Australia news live: Mark Butler flags Covid vaccines for under-fives ‘within months’, ACCC to investigate energy prices

Mark Butler says Covid vaccines for children under five coming within months

Health minister, Mark Butler, is making the rounds this morning, and said on RN Breakfast that Covid vaccines for children under five years old could be approved “within months”.

Butler said the Therapeutic Goods Administration has an application from Moderna they are currently considering, and that it could be a couple of months before they are rolled out:

The Therapeutic Goods Administration has an application from Moderna which they’re currently going through. If that is approved, then that will go to our advisory group on vaccinations.

I don’t control that timeframe. I think it’s appropriate that those authorities feel that they are able to conduct their legislative work in a timeframe that’s proper, and I’d expect that to happen over the coming weeks now.

The former chair of the advisory group on vaccines [Prof Allen Cheng] I know said over the last couple of days it might be a month or two until we finally see those vaccines going into the arms of under-five-year-olds, but that ultimately is a matter for them.

Updated at 19.02 EDT

NSW Health records 7,805 Covid cases and seven deaths

NSW Health is reporting 7,805 new Covid cases and seven deaths:

COVID-19 update – Tuesday 21 June 2022

In the 24-hour reporting period to 4pm yesterday:

– 96.5% of people aged 16+ have had one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine
– 95.1% of people aged 16+ have had two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine pic.twitter.com/f25smPwmXq

— NSW Health (@NSWHealth) June 20, 2022

Updated at 19.13 EDT

Victoria records 7,507 new Covid cases and 28 deaths

Victoria is reporting a spike in Covid related deaths, after 28 people lost their lives overnight:

Updated at 19.11 EDT

Rally outside NSW parliament to protest government’s wages policy

The AAP is reporting that NSW private and public sector union members are rallying outside parliament to protest against the government’s wages policy, saying it will leave workers worse off as inflation takes flight.

The rally coincides with the treasurer, Matt Kean, preparing to deliver the Perrottet government’s first budget at midday on Tuesday.

Dominic Perrottet has already flagged that public sector workers can expect a 3% wage rise in the budget this year.

Unions NSW secretary, Mark Morey, says with inflation running at 5.2%, and predictions it could hit 7% by the end of the year, the government’s pay offer will slash workers’ real wages by thousands of dollars a year. He told Sydney radio 2GB:

We are losing skilled teachers, nurses, cleaners – and we’re going to have more pressure in NSW for services to be provided that we can’t retain.

It’s not much to ask and the government needs to act.

Updated at 19.13 EDT

Mark Butler says Covid vaccines for children under five coming within months

Health minister, Mark Butler, is making the rounds this morning, and said on RN Breakfast that Covid vaccines for children under five years old could be approved “within months”.

Butler said the Therapeutic Goods Administration has an application from Moderna they are currently considering, and that it could be a couple of months before they are rolled out:

The Therapeutic Goods Administration has an application from Moderna which they’re currently going through. If that is approved, then that will go to our advisory group on vaccinations.

I don’t control that timeframe. I think it’s appropriate that those authorities feel that they are able to conduct their legislative work in a timeframe that’s proper, and I’d expect that to happen over the coming weeks now.

The former chair of the advisory group on vaccines [Prof Allen Cheng] I know said over the last couple of days it might be a month or two until we finally see those vaccines going into the arms of under-five-year-olds, but that ultimately is a matter for them.

Updated at 19.02 EDT

Shorten says Greens moving Australian flag ‘counterproductive’

Minister for government services, Bill Shorten, has criticised the Greens for removing the Australian flag from view before a press conference yesterday.

A staffer moved the flag out of shot of TV cameras, and Shorten was not impressed, telling the Today show the act was “counterproductive to the cause”.

I would remind Adam and the Greens … that we’ve got to bring people with us on a path of change.

Everyone agrees that our First Nations people should get an equal deal in this country. We want to change the constitution and include them in our nation’s birth certificate, but antics like this … This is virtue signalling.

Virtue signalling is when someone thinks that their morality is superior to everyone else’s.

Updated at 18.49 EDT

Benita Kolovos

Benita Kolovos

Endangered leadbeater’s possum born in captivity for first time in two decades

Victoria’s faunal emblem – the critically endangered leadbeater’s possum – has been born in captivity for the first time in 20 years.

Environment minister, Lily D’Ambrosio, on Tuesday announced the arrival of two highland leadbeater’s possum joeys born at Healesville Sanctuary. The duo have undergone health checks and have been confirmed to be female.

Victoria’s faunal emblem, the Leadbeater’s Possum
Victoria’s faunal emblem, the Leadbeater’s Possum, has been born in captivity for the first time in 20 years. Photograph: Victoria’s faunal emblem, the Leadbeater’s Possum/Zoos Victoria

She says the births provide hope for the long-term goal of also successfully breeding lowland leadbeater’s possums, of which fewer than 30 remain in the world.

Comparatively, highland populations have declined to a few thousand possums.

