Australia news live: Victoria records three new Covid cases; PM refuses to give in to Facebook news ban




8.21pm EST20:21

Shortly after Kevin Rudd finished giving evidence, News Corp executives fronted the media diversity inquiry to argue that “democracy is messy” and relied on “the robust and open exchange of news, views and opinions and a recognition that all people have a right to hear a range of views”.

Michael Miller, the executive chairman of News Corp Australasia, said:


On any given day you will hear people on the ABC highly critical of the views of people on News Corp platforms and those people will be firing back. This is not democracy failing, this is democracy working.

Miller contended that it was outdated to look at the media market through print figures, as Rudd did. Miller said sales of print newspapers had declined sharply and all established media companies have had to follow their audiences online, adding that “we are living in the most diverse news media marketplace in Australian history”.

He said the list of the top ten news websites in Australia “paints a picture of diversity, not monopoly”, with audience numbers biggest for the ABC followed by Nine News and then News Corp’s news.com.au.


The top 10 sites include three sites operated by Nine, two from News along with the sites of The Daily Mail and The Guardian, Seven News and Australian Community Media.

Miller said the Senate’s media diversity inquiry was itself “evidence of our nation’s embrace of free speech” – before taking a dig at Rudd.


A former prime minister’s objections to News Corp that mobilised his social media followers to is in large part why we are here. I respect the former PM’s right to hold his views. I suspect the problem might be that he only respects the views that agree with his.

Miller also rejected concerns about News Corp’s political influence, arguing election results showed the newspapers did not necessarily have the impact the critics say:


If the sloganeering had any truth the governments across the country would be the ones that editors decide are best and people would sing from one tune on the big issues. The absolute reverse is true.

Australia has nine Federal, State and Territory Governments. Four are Coalition. Five are ALP. The latest Newspoll has the Federal ALP and Coalition sitting at 50 per cent each.

What this says is Australians are smart people. They make up their own minds about what media they consume, who they back politically and what they feel about the big issues.




8.14pm EST20:14

Brisbane siege enters a second day

Updated
at 8.22pm EST




7.59pm EST19:59

Updated
at 8.06pm EST




7.31pm EST19:31




7.25pm EST19:25

Updated
at 7.32pm EST




7.08pm EST19:08

Updated
at 7.10pm EST




7.03pm EST19:03




6.53pm EST18:53

Updated
at 7.02pm EST




6.48pm EST18:48

Updated
at 6.51pm EST




6.44pm EST18:44

And now to the question nagging at the minds of Guardian readers: how are the share prices of Australian media companies faring during the Facebook news ban?

It’s a bit of a mixed bag. Shares in Nine Entertainment, which in addition to its TV network owns the former Fairfax mastheads (the Age, Sydney Morning Herald and Financial Review) fell 4.66% yesterday, and are down another 0.56% in early trade this morning.

Another TV network with print interests, Seven West Media, which owns the West Australian and WA regional mastheads, rose 1.89% yesterday but this morning has almost gone back to where it was before Faceaggedon, dropping 1.39% in trade so far.

Its regional affiliate, Prime Media Group, shed 3.7% yesterday and is flat in early trade today.

Australia’s biggest media outlet, News Corp, dropped just 0.57% yesterday and the same so far today.

But Southern Cross Media, which owns the Triple M and Hit radio networks as well as regional TV broadcasting, fell 4.9% yesterday and is off another 2.15% this morning.

These kinds of rises and falls aren’t even particularly unusual in the media sector, which is turbulent at the best of times.

And some of the media companies that, anecdotally at least, rely the most on Facebook traffic, such as Daily Mail Australia, aren’t listed anyway.

Updated
at 6.51pm EST




6.39pm EST18:39

Updated
at 6.44pm EST