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As it happened: Ley holds on to leadership as rivals fail to reach agreement on who should challenge; PM pledges extra $160m for fire recovery

Emily Kaine and Rachael Ward
Updated ,first published

What we covered today

By Rachael Ward

Thanks for reading the national news blog. This is where we’ll leave today’s coverage but we will be back with more live news coverage on Monday.

Here’s a look back at the day’s major stories:

  • Liberal MP Andrew Hastie has pulled out of the Liberal leadership race a day after meeting with rival Angus Taylor in Melbourne to try work out which one of them would challenge Sussan Ley for her job. Chief Political Correspondent Paul Sakkal broke the story.
  • Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan announced an additional $160 million in funding for communities impacted by bushfires in Victoria this summer.
  • It came after state and territory governments squeezed an extra $2 billion out of the prime minister to strike a $25 billion deal to fund hospitals for the next five years, ending a long-running stalemate in negotiations.
  • Four people are dead in what police are treating as a murder-suicide in the western Perth suburb of Mosman Park. Officers were called to the scene on Friday morning and found a man, 50, woman, 49, and two boys aged 14 and 16 dead.
  • Nine Entertainment struck a deal to sell Australia’s top-rating conservative talkback stations 2GB, 3AW, 4BC and 6PR to publican and pokies billionaire Arthur Laundy and his family for $56 million, marking a major transition in Australia’s media landscape.
  • Australians John Peers and Olivia Gadecki claimed back-to-back Australian Open mixed doubles titles, beating French pair Kristina Mladenovic and Manuel Guinard 4-6, 6-3, (10-8).
The Prime Minister, Anthony Albanese, Premier of Victoria, Jacinta Allan at the State Control Centre.Jason South

Thanks again for joining us. This is Rachael Ward, signing off.

Chalmers puts tax reform at top of budget plans

By Shane Wright

Treasurer Jim Chalmers has declared himself and the government open to tax reform to address intergenerational unfairness driven by the nation’s dysfunctional property market, saying the inability of young people to buy a home is one of Australia’s defining issues.

In an interview with Nobel Prize economics winner Joseph Stiglitz for The Monthly magazine published on Friday, Chalmers said the government was “impatient but not impetuous” for reform.

He opened the door to tax changes, while signalling any measures would have to be explained methodically so they could be locked in permanently.

More details here.

NSW authorities issue measles alert for airport, rail network

By Angus Thomson

Health authorities in NSW are urging recent travellers with symptoms such as fevers and sore eyes to seek medical care after a person returned from South-East Asia with measles.

The exposure locations include Sydney’s T8 and T1 train lines, Sydney International Airport, and a Cebu flight from Manila that arrived in Sydney on Tuesday morning. These locations do not pose an ongoing threat.

NSW Health’s Dr Vicky Sheppeard said anyone with symptoms who had visited the locations on that day should see their GP or visit an emergency department.

“Call ahead to let them know that you may have come into contact with measles, so you don’t spend time in waiting rooms with other patients,” she said.

“Symptoms to watch out for include fever, runny nose, sore eyes and a cough, usually followed three or four days later by a red, blotchy rash that spreads from the head to the rest of the body.”

Exposure locations (January 27)

  • Cebu Pacific Flight CEB39 from Manila to Sydney International Airport, arriving at 10:50am.
  • Sydney International Airport arrivals and baggage claim, from 11:00am to 12:00pm.
  • Sydney T8 Train Line from International Airport Station to Central Station, 12:30pm to 1:20pm.
  • Sydney T1 Train Line from Central Station to Hornsby Station, from 12:50pm to 2:20pm.

There have been 14 confirmed cases of measles in NSW in the last two months, mostly from travellers returning from overseas. Many parts of South-East Asia are experiencing ongoing outbreaks of the airborne disease.

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Hastie pulls out of Liberal leadership race, giving Ley breathing space

By Paul Sakkal

Liberal MP Andrew Hastie has pulled out of the Liberal leadership race a day after meeting with rival Angus Taylor in Melbourne to try work out which one of them would challenge Sussan Ley for her job.

