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Australia news as it happened: ANZ to slash 3500 jobs; Price should apologise, says Albanese; French government in crisis after PM ousted

Cassandra Morgan and Daniel Lo Surdo
Updated ,first published
Pinned post from 6.08pm on Sep 9, 2025
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What we covered today

By Cassandra Morgan

Thanks for reading the national news blog. This is where we’ll end today’s coverage.

To conclude, here’s a look back at the day’s major stories:

  • ANZ Bank chief executive Nuno Matos said slashing 3500 jobs and a further 1000 contractors was a last-resort move needed to simplify the bank’s operations and help it remain competitive, as the finance union slammed the sackings as a reckless profit grab.
  • Australia’s bid to block China from gaining a security foothold in the Pacific through ports, airports and other sensitive critical infrastructure assets was dealt a blow after Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was forced to scrap plans to sign a sweeping $500 million treaty-level agreement with Vanuatu.
  • Australia Post will resume business shipments to the United States before September 25, almost a month after they were suspended due to changes to the small parcel tariff system implemented by the Trump administration.
  • Aboriginal leaders have declared a treaty with the state of Victoria which will expand their power to influence government policy, determine their own affairs and embed “truth-telling” into the school curriculum as “a turning point in this nation’s history”.
  • The NSW government confirmed it would not proceed with the trial removal of some of Sydney’s shark nets following the death of surfer Mercury Psillakis, who was fatally attacked by what was thought to be a great white shark at Dee Why.
  • The state’s Liberal leader Mark Speakman apologised for the “deep hurt” that Jacinta Nampijinpa Price caused Indian Australians, just days after backing a party fundraiser that was headlined by the firebrand Northern Territory senator.
  • Albanese said Price should apologise after her remarks about migrants last week.
  • In world news, an outcry over an “austerity” budget threw the French government into crisis after the national assembly voted the prime minister out of office with no obvious successor, and no coalition with a clear majority to restore stability.
  • Israel’s military ordered Gaza City residents to evacuate ahead of a new offensive.
  • And, a Thai court ordered former leader Thaksin Shinawatra to serve one year in prison to complete a sentence for a past conviction.

Thanks again for joining us. We’ll be back tomorrow with more live coverage. This is Cassandra Morgan, signing off.

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Israel urges full evacuation of Gaza City

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Israel’s military has ordered Gaza City residents to evacuate ahead of a new offensive, after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned it would step up its military attacks in a “mighty hurricane” if Hamas does not free the last hostages it holds.

The city’s one million Palestinians have been expecting an onslaught for weeks, since the Israeli government devised a plan to deal Hamas a fatal blow in what it says are the militant group’s last remaining strongholds.

Palestinians take cover during an Israeli strike on a building in Gaza City on September 7.AP

“I say to the residents of Gaza, take this opportunity and listen to me carefully: you have been warned – get out of there!” Netanyahu said.

The evacuation orders caused panic and confusion among Gaza City residents. Some said they would have no choice but to leave for the south, but most said they would stay as no other place was safe.

‘Who says that?’: Thorpe disappointed by senator’s migration remarks

By Cassandra Morgan

Staying with Lidia Thorpe’s appearance on ABC’s Afternoon Briefing, the senator joined the chorus of officials calling on Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price to apologise for her remarks about Indian migrants.

Thorpe said Price was “completely out of touch with the reality of this country” with her comments.

“I mean, who says that? I’m very disappointed that she did say that, and I’m equally disappointed that she hasn’t apologised,” Thorpe said.

“Indian people, multicultural people, people seeking asylum are all welcome in this country, and we need to stop demonising black and brown people in this country.

“It’s a very big, big problem. Racism is a very big problem in this country, and we need to get rid of it. We need to stamp that out.

“The senator needs to apologise, first and foremost.”

NSW government scraps planned shark-net removals

By Nick O'Malley

The NSW government has confirmed it will not proceed with the trial removal of some of Sydney’s shark nets following the death of surfer Mercury Psillakis, who was fatally attacked by what was thought to be a great white shark at Dee Why on Saturday.

“The government has said today that we’re not going to be removing nets as part of a trial this summer,” NSW Agriculture Minister Tara Moriarty said in a statement.

“In light of the tragedy that has occurred at Dee Why on the weekend, we need to be sensible about what the community would accept at this time.

“We need to allow time for the department and our government scientists to collect information on what happened and then provide a report to government that will inform future considerations for the shark management program.”

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‘Step in the right direction’: Thorpe on Australia-first treaty

By Cassandra Morgan

Independent senator Lidia Thorpe has welcomed Aboriginal leaders’ declaration of treaty with the state of Victoria, saying the move to make the First Peoples’ Assembly permanent and expand its responsibilities is “a step in the right direction”.

Speaking on ABC’s Afternoon Briefing, Thorpe said the model was “better than what we’ve got”.

Senator Lidia Thorpe, with a message stick representing Indigenous deaths in custody, at a press conference in July this year.Alex Ellinghausen

“It is good that we have got representation. Obviously, we can do better with that representation given we have 40-plus clans around this state, and only 12 sit around the table,” Thorpe said.

“I do believe in free, prior and informed consent, and that all of those clans should be able to self-determine their own destinies, rather than only a handful of people.