The breeding breakthrough has been attributed to a new diet of honey-based nectar, loaded with increased fibre, vitamins and minerals, which has led to positive changes to the possums’ gut microbiome and reproductive health.

The government has contributed almost $4m since 2018 to improving the long-term sustainability of the possum and the helmeted honeyeater, the state’s two faunal emblems.

D’Ambrosio said:

We’re excited to welcome these two precious possums and to see the success of our ongoing investment into our state’s faunal emblem and the unique biodiversity of Victoria.

Updated at 19.16 EDT

Chalmers says Labor has inherited a budget with ‘significant challenges’

The treasurer, Jim Chalmers, who is due to hand down his first budget on 25 October, has spoken to the Nine newspapers, saying the government’s bottom line is being affected by higher-than-expected interest rates on outstanding debt.

As interest rates on government debt rise to their highest levels in eight years, amid rising global inflation, could combine to derail any plans to bring the budget under control.

Chalmers laid the blame firmly on the previous government, saying the “legacy” of the Coalition government was a trillion dollars in debt with “not enough to show for it”.

After a wasted decade, the Liberals’ legacy is a trillion dollars of debt with not enough to show for it and now the cost of servicing all that Liberal debt is going up too.

We’ve been upfront about the significant challenges in the economy and the additional pressures on the budget we’ve inherited, including the cost of rising bond yields.

Updated at 18.32 EDT

Fletcher says Labor government a ‘parliamentary go-slow’

The proposed parliamentary sitting schedule for the rest of the year was released last night, and the opposition was quick to criticise the government for its “remarkably light” schedule.

Almost as soon as the schedule was released, opposition spokesman for business in the house, Paul Fletcher, released a statement criticising it for being too short.

This, of course, comes after the Coalition had designed a schedule with just 10 sitting days before August 2022.

Dan Tehan says Labor has given “no good reason” why parliament isn’t sitting until July.

In government, the Coalition designed a schedule with just 10 sitting days before August 2022.

Parliament, optional in govt, VITAL in opposition.#auspoI https://t.co/NiqSxwRwIF

— Paul Karp (@Paul_Karp) June 13, 2022

Nonetheless, here is what Fletcher had to say:

The Albanese Labor government is on a parliamentary go-slow.

Total sitting days for the House of Representatives for 2022 will be just 40. This is a dramatic drop from 67 in 2021 and 58 in 2020.

The latest day for return of the writs is 28 June and Labor is just scraping in within the 30 day period by reconvening Parliament on 26 July.

This is entirely at odds with Labor’s claim that they do not waste a day.

Updated at 18.15 EDT

Richard Marles arrives in India

Deputy prime minister and defence minister, Richard Marles, arrived in India earlier this morning for his scheduled trip, where he will meet his Indian counterpart, Rajnath Singh.

Marles’ trip is intended to engage a “top-tier partner”, to discuss defensive cooperation and ambitions for an “open, inclusive and resilient Indo-Pacific”.

Arrived in India – a top-tier partner + close friend to Australia.

I look forward to advancing our ongoing defence engagement as Comprehensive Strategic Partners and reiterate our commitment for closer cooperation in the #IndoPacific. pic.twitter.com/68bxyCkxyf

— Richard Marles (@RichardMarlesMP) June 20, 2022

Updated at 17.59 EDT

Federal health minister says long Covid a ‘major health challenge’

The federal health minister, Mark Butler, has begun the daily round of politicians in the media this morning, appearing on Sunrise and warning that there could be “very big” numbers of Australians suffering from long Covid.

Butler said the large Omicron wave may have contributed to the rising rates of long Covid, adding it was proving to be a “major health challenge”:

When you get the sort of numbers of Covid that we have had here in Australia – literally millions and millions of Australians – that is going to translate into very big numbers of people experiencing long Covid symptoms.

I am very keen to talk with clinicians, researchers, have a look at the international research as well, and start to make sure our health system is prepared for what will be a very big wave of people experiencing these very long symptoms.

We are seeing dozens and dozens of deaths every week. This is still a very serious health challenge which we cannot take lightly.

Mark Butler.
Mark Butler. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP

Updated at 18.01 EDT

Good morning

Good morning, Mostafa Rachwani with you this morning. I’ll be taking you through what I’m sure will be another busy day.

We begin with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, who will conduct an investigation into energy prices, including an assessment of power companies and whether they are gaming the system for profit. Commission chair, Gina Cass-Gottlieb, told the Nine newspapers the ACCC had “real breadth of powers” to investigate companies’ behaviour.

It comes as former chair Rod Sims pens an opinion piece for Guardian Australia today, saying the government should push against “the instincts of the corporate sector” and introduce more competition into the market. Sims argues there is inadequate competition in Australia, and that the government should be the one to foster greater competition.

There are two state budgets due today, from the New South Wales and Queensland state governments. The NSW government has already flagged a wide range of measures, including a $5.8bn investment into an extra year of education and $4.5bn boost to the health sector.

The Palaszczuk government’s eighth budget will also be handed down today, and expectations will be that the focus will be on health and cost of living measures, including a $175 electricity rebate expected to be introduced.