Thanks for joining us on the blog today.
If you’re heading to Oasis in Sydney tonight, here’s a little taste of what you can expect, courtesy of Melburnians.
Meanwhile, it’s likely there will storms and rain across much of the eastern seaboard this weekend, the BOM says.
We will be back on Monday with continuing coverage of news as it happens. Here’s what happened across the afternoon:
- Opposition Leader Sussan Ley’s senior conservative rivals have played down the prospect of a coup, giving Ley at least until next year to prove herself after an escalation of backbench criticism before a climax over energy policy next week.
- It has been revealed that the father of two infants killed in a Queensland house fire that claimed four lives was undergoing treatment for cancer when he learnt his children had died.
- The Pentagon says its review of the AUKUS pact with Australia is in its final stages, but it now agrees that the agreement will bring “significant benefit” for US strategic interests in the Indo-Pacific. We also found out today that Jonathan Mead, the vice admiral spearheading AUKUS in Australia, will retire mid-next year.
- The Northern Territory police command has released a strategy to deliver anti-racism training to all staff and boost Aboriginal employment in the force to 30 per cent. It follows the exposure of systemic racism within the force by a long-running coronial inquest into the death in custody of young Aboriginal man Kumanjayi Walker in 2019.
- Overseas, at least five people died in Vietnam after Typhoon Kalmaegi pummelled coastal regions with destructive winds and heavy rain, officials said on Friday, following the storm’s deadly passage through the Philippines, where it killed at least 188 people.
- World leaders said on Thursday that time is running short for urgent and decisive action to prevent the worst effects of climate change, and blasted the US for its retreat from those efforts, as they gathered at the edge of the Amazon rainforest for the annual United Nations climate summit.
- Speaking of the US, airlines have begun cancelling hundreds of flights due to the Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) order to reduce traffic at the country’s busiest airports from Friday because of the government shutdown.
And Grand Theft Auto VI, the video game that has been anticipated as potentially the largest launch of any entertainment product ever, has been delayed for a second time. It is now scheduled to be released on November 19, 2026.