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As it happened: RBA holds interest rates steady; JD Vance says US appears ‘headed to a shutdown’

Angus Delaney and Emily Kaine
Updated ,first published

What happened today

By Angus Delaney

Thanks for reading our national news live blog. This is where we will end today’s coverage. We’ll be back tomorrow with more live coverage.

Here’s a look back at the biggest stories of the day:

  • Communications Minister Anika Wells met with the bosses of Optus and Singtel today, after repeated failures by the carrier to support Triple Zero calls in recent weeks. Wells said Optus CEO Stephen Rue “has a lot of work to do” to regain Australia’s confidence and said the government was fast-tracking legislation for a “Triple Zero guardian” that was recommended almost a year and a half ago. Singtel boss Yuen Kuan Moon refused to say whether Rue’s job is safe. The Optus board has appointed consultancy giant Kearney to oversee its network. Wells has come under fire from the Coalition for saying she’s “a new minister” and attending the UN General Assembly in New York throughout the Optus saga.
  • US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said they’ve agreed to a plan to end the war in Gaza, but it’s unclear whether Hamas will accept the terms. This morning Trump laid out a 20-point plan for ending the Israel-Hamas war and establishing a postwar governance in the war-battered Palestinian territory. His plan would establish a temporary governing board that would be headed by himself and include former British prime minister Tony Blair. The Australian government has come out broadly in support of the plan.
  • The Reserve Bank has kept interest rates unchanged at 3.6 per cent. Rates have been cut three times this year, most recently at its August meeting. Markets and economists had not expected the bank to follow that August decision with another cut today.
  • A court has condemned the humiliating and unlawful strip search of a music festival attendee, awarding her $93,000 and flagging further damages. Officers did not have reasonable grounds to search Raya Meredith at the 2018 Splendour in the Grass festival at Byron Bay, the NSW Supreme Court found today. The landmark decision paves the way for the state to pay millions of dollars for unlawful strip searches.
  • Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban have separated after 19 years of marriage. US site TMZ reported this morning that the two have been living apart “since the beginning of [the northern] summer”. Citing multiple but unnamed sources, the site reported that Kidman had been taking care of the pair’s two children and “holding the family together through this difficult time since Keith has been gone.” The report said Urban has moved out of their Nashville family home and into his own residence.

Treasurer welcomes top credit rating

By Angus Delaney

Treasurer Jim Chalmers has welcomed Australia’s triple A credit rating being reaffirmed by S&P Global.

Credit ratings determine the interest rates on government debt, and the agency said “sound fiscal metrics” supported the top rating, making Australia one of just 11 countries with a triple A rating.

Chalmers said: “This is a resounding endorsement of the Albanese Labor government’s responsible economic management.

“We are realistic about the challenges facing our economy including growing global uncertainty, but our AAA rating is further proof Australia is coming at these challenges from a position of genuine economic strength.”

ASX finishes lower after RBA decision

By Staff writers

The Australian sharemarket wiped out its morning gains and finished in the red, led lower by energy and financial stocks, after the Reserve Bank left interest rates on hold and sparked doubt about a cut at its next meeting on Melbourne Cup Day.

The S&P/ASX 200 closed down 14 points, or 0.2 per cent, at 8848.80. Nine of its 11 industry sectors declined, with energy the biggest drag on the index after oil prices tumbled overnight. The Australian dollar jumped 0.4 per cent to US66.01¢ after the rate decision.

Australian shares have declined after the RBA left interest rates unchanged. Louie Douvis

Financial shares weighed down the market, with the big four banks trading lower for most of the session. CBA, the nation’s biggest stock, fell 0.9 per cent, National Australia Bank shed 0.3 per cent, ANZ Bank lost 0.5 per cent and Westpac ended flat. While their moves were modest, they were among the strongest forces weighing on the local bourse because financial stocks make up more than a third of the ASX.

But it was the energy sector that had the biggest declines after oil slumped overnight on signals that OPEC+ will increase production again in November.

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Ley doubts PM had knowledge of Trump’s Gaza plan

By Angus Delaney

Opposition Leader Sussan Ley expressed doubt Prime Minister Anthony Albanese had any knowledge of Donald Trump’s proposed ceasefire for the Gaza Strip, despite his saying he discussed the proposal in New York.

Speaking from Abu Dhabi today, Albanese said he had spoken with world leaders about the US president’s 20-point plan at the UN General Assembly last week.

But Ley said she doubted Albanese had “any insight whatsoever”.

“But we [the Coalition] certainly agree that we want a peace deal that sees the hostages released, humanitarian aid delivered, the war ended and an enduring peace settlement put in place for the future.

Ley dodges questions on reunion with Andrew Hastie

By Angus Delaney

Sussan Ley has dodged questions on whether she will meet her rogue shadow cabinet minister Andrew Hastie during her visit to his home state of Western Australia.