Clare tells senator ‘it’s never too late to say sorry’

By Cassandra Morgan

Staying with Jason Clare’s appearance on ABC’s Afternoon Briefing, the education minister said it is “pretty obvious” that Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price should apologise for her remarks last week about Indian migrants, and it is “never” too late to say sorry.

“Jacinta Price should have apologised immediately, and still should apologise now, if only for the simple fact of what it means in helping to keep our community together,” Clare said.

Clare lauded Liberal MP Julian Leeser for his “courageous” comments, after Leeser apologised to the Indian community in his electorate for the senator’s remarks.

“We’re the best country in the world … [and] one of the reasons for that is we’re a country made up of people from all around the world living here together, almost always in harmony. But you can’t always count on that,” Clare said.

“It’s up to us as leaders, whether it’s in politics or the media, to help to knit our community together. Those sorts of words divide. They make people feel like they’re unwelcome, or they don’t belong.

“That’s why what Julian [Leeser] said was so important. I just encourage Jacinta that it’s not too late to say sorry. It never is.”

‘Children should be taught the truth’: Clare on treaty change in schools

By Cassandra Morgan and Chip Le Grand

Federal Education Minister Jason Clare suggests that he expects his state and territory counterparts to look at the reshaping of Victoria’s school curriculum, as “truth-telling” is embedded into it.

Australia’s first treaty between a state government and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people was introduced to the Victorian parliament today, with a reframing of the state’s school curriculum and greater use of traditional names for natural parks and waterways among the reforms contained in the agreement.

Federal Minister for Education Jason Clare last month.Kate Geraghty

School students from prep to year 10 will be taught the “enduring harm” of colonisation, dispossession and injustice as recounted by our First Peoples. The final report of the Yoorrook Justice Commission published this year – including its finding that historical massacres, cultural erosion and forced child removals constituted a genocide against Aboriginal people in Victoria – will serve as a foundational text.

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NSW Liberals split from Nats to oppose ‘NRA-style gun lobby group’

By Alexandra Smith and Max Maddison

In case you missed it earlier, the NSW Liberals have sensationally split from the Nationals and will not support a contentious hunting bill, warning that the party cannot support a “taxpayer-funded, NRA-style lobby group”.

The Liberals voted at shadow cabinet on Monday night to oppose the Shooters, Fishers and Farmers’ bill, which included the establishment of a new hunting authority, but the Nationals will go their own way and support the legislation with some amendments.

NSW Opposition Leader Mark Speakman.Steven Siewert

Premier Chris Minns on Monday walked back his support for one of the most controversial aspects of the bill, which would have enshrined the “right to hunt” in NSW law.

Minns said he was concerned “it might evoke this idea that there’s a right to bear arms, like we’ve seen in the United States”. Labor is still finalising its position on other sections of the bill.

However, Opposition Leader Mark Speakman said today that Minns’ stance did not go far enough and the Liberals would vote against the bill, which initially had the support of the Labor government when it was introduced to parliament in May.

Click here to read the full story from Alexandra Smith and Max Maddison here.

Australia offers help as Britain struggles with asylum seeker influx

By David Crowe

Australia and Britain will tighten their joint work against people smugglers after a meeting in London on border security, as the British government struggles to stop thousands of asylum seekers crossing the English Channel.

Home Affairs and Immigration Minister Tony Burke outlined the Australian approach to British Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood in talks on Monday, insisting that the key principle of border sovereignty belongs to progressive political parties as well as conservative ones.

Britain’s Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood (left) greets Australia’s Minister for Home Affairs Tony Burke.AP

Mahmood took office on Friday in a sudden cabinet reshuffle that elevated her from the justice portfolio, in a move by British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer to bring a tough new minister into the job to crack down on boat arrivals.

Burke and Mahmood were part of a Five Eyes meeting of ministers from the United Kingdom, United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand that sought to cement an intelligence-sharing partnership that dates back to the 1940s and has countered Russian and Chinese espionage over many years.

In a sign that Starmer and his ministers are acting on Australian lessons, Mahmood announced on Monday that she was considering tougher visa measures to the UK, including refusing visas to visitors from countries that do not accept returned asylum seekers.

Read the full story from David Crowe here.

Setback in Australian bid to block China from security foothold

By Matthew Knott

Australia’s bid to block China from gaining a security foothold in the Pacific through ports, airports and other sensitive critical infrastructure assets has been dealt a blow, as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was forced to scrap plans to sign a sweeping $500 million treaty-level agreement with Vanuatu.

Albanese hoped to kickstart a major fortnight of diplomacy in the Pacific by finalising a long-awaited deal with his Vanuatu counterpart during a visit to the capital of Port Vila today, but political jostling in Vanuatu meant the 10-year agreement was put back on ice at the last minute.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Vanuatu counterpart Jotham Napat in Port Vila on Tuesday.Michael Read

Vanuatuan Prime Minister Jotham Napat said the key sticking point was that the pact, known as the Nakamal Agreement, could overly restrict Vanuatu’s ability to receive funding from other nations for critical infrastructure projects.

“Some of my ministers and my MPs feel it requires more discussion, particularly on some of the specific wordings in the agreement,” Napat said during a joint press conference.

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