Thanks for reading the national news blog. This is where we’ll end today’s coverage. We will be back tomorrow morning with the latest updates.
To conclude, here’s a look back at the day’s major stories:
- Deputy Liberal leader Jane Hume and Goldstein MP Tim Wilson will lead the opposition’s effort to regain the party’s image as better managers of the economy in Angus Taylor’s new-look frontbench.
- Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has declared he has no sympathy for 34 Islamic State-linked Australians trying to re-enter the country, saying the government would provide no help to the families, even as a close associate of Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke is reported to be helping them leave the camp where they have been living.
- On the second day of the landmark case by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission against Coles over alleged illusory discounts, the supermarket’s legal team claimed the watchdog’s overall focus on the “Down Down” ad jingle was “a bit of a furphy”.
- The Australian Federal Police has cleared Lidia Thorpe of a criminal offence after an investigation into comments the independent senator made saying she would “burn down Parliament House to make a point”.
- In Western Australia, a man who allegedly threw a homemade bomb into a crowd of protesters at an Invasion Day rally in Perth’s CBD has been identified for the first time after a suppression order on his identity was lifted.
- And, in world news, Nancy Guthrie’s family have been cleared as possible suspects in her abduction in the US, as the case involving the missing mother of NBC’s Today show host Savannah Guthrie enters its third week.
- US President Donald Trump says he will be involved “indirectly” in high-stakes talks set for Tuesday in Geneva between Iran and the US over Tehran’s nuclear program, adding he believed Tehran wanted to make a deal.
Thanks again for joining us. This is Cassandra Morgan, signing off.