Thanks for reading our national news live blog. This is where we’ll end it for today.
We’ll be back tomorrow with more live coverage, here’s a look at today’s biggest stories:
- Prime Minister Anthony Albanese delivered his debut address to the United Nations this morning. He used the opportunity to address Iran’s involvement in two antisemitic attacks on Australia, and pointed to the principles of the UN as a reason to recognise a Palestinian state, an action Australia took this week alongside Canada and the United Kingdom.
- China has promised to reduce greenhouse gas emissions for the first time. At a climate summit during the UN General Assembly, Chinese President Xi Jinping announced the world’s largest carbon-polluting country would aim to cut emissions by 7 to 10 per cent by 2035. China currently produces more than 31 per cent of the world’s carbon dioxide emissions.
- Liberal hopeful Gisele Kapterian has conceded defeat in Bradfield more than four months after the federal election, abandoning a court challenge over the validity of 151 ballot papers.
- Former Liberal minister Arthur Sinodinos has told the party to unite behind a centrist message after frontbencher Andrew Hastie and Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price repeatedly claimed the spotlight with statements on immigration playing to conservative voters.
- Ongoing investigations into sacked Smiggle chief executive John Cheston have uncovered allegations of gambling, drinking during office hours, sexual harassment and bribery, says Premier Investment chairman and billionaire rag trader Solomon Lew.
- Typhoon Ragasa has made landfall in China, where nearly 2 million people were evacuated in preparation for its arrival. Authorities have reported at least 17 people have died and more are missing in Taiwan and 11 were killed in the Philippines.
- Communications Minister Anika Wells has asked to speak with executives of Singtel – Optus’ parent company – when they visit Australia next week, to discuss the Optus Triple Zero outage that resulted in three deaths. An independent review into the fatal Optus outage will examine Optus’ management of Triple Zero calls and actions in response to the incident in adherence to policies, procedures and legal requirements.