The Spanish footballer Jenni Hermoso has told a court that “one of the happiest moments” of her life was ruined when the then president of the Spanish Football Federation grabbed her and kissed her on the lips after Spain’s World Cup win in Sydney in August 2023.

Taliban ban | A senior Taliban minister who expressed support for reversing the ban on girls’ education in Afghanistan appears to have been forced to flee the country.

‘Quite distressing’ | The Oscar-winning actor Cate Blanchett has said she finds the lack of change after the #MeToo movement eight years ago “quite distressing”. In France, after a landmark #MeToo trial, film director Christophe Ruggia has been found guilty of sexually assaulting an actor but was not jailed.

 
Have your say
Join our research panel to share your thoughts on The Guardian's advertising and commercial partnerships. You'll also go into the running to win one of three $50 vouchers each month.
Join now
 
Tracking Pixel

Full Story

Dural Episodic artwork Full story

What a caravan filled with explosives has to do with antisemitism

Reged Ahmad talks to Caitlin Cassidy and Jordyn Beazley about what happened after a caravan filled with explosives was found on a quiet Sydney street.

The Guardian Podcasts

In-depth

Australia Is Quitting Coal in Record Time Thanks to TeslaThe AusNet Services transformer station near the Victorian Big Battery site operated by Neoen SA in Moorabool, Victoria, Australia, on Friday, Feb. 3, 2023. Elon Musk helped accelerate a transformation of Australias electricity grid to replace fossil fuels with clean power now it’s a testing ground for global climate action. Photographer: Carla Gottgens/Bloomberg via Getty Images

A leading energy industry expert says Peter Dutton has “no idea what he is talking about”, after the opposition leader claimed that slowing the rollout of renewable energy and backing nuclear power could bring down bills by 44% “or of that order”. Dr Dylan McConnell, of the University of New South Wales, said Dutton didn’t even understand his own policy. Check out our explainer for more analysis on the Coalition’s nuclear plans.

Advertisement

Not the news

Illustration for Australian Lifestyle story on Chefs remember their favourite after school meals. The image shows Indomie noodles with crustacean oil, tinned sardines, A mango and herb and chilli fried rice.

Tinned sardines with Thai salad or poached chicken and mango salad aren’t the sort of things that kids might be expected to knock up for an after-school snack. But we asked celebrated Australian chefs such as Palisa Anderson and Rowena Chansiri what they liked to cook when they got home from school and this what they said.

Sport

Annabel Sutherland wins the Belinda Clark Award during the 2025 Australian Cricket Awards ceremony at Crown Casino in Melbourne, Monday, February 3, 2025. (AAP Image/Con Chronis) NO ARCHIVING

Cricket | Travis Head is Australian cricket’s Allan Border medallist and Annabel Sutherland has won the Belinda Clark award as the top woman in a surprise result.

Football | Marcus Rashford is extremely unlikely to play competitively for Manchester United again after his loan to Aston Villa with the club near irreparable. Follow the final hours of the transfer window live.

Cricket | It could be a tough task, but one of our writers suggest six ways to fix the England women’s cricket team after their Ashes debacle.

Media roundup

The Cairns Post has dramatic first-hand reporting on the flooding in far north Queensland with residents describing homes being “swallowed up” by rising waters. The Albanese government is launching a last-minute bid to toughen the anti-hate laws amid fears of rising antisemitism, the Age claims. The Financial Review boasts an exclusive with a report that the defence minister, Richard Marles, is flying to Washington to shore up relations with the US.

What’s happening today

Sport | Case management hearing at supreme court of Victoria in player concussion cases against AFL.

Environment | NSW parliamentary inquiry into PFAS.

Perth | Sentencing for four climate activists over incident at the home of Woodside chief executive.

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.

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 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.

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