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As it happened: Scott Morrison labels Labor’s censure motion ‘political intimidation’; Nationals criticised over Voice to parliament opposition

Broede Carmody, Angus Thompson and Michaela Whitbourn
Updated ,first published

The day in review

By Michaela Whitbourn

Good evening and thank you for reading our live coverage of the day’s events. If you’re just joining us now, here’s a wrap of the major headlines today.

  • The government’s industrial relations legislation is set to pass the upper house tonight with the support of the Greens and independent senator David Pocock. Read more about the bill here.
  • Former federal Liberal minister Christopher Pyne has said it is “time to move on” from Scott Morrison’s five secret ministries, following a historic censure motion against the former prime minister today. “The Australian public see it as a very inside the beltway story and a Canberra bubble story,” Pyne told ABC News 24. “It’s time to focus on things that are more important to people like inflation and things.”
Scott Morrison and Anthony Albanese today.Rhett Wyman, Alex Ellinshausen
  • Morrison became the first former prime minister to be censured by parliament after the motion against him passed 86 votes to 50. In the motion moved by Labor, parliament censured Morrison for failing to disclose his five additional ministerial appointments to the parliament, the public and his colleagues.
  • Morrison was appointed in secret to five additional ministries between March 2020 and May 2021: Health; Finance; Industry, Science, Energy and Resources; Treasury and Home Affairs. Former High Court justice Virginia Bell said in a report last week that “the secrecy with which the appointments had been surrounded was corrosive of trust ... in government”.
Liberal backbencher Bridget Archer.Rhett Wyman

Government’s IR bill set to pass upper house

By Angus Thompson

The Albanese government’s industrial relations legislation is set to pass the upper house tonight after independent senator David Pocock sided with Labor and the Greens to back the bill. You can read more about the law here.

Independent senator David Pocock.Alex Ellinghausen

Liberal senator Linda Reynolds likened David Pocock to the biblical figure Judas in supporting the legislation.

The former Coalition minister accused Pocock of believing he had rode in on a “big white horse” to aid workers, and implored him to change his mind before the bill is voted on in the next 30 minutes.

Deliveroo Australia failed to meet profit targets, CEO says

By Jessica Yun

Deliveroo Australia had no viable path to profitability, the company’s chief executive has said, as riders, drivers, restaurant operators and customers await a second creditors’ meeting to determine if they will receive further compensation.

Ed McManus, who ran the collapsed food delivery service Deliveroo Australia.Arsineh Houspian

In his first remarks since the collapse of Deliveroo’s local operations, Australian chief executive Ed McManus said the food delivery service’s parent company had lost confidence that it would be able to recapture market share amid fierce competition from Uber, DoorDash and Menulog.

“This [decision to exit] has been based purely on economic grounds,” McManus said at the first creditors’ meeting on Monday.

Read the full story here.

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‘Move on,’ ex-Liberal minister says of secret ministries

By Michaela Whitbourn

Former federal Liberal minister Christopher Pyne has said it is “time to move on” from Scott Morrison’s five secret ministries, following a historic censure motion against the former prime minister today.

The motion passed by 86 votes to 50 and Morrison became the first former prime minister to be censured by parliament.

Former federal Liberal minister Christopher Pyne.Alex Ellinghausen

Morrison was appointed in secret to five additional ministries between March 2020 and May 2021: Health; Finance; Industry, Science, Energy and Resources; Treasury and Home Affairs.

Former High Court justice Virginia Bell said in a report last week that “the secrecy with which the appointments had been surrounded was corrosive of trust ... in government”.

Plan to print health warnings on individual cigarettes

By Natassia Chrysanthos

Each cigarette sold in Australia would be printed with messages such as “smoking kills” or manufactured in ugly colours under a federal government package to combat the waning impact of plain packaging laws with the biggest nicotine reforms in a decade.

An artist’s impression of a cigarette branded with a ‘smoking kills’ warning.Kathleen Adele

Health Minister Mark Butler has promised to “reignite the fight” against nicotine and tobacco as part of his public health agenda, unveiling several new measures to dissuade smokers as well as the start of a crackdown on vaping, following concerns that the practice is rampant among school-aged children.

Read the full story here.

