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As it happened: Albanese touches down in London; Trump’s warning to Americans on political violence

Emily Kaine and Angus Delaney
Updated ,first published

What happened today

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Thanks for reading our live coverage of today’s biggest stories. The blog has now concluded and we will return on Monday with more live coverage.

Here’s a look back at today’s biggest stories:

  • US President Donald Trump has signed a new TikTok deal that he says will allow the Chinese social media giant to continue operating in the United States in a way he says meets national security concerns laid out in law. TikTok’s new owners will include many whose business or political interests are tied to Trump, including Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison and Rupert Murdoch. Much is still unknown about the actual deal, but Trump said Chinese President Xi Jinping had approved it.
  • The US will impose a 100 per cent tariff on imports of branded or patented pharmaceutical products from October 1, unless a pharmaceutical company is building a manufacturing plant in the US, Trump announced this morning. Australia’s biggest pharmaceutical manufacturer CSL said it did not expect to be affected, since it already has operations in the US.
  • Two more sunscreens have been pulled from Australian shop shelves today for claiming higher SPF ratings that provided, bringing the total to eight since concerns about how sunscreens are tested were raised by consumer advocacy group Choice. This morning, the Therapeutic Goods Administration said Advanced Skin Technology was recalling several batches of its Aspect Sun Physical Sun Protection SPF50+, and Aspect Sun Tinted Physical SPF50+.
  • Trump said he will not allow Israel to annex the West Bank, rejecting calls from some far-right politicians in Israel who want to extend sovereignty over the area and snuff out hopes for a Palestinian state. “I will not allow Israel to annex the West Bank. Nope, I will not allow it. It’s not going to happen,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. “There’s been enough. It’s time to stop now.“
  • Weather forecasters’ outlook for a soggy spring is being rewritten by a rare, sudden temperature spike high above Antarctica that could end the run of unusually wet weather on the eastern seaboard. Temperatures have shot up by as much as 30 degrees in the stratosphere high above the South Pole, in what is known as a sudden stratospheric warming episode.

    Octogenarian in court accused of dealing ‘whale drugs’ in alleged suicide

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    An octogenarian accused of involvement in a whale euthanasia charity acting as a front for a life-ending business has shuffled into court aided by crutches to face a magistrate.

    Ian George Taylor today faced Southport Magistrates Court on Queensland’s Gold Coast charged with once count each of possessing and trafficking drugs.

    Police allege Taylor, aged 80, trafficked animal euthanasia drugs on April 5, less than a week before his son, Brett Daniel Taylor, 53, allegedly helped a quadriplegic man to take his own life.

    Ian Taylor sought to view police evidence alleging he trafficked whale euthanasia drugs alongside his son.

    ICAC fugitive Ibrahim Helmy arrested after months on the run

    By Sally Rawsthorne and Michael Ruffles

    After months on the run, fugitive former Transport for NSW manager Ibrahim Helmy was arrested at an apartment block in south-western Sydney this afternoon.

    Helmy is not facing criminal charges, but was the subject of a warrant to ensure his appearance before the Independent Commission Against Corruption.

    Detectives picked Helmy up at a red-brick unit block in Lakemba, wearing sandals, black pants and a black jumper.

    Ibrahim Helmy was arrested today.NSW Police

    Helmy walked quietly with two cybercrime squad investigators to an unmarked police car. He was taken to Campsie police station where the warrant was executed, “which authorises police to detain the man to ensure his appearance before the ICAC inquiry”, police said in a statement.

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    Australian shares snap three-week losing streak by a hair

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    Australia’s sharemarket has finished the week with a shrug, closing roughly where it began thanks to a mining sector rally, which dug the bourse out of trouble elsewhere.

    The S&P/ASX200 edged 13.3 points higher today, up 0.15 per cent, to 8786.3, as the broader All Ordinaries gained 13.9 points, or 0.15 per cent, to 9079.2.

    Four of the 11 local sectors closed higher, with the heavyweight financials and mining stocks leading equities higher.

    The materials segment rose more than 5 per cent during the week on the back of strong gold and copper prices, one of only two segments to lock-in gains since Monday’s open.

