That’s where we’ll leave today’s live coverage. Join us again tomorrow for a dedicated live coverage of the Albanese-Trump meeting and a separate continuing live coverage in other news.
Here’s what we covered today.
- Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has touched down in the United States ahead of a scheduled face-to-face meeting with US President Donald Trump. The meeting is set to take place early tomorrow morning, AEDT. Upholding the under-review AUKUS pact, and leveraging Australia’s role in supplying the West with critical minerals, will be high on the agenda. It will be the first bilateral meeting between the two leaders since Albanese took office.
- The Coalition will put forward a policy to cut personal income tax at the 2028 federal election, Opposition Leader Sussan Ley has announced. Ley said the policy commitment would target low- and middle-income earners. Under Peter Dutton, the opposition controversially opposed Labor’s tax cut proposal just before the election.
- Nationals leader David Littleproud has denied feuding with Barnaby Joyce while insisting the New England MP must accept the fact he has been shunted to the backbench. Joyce – a former Nationals leader – wrote to his branch members at the weekend to claim he had been forced to stand down at the next election and quit the party room due to a personality clash with Littleproud.
Liberal senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price “trampled” on the reputation of a prominent Indigenous leader without caring whether her claims were true or false, the Federal Court has heard. Price fronted the Federal Court in Darwin today for the first day of a defamation case, which was filed against her by Central Land Council chief executive Les Turner.
Westpac Rescue Helicopter Service has announced it will order an independent inquiry into allegations of a toxic workplace culture, sexual harassment and safety compliance breaches. The announcement follows a months-long investigation by this masthead and 60 Minutes into the service, which covers an area from the NSW Central Coast to the Queensland border.
A Melbourne protest that resulted in rocks being thrown at police was an aberration, Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan has suggested, while maintaining the city is safe. Allan once again rejected calls for a protest permit system and defended the right to protest peacefully, saying Sunday’s incident should not be conflated with demonstrations that had become a constant weekend presence.