Liberals ‘always free to cross the floor’: Opposition MP

By Michaela Whitbourn

As we reported earlier today, federal Liberal backbencher Bridget Archer crossed the floor today to support a censure motion against former prime minister Scott Morrison over his five secret ministries.

The motion passed today by 86 votes to 50 and Morrison became the first former prime minister to be censured by parliament.

Member for Bass Bridget Archer listening as former prime minister Scott Morrison speaks.Alex Ellinghausen

Manager of opposition business Paul Fletcher described the censure motion on the ABC’s News 24 channel as a “political stunt”. But asked about whether there would be any blowback for Archer in supporting the motion, Fletcher said:

It’s a longstanding tradition in the Liberal Party [that] we’re a party that recognises and respects the rights of individuals, and members of our party are always free to cross the floor. [In] the Labor Party if you cross the floor, you are automatically expelled.

I know Bridget didn’t do it lightly, but the key point is in our party it’s a longstanding tradition that members are free to cross the floor where they judge it necessary in the exercise of their own conscience.

Morrison was appointed in secret to five additional ministries between March 2020 and May 2021: Health; Finance; Industry, Science, Energy and Resources; Treasury and Home Affairs.

Former High Court justice Virginia Bell said in a report last week that “the secrecy with which the appointments had been surrounded was corrosive of trust ... in government”.

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Studios hit Australian telcos with fresh piracy lawsuit

By Sarah Danckert

Call it the Stranger Things effect. A group of film production giants including Roadshow, Disney and Netflix have launched fresh legal action to force Australia’s top internet service providers to block a suite of pirate websites that have found renewed popularity amid a battle between streaming services and the fragmentation of content offerings.

Netflix’s Stranger Things is one of the popular illegal downloads..Supplied

The film studios – Roadshow, Disney, Columbia Pictures, Warner Bros, Paramount and Netflix, among others – launched Federal Court action this month aimed at protecting the copyright of hits including children’s favourites The Lego Movie and films from the Toy Story franchise as well as episodes of Netflix favourite Stranger Things and The Big Bang Theory.

Read more here.

Helicopter crashes into home in Melbourne’s south-east

By Marta Pascual Juanola, Caroline Schelle and David Estcourt

A helicopter crashed into a home near a primary school in Mentone just after 1pm today. The student pilot, the sole occupant of the aircraft, sustained lower-body injuries and was taken to The Alfred hospital in an ambulance.

Victoria Police confirmed that no one was in the home at the time of the crash.

Photo of the crash scene in Mentone.Nine News

Emergency services rushed to the scene at the corner of Broome Avenue and Tylden Court about 1.15pm after receiving several triple-zero calls from concerned neighbours.

The scene is not far from Moorabbin Airport and close to Mentone Park Primary School. The school confirmed that no evacuations were required and that students did not see or hear the crash directly.

Read more here.

Abbott portrait unveiled in parliament

By Michaela Whitbourn

Former prime minister Tony Abbott’s official portrait, painted by News Corp cartoonist Johannes Leak, was unveiled in Canberra today and depicts the nation’s 28th PM in a characteristic pose with hands on hips and shirtsleeves rolled.

PM Anthony Albanese, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton, former prime minister Tony Abbott and Johannes Leak during the unveiling of Abbott’s official portrait.Alex Ellinghausen

Read more from Angus Thompson here.

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Murdoch wants social media expert in Crikey defamation fight

By Michaela Whitbourn

Media scion Lachlan Murdoch is seeking to rely on the evidence of a social media expert in his defamation fight with online publisher Crikey, the Federal Court has heard.

Sydney barrister Sue Chrysanthou, SC, acting for Murdoch, told the court today that expert evidence on the reach of select posts by Crikey about Murdoch was relevant to the potential damages award as well as to the new serious harm test that is now law in most jurisdictions in Australia, including NSW where the trial will be held.

Lachlan Murdoch, Private Media chair Eric Beecher and the US Capitol building on January 6, 2021.Jessica Hromas, Thom Rigney, AP

The trial is set to start on March 27, but the parties will attend standard pre-trial mediation before then in a bid to settle the dispute out of court.

Murdoch, chief executive of Fox Corporation and elder son of media baron Rupert, filed defamation proceedings in August against Crikey over a June 29 article naming his family as “unindicted co-conspirators” of former US president Donald Trump following the deadly US Capitol riots in 2021.

Read the full story here.

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