    Freak Antarctic heat spike plays havoc with Australia’s spring forecast

    By Mike Foley

    Weather forecasters’ outlook for a soggy spring is being rewritten by a rare, sudden temperature spike high above Antarctica that could end the run of unusually wet weather on the eastern seaboard.

    Temperatures have shot up by as much as 30 degrees in the stratosphere high above the South Pole, in what is known as a sudden stratospheric warming episode.

    The rare warming episode has only been recorded twice before, in 2002 and 2019, and in each instance months of warmer, dry conditions proceeded some of Australia’s worst bushfire seasons.

    This year recent above-average rainfall has soaked the ground, reducing elevated risk of fires heading into summer.

    Liberal MP dismisses link between Hastie’s immigration comment and white nationalist

    By Angus Delaney

    Shadow immigration minister Paul Scarr has said comparing Liberal MP Andrew Hastie’s comments that Australians were becoming “strangers in our own country” to historical comments made by a white nationalist was “drawing a long bow”.

    Shadow immigration minister Paul Scarr.Oscar Colman

    Independent MP Allegra Spender yesterday said the comment made on Hastie’s Instagram account earlier this week echoed a 1968 speech made by white nationalist Enoch Powell.

    “Maybe this is an unintentional evocation of that speech but be thoughtful, this is something we should do really carefully and thoughtfully,” Spender said on the ABC yesterday.

    Scarr told the ABC: “I think it’s a bit of a long bow with all due respect to try and draw some sort of connection between Andrew Hastie’s passionate advocacy for ... local community and ... [a] speech that was given in the 1960s and in a totally different context. I do not think that a politically fair characterisation in my view.”

    British Prime Minister Keir Starmer apologised for unknowingly quoting from Powell’s speech when he said the UK risked becoming “an island of strangers” during an address about immigration in May.

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    Government shown no plan for managing migration, says shadow immigration minister

    By Angus Delaney

    The government has given no clear public indication on how it will bring migration levels down to pre-pandemic levels, says shadow immigration minister Paul Scarr.

    Immigration spiked following the COVID-19 pandemic but has fallen significantly in the past 12 months, although it still remains higher than pre-pandemic levels. Scarr said the government had not proved it was capable of managing migration levels.

    “There was no narrative, there was no explanation, there was no indication of long-term planning and as to how the government is going to manage the policy settings to get that figure down to those pre-COVID-19 pandemic levels,” Scarr told the ABC.

    Scarr added that high migration was outstripping the construction of new housing, and called it “a really important issue”.

    Pharma giant CSL sees no pain from 100% Trump tariffs

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    Australia’s largest pharmaceutical company has brushed off investor concerns after Donald Trump announced massive tariffs on medicines shipped to the United States.

    It remains unclear whether CSL would be directly affected by the US president’s proposed 100 per cent tariffs, which he announced in a post on social media.

    CSL says it doesn’t expect any material impact from the tariffs on pharmaceutical imports into the US.Bloomberg

    CSL, Australia’s seventh-largest public firm by market capitalisation, makes up the bulk of Australia’s $2.2 billion pharmaceutical export trade to the US.

    The company said it was confident it would be exempted from the imposts, given Trump said companies building manufacturing facilities in the US would not be impacted.

    Putin, Myanmar junta chief discuss deepening ties in Moscow

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    Russian President Vladimir Putin and Myanmar’s junta chief Min Aung Hlaing held talks in Moscow about deepening diplomatic, defence, energy and investment ties.

    The two leaders spoke on the sidelines of the World Atomic Week 2025, according to government releases.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin in Moscow this week.AP

    The general told Putin that Myanmar planned to open a consulate in Vladivostok in the near future, on top of its embassy in Moscow and consulates in St Petersburg and Novosibirsk, according to a Kremlin release.

    “Looking east and west, you have a very large territory, so we’re opening consulates general for Myanmar to facilitate further cooperation between our countries,” Min Aung Hlaing said in the statement.

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    Listen: Albanese’s warning on tyranny, dictators, and his selfie with Trump

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    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has spent the week in New York addressing the United Nations, recognising Palestinian statehood and chasing US President Donald Trump around Manhattan trying to get a meeting.

    Host Jacqueline Maley and chief political correspondent Paul Sakkal – joined by foreign affairs and national security correspondent Matthew Knott from New York – discuss all these capers in today’s episode of Inside Politics.

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