Thanks for reading the national news blog. This is where we will end today’s coverage.
But first, let’s take a quick look back at the day’s major stories:
- Much of the focus was on US politics, after President Joe Biden announced he was withdrawing from the 2024 election amid concerns from within his own party that he would be unable to defeat Donald Trump.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese thanked Biden for his “leadership and ongoing service”, while Opposition Leader Peter Dutton said he appreciated the “support and abiding friendship [Biden] has shown to Australia”.
- Vice President Kamala Harris moved to swiftly secure Democratic support behind her campaign for the White House. But with only four months until election day, Harris will need to overcome the fact she has only limited time unite the party, according to North America correspondent Farrah Tomazin.
- Back on home soil, Albanese continued his dismissal of calls to reinstate the Australian Building and Construction Commission to regulate industrial relations in the sector, following reporting of wrongdoing and criminal behaviour within the CFMEU. “If it worked, we wouldn’t be talking about this issue today,” he told reporters on Monday morning.
- Opposition Leader Peter Dutton told 3AW Victoria has become “the gangster state” and questioned why Victoria Police hadn’t investigated the state’s CFMEU branch more.
Michael Stutchbury, editor-in-chief of The Australian Financial Review, announced he will retire next month after 13 years in the role and will be replaced by former executive editor of The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age James Chessell.
- The federal government will fall 260,000 homes short of its 1.2 million target by the end of the decade, with warnings the nation faces chronic housing affordability problems that will weigh on younger generations for years, senior economics correspondent Shane Wright writes.