Thanks for reading our live coverage of today’s biggest stories, we’ll be back tomorrow with continuing live coverage. Here’s a look back at what made news:
- All 20 living hostages held by Hamas and almost 2000 Palestinian prisoners held by Israel are free as part of a ceasefire pausing two years of war that decimated the Gaza Strip and killed tens of thousands of Palestinians. The first seven hostages were transferred by Hamas into the care of Red Cross personnel, then handed over to the IDF. In Gaza, Palestinians gathered at a hospital where buses brought home some of the nearly 2000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees to be freed by Israel as part of the peace agreement. US President Donald Trump, who helped broker peace, delivered a speech to Israel’s parliament, the Knesset.
- Opposition Leader Sussan Ley has written to the heads of the House of Representatives and the Senate calling on them to investigate Senator Lidia Thorpe’s comment that she would “burn down Parliament House to make a point” about Palestinian and Indigenous rights. In a letter co-signed by the Coalition’s Senate leader, Michaelia Cash, Ley called on the leaders to “urgently investigate the credibility of Senator Thorpe’s threats, and the implications of her comments”. Thorpe’s remark, made at a pro-Palestine protest in Melbourne on Sunday, is being investigated by the Australian Federal Police to determine if it was illegal. Thorpe said it was “obviously not a literal threat”.
- Two top executives at one of Australia’s biggest childcare chains, which employed accused Melbourne paedophile Joshua Brown, have stepped down from their roles effective immediately. Affinity Education staff were informed this morning that embattled chief executive Tim Hickey and chief operating officer Nishad Alani had stepped down after months of scandals.
- The Coalition is set to oppose Labor’s superannuation tax changes, despite the government “capitulating and improving” its original policy, opposition housing spokesperson Andrew Bragg said. Labor scaled back its tax on superannuation earnings to a 40 per cent tax on balances over $10 million and 30 per cent on balances above $3 million, ditching taxes on unrealised gains. But Bragg said the revamped policy would be “very unlikely to pass [parliament] because this is just another tax increase”.
- The Reserve Bank is in no rush to cut interest rates again, the minutes from its last meeting reveal, as it waits for more economic data to guide its next steps. The central bank is worried inflation may be stronger than expected, driven partly by price growth in the services economy, which includes sectors such as healthcare, finance and hospitality.
- Brittany Higgins has been dealt another financial blow after her former boss launched bankruptcy proceedings to recoup costs awarded from her defamation win. Linda Reynolds sued Higgins over a series of social media posts the ex-Liberal senator believed damaged her reputation. Reynolds confirmed today that she has filed a creditor’s petition in the Federal Court, claiming Higgins failed to comply with a bankruptcy notice issued to her several weeks ago.