In a statement released a few minutes after Chief Political Correspondent Paul Sakkal broke the story, Hastie wrote:

Read more here.

Trump sues IRS and US Treasury for $14.3 billion over leaked tax info

By

Washington: US President Donald Trump is suing the IRS and Treasury Department for $US10 billion ($14.3 billion), as he accuses the federal agencies of a failure to prevent a leak of his tax information to news outlets between 2018 and 2020.

The suit, filed in a Florida federal court, includes the president’s sons Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr and the Trump organisation as plaintiffs.

US President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump at The Kennedy Center on Thursday.Getty Images

The filing alleges that the leak of Trump and the Trump Organisation’s confidential tax records caused “reputational and financial harm, public embarrassment, unfairly tarnished their business reputations, portrayed them in a false light, and negatively affected President Trump, and the other plaintiffs’ public standing”.

In 2024, former IRS contractor Charles Edward Littlejohn of Washington, DC — who worked for Booz Allen Hamilton, a defence and national security tech firm — was sentenced to five years in prison after pleading guilty to leaking tax information about Trump and others to news outlets.

The disclosure violated IRS Code 6103, one of the strictest confidentiality laws in federal statute.

AP

Kennedy resets US autism panel with new line-up of 21 members

By

Washington: US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr has remade a federal panel that guides national autism policy, naming a new slate of 21 members that includes some with ties to groups promoting unproven claims that link vaccines to autism.

Kennedy, a long-time anti-vaccine activist who has tied vaccines to autism and claimed that no vaccine is safe, said his appointees to the Interagency Autism Co-ordinating Committee brought decades of experience and would “deliver the answers Americans deserve”.

US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.AP

The appointments drew criticism from former panel members and autism experts in the medical and scientific community. “This will hurt people with autism, those currently alive and those yet to be born, and all who love them,” said Autism Science Foundation president Alison Singer, who served on the committee for 12 years.

A US Health and Human Services Department official said the previous members’ terms had ended and were not renewed, adding that the new appointments were made in line with long-standing procedures.

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PM announces extra $160 million in bushfire recovery funding

By Rachael Ward

Anthony Albanese has announced an additional $160 million in funding for communities impacted by bushfires in Victoria this summer.

Albanese revealed the support package with Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan at a press conference in Melbourne on Friday afternoon.

The Prime Minister, Anthony Albanese, Premier of Victoria, Jacinta Allan at the State Control Centre.Jason South

Some $158 million comes from joint Commonwealth‑State Disaster Recovery Funding Arrangements and an additional $2 million in state funding is intended for schools in fire-affected areas to pay for extra mental health services.

More than 400 homes were lost in fires in the state in recent weeks.

LIVE: PM and Victorian premier press conference

By

Anthony Albanese and Jacinta Allan unveiled an additional $160 million in funding for fire-affected communities at the State Control Centre in Melbourne.

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Trump threatens Canada with 50 per cent aircraft tariff, expanding trade war

By

US President Donald Trump has threatened Canada with a 50 per cent tariff on aircraft sold in the US, the latest salvo in his trade war with the nation’s northern neighbour.

Trump’s threat posted on social media came after he threatened at the weekend to impose a 100 per cent tariff on goods imported from Canada if it went forward with a planned trade deal with China.

But it did not come with any details about when Trump would impose the import taxes, as Canada had already struck a deal.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney.AP

In Trump’s latest threat, the Republican president said he was retaliating against Canada for refusing to certify jets from Savannah, Georgia-based Gulfstream Aerospace.

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Four dead in suspected murder-suicide in Perth’s western suburbs

By Hannah Murphy

Four people are dead in what police are treating as a murder-suicide in the western Perth suburb of Mosman Park.

Officers were called to the scene just after 8am on Friday, arriving to find a 50-year-old man, a 49-year-old woman and two boys aged 14 and 16 dead.

Major crime division Detective Inspector Jessica Securo said the four were believed to be all part of the same family.

Securo said a note was left, but police would not disclose its contents.

Police would also not disclose how the people died, but Securo said a weapon was not used, and it did not appear to be a violent incident.

Read more here.

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