Hastie courted controversy after saying Australians were becoming strangers in their own country in an inflammatory social media post blaming immigration for the housing crisis.

Andrew Hastie and Sussan Ley. Alex Ellinghausen

Hastie has also publicly said he would quit the frontbench if the Coalition did not abandon its support for the net zero by 2050 climate target, creating a political headache for Ley. He has also been privately touted as a conservative alternative to her by right-wing colleagues.

Asked if she would meet with Hastie when he returned from leave tomorrow, Ley said she “will see all my colleagues in Canberra soon”.

Asked directly “Does Andrew Hastie want your job?” Ley brushed off the question.

“The only leadership I’m worried about is the prime minister’s leadership” she said.

Government addicted to spending as interest rates unchanged, says Ley

By Angus Delaney

Opposition Leader Sussan Ley said interest rates remaining unchanged is a consequence of the government spending recklessly.

The Reserve Bank today announced interest rates would remain steady at 3.6 per cent, which Treasurer Jim Chalmers said was unfortunate news for home owners but anticipated by economists.

Opposition Leader Sussan Ley.Simon Schluter

Ley said this was hurting mortgage holders and said it was “because this government is simply addicted to spending”.

“These are massive failures by a government that cannot get its spending under control. As a consequence, interest rates have gone up 12 times and come down only three are continuing to hurt Australian families.”

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Nurses begin six-week fight for 35 per cent pay increase

By Angus Thomson

The NSW industrial court has asked the state’s health department to clarify whether it would need to cut services or take on more debt to fund a 35 per cent wage increase for nurses and midwives.

The six-week case to strike a new deal for the state’s 69,000 nurses and midwives began in the Industrial Relations Commission today, with both the government and the NSW Nurses and Midwives’ Association estimating the cost of the claim at over $10 billion.

NSW Nurses and Midwives’ Association members and representatives outside the Industrial Relations Commission. Edwina Pickles

The union’s lawyer, Leo Saunders, said the cost was large but one the state’s economy could afford. “Nurses are expensive now; they’ll be made more expensive, [but] this does not represent an economic disaster,” he said.

He said a 35 per cent increase over three years was necessary to address cost-of-living pressures, compensate for the expanded roles and responsibilities of nurses and midwives, and correct the historic undervaluation of the majority-female workforce.

Consultancy giant to oversee Optus network following Triple Zero outage

By David Swan

The Optus board has appointed consultancy giant Kearney to oversee its network in the wake of the fatal Triple Zero outage linked to three deaths.

Optus chairman John Arthur said the appointment came after a constructive discussion with Communications Minister Anika Wells, Optus chief executive Stephen Rue and Singtel chief executive Yuen Kuan Moon.

Optus chairman John Arthur (left), Singtel chief executive Yuen Kuan Moon and Optus chief executive Stephen Rue speak to the media on Tuesday morning in Sydney.Flavio Brancaleone

Optus and the government are facing mounting scrutiny after repeat emergency service outages.

“As agreed with the minister, the board has appointed independent expertise to provide additional oversight of our mobile network,” Arthur said in a statement.

Trans inmate jailed for child sex abuse no danger to female prisoners, says lawyer

By Wendy Tuohy

A trans inmate jailed in a women’s prison for child sexual assault is being kept in solitary confinement and is no danger to other prisoners, her lawyer has said.

Women’s rights advocates and the Victorian Liberals are calling for the transfer of Hilary Maloney, a court imposed pseudonym, to a men’s prison to serve the remainder of a 2½-year minimum term for abusing her five-year-old daughter and sending the videos to an overseas paedophile in 2023.

But Maloney’s defence lawyer, Isabelle Skaburskis, told this masthead her client would face serious risks in a men’s prison.

“[Maloney] has been in solitary confinement for 13 months, which is a form of torture under international law,” Skaburskis said. “If she were moved to a men’s prison, she would almost certainly be physically or sexually assaulted.

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Australian authors compare AI copyright push to colonialism, Nazi Germany

By Nick Newling

Australian author Anna Funder has described artificial intelligence models scraping the work of creatives as a form of colonialism, likening fellow authors to “natives”.

“The reason they want our stuff is because it’s valuable to them for money, and yet they are not prepared to abide by the law in paying us for that value,” Funder told a Senate inquiry.

“So like colonialists, they pretend there is no value in this land. We can take this sugar, this labour, or ore, or oil; it’s worth nothing to the natives. We’re going to take it and make money out of it. But we are the natives.”

Author Anna Funder appears before the Senate inquiry.AAP

The inquiry is investigating the government’s National Cultural Policy, amid requests from technology firms to allow the scraping of creative content to train AI models despite copyright protections.

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