Australia politics news live updates: Cash confirms no federal Icac bill before election; thousands strike for NSW nurses; at least 46 Covid deaths



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at 10.18pm EST



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Labor’s Murray Watt has been asking attorney-general Michaelia Cash about reports Scott Morrison considered a last-ditch attempt to get the national integrity commission up to help pass the religious discrimination bill.

Watt asked about reports the cabinet rejected the possibility of making the integrity commission retrospective – which led to a classic Cash counterpunch.

Cash said Watt had “demeaned” his line of questioning and was getting “political”, then questioned what senator Kim Carr thinks about the proposed expulsion of Victorian MP Kaushaliya Vaghela.

Watt objected on the grounds of relevance, but Cash pushed on:


Given that Mr Albanese is campaigning on a federal Icac, expelling a member for referring a matter to [Vic] Ibac … is hypocritical and suggests Mr Albanese is not serious about fighting corruption.

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at 10.19pm EST



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10.04pm EST

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Question time begins

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at 10.06pm EST



9.58pm EST

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No anti-corruption commission bill until after election

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at 10.08pm EST



9.37pm EST

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This just in from Christopher Knaus – a human story, important in context of the federal government’s push to be able to kick out offenders:



9.27pm EST

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WA reports 48 new cases



9.12pm EST

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A few more bits and bobs from party room.

There was a discussion of the government’s Regional Telecommunications Review report which was tabled in parliament on Monday, with several MPs speaking in support. There was also some discussion about live exports and cost of living.

One MP said the government needed to exercise spending restraint, urging an end to the low and middle income tax offset which was always intended to be temporary.

Terry Young, the Liberal MP for the seat of Longman, addressed the split over religious discrimination last week, complaining that he had supported net zero because “they accepted that it was for the greater good”, but spoke “disappointingly” of the MPs who had not supported the bill. He also read out an email from a local pastor expressing anger at the government over the failure to legislate religious discrimination.

Another spoke on marginal seat campaigns, saying “they were not rocket science, but were hard work” and praised the prime minister and federal director Andrew Hirst for their campaign strategy at the last election.

Greg Hunt, who is retiring at the next election, also spoke about his experience in parliament, saying the Coalition had been written off in 2001, 2004 and 2019, but had prevailed because of the leadership of John Howard and Scott Morrison. “We were told we were going to lose, but we didn’t.”

He said that if Morrison “pulls this off” and wins the next election, he will be “just above” Howard in his estimation.

Health Minister Greg Hunt


Health minister Greg Hunt told party room colleagues the Coalition had been written off before. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

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at 9.26pm EST



9.10pm EST

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ACT reports 455 new cases

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at 9.12pm EST



8.55pm EST

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Some more on inflation issues. The RBA this morning released the minutes of its first board meeting in 2022. Nothing jumps out as startling.

However, CBA, Australia’s biggest lender, has seen enough. It shifted its prediction of when the central bank will lift the official cash rate to June, earlier the August timing it had forecast.

Financial markets are already pricing in a June move too, with the rate to lift to 0.25% from its record low 0.1% rate.

Gareth Aird, the CBA’s top economist, predicts three further rate rises in 2022 to take it to 1% by the end of 2022.

While the rate rise, if the CBA is right, won’t come before the federal elections, the expectation may be firmly in the minds of rate-wary voters. Aird said:


We expect the RBA to move to an explicit hiking bias at the May 2022 board meeting.



8.53pm EST

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The Labor caucus met this morning – including a lengthy debrief about how the religious discrimination debate went and discussion of some of the wedge tactics the government is using on national security and immigration.

Leader Anthony Albanese said:


Last week was our party at its best – we made a collective decision and backed it in. There is often a debate about Labor having different constituencies and attitudes between them. We can represent people of faith and still represent that every child should be free from discrimination.

If we win, we will act on discrimination on the basis of faith, including an anti-vilification provision, which is stronger than what the government put forward, and we’ll also protect children.

Albanese said he’d never seen the government vote against its own legislation before (after it lost the vote on LGBTQ+ student amendments) and also chipped the Greens for pushing for bigger amendments that would not have guaranteed the result.

Albanese said “every government scare campaign has blown up in their face”, including Josh Frydenberg’s attacks on a speech he gave in 1991 on inheritance tax, which he compared to “Jason Falinski’s comments in the paper today”.

On national security, Albanese noted Asio boss Mike Burgess had backed his account of briefings related to alleged foreign interference.

Albanese said Labor was “competitive” in the election and “confident the government does not deserve a second decade in office”.

One MP noted that Labor’s anti-vilification amendment was being described in the Muslim community as the “Christchurch amendment” and there is an important national security dimension in ensuring people aren’t vilified on the basis of religion.

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at 9.14pm EST



8.51pm EST

20:51

The NSW Nurse and Midwives Association are striking today, with a list of issues as outlined by my colleagues Michael McGowan and Tamsin Rose here.

Interesting to hear a sympathetic Ben Fordham on Sydney’s 2GB this morning (apparently his mother-in-law was a nurse).

Nurses hold placards in Queen’s Square, Sydney.


Nurses hold placards in Queen’s Square, Sydney. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP

Fordham did highlight that nurses got a 2.5% pay rise last year but, unless I missed it, made no mention that CPI is running at 3.5% (or 2.6% if you take the RBA’s preferred measure for underlying inflation).

Either way, nurses are – like many of us – unlikely to see much in the way of increased pay in real terms, given the jump in inflation.

Meanwhile, executives at one prominent Sydney hospital are apparently unhappy with the badges being worn by nurses.

A source tells us executives at the Royal Prince Alfred hospital have been overheard criticising nurses for these badges and stickers in front of patients.

“Remove it. It is offensive because the sticker has the phrase ‘life and death’ on it. It’s very misleading,” is what one nurse was told, apparently.

NSW nurses gather at the Royal Prince Alfred hospital before strike action in Sydney.


NSW nurses gather at the Royal Prince Alfred hospital before strike action. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP

The nurse said the executives were “basically giving orders to shut [the protest] down instead of creating a solution”.

We can expect more tensions between executives and staff, it seems.

Updated
at 8.58pm EST