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Australia news as it happened: Annual inflation remains steady, ABS figures show; MPs respond to news PM was forced to evacuate The Lodge over security threat

Emily Kaine, Isabel McMillan and Brittany Busch
Updated ,first published

What we covered today

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

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

  • Figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showed annual inflation was steady at 3.8 per cent through the 12 months to the end of January. Underlying inflation, closely watched by the Reserve Bank, was up by 0.3 per cent in January, taking the annual rate up slightly to 3.4 per cent and leaving the Reserve Bank poised to hit the economy with an interest rate hike before the May budget.
  • A bomb threat that forced the evacuation of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese from his official Canberra residence came after an email that claimed explosives had been planted around The Lodge and would be detonated unless performances by a Chinese dance troupe were cancelled.
  • US President Donald Trump delivered the longest ever State of the Union address. Trump took a triumphant tone in the speech, which clocked over 100 minutes, saying “our nation is back bigger, better, richer and stronger than ever before”.
  • Government ministers have been directed by Albanese to find billions of dollars in cuts and delay spending to avoid adding fuel to the inflation fire ahead of the May budget. Finance Minister Katy Gallagher confirmed this morning that the government was seeking “significant savings” in its next budget.
  • WiseTech Global announced it would cut roughly 2000 staff – nearly one-third of its workforce of 7000 – over the next two years as chief executive Zubin Appoo bets the logistics software giant’s future on artificial intelligence.

Thanks again for joining us.

History beckons as the outback soaking continues

By Alexander Darling

The vast interior of Australia has played host to a rare phenomenon in recent weeks – teeming rain – and now history beckons.

Nappa Merrie station in south-west Queensland recorded 169 millimetres of rain overnight on Tuesday, a fall equivalent to the station’s yearly rainfall total, according to Higgins Storm Chasing weather service. Nearby Cameron Corner has received 251 millimetres in the past fortnight.

And as the floodwaters slowly drain south and west, South Australia’s Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre is expected to be inundated for a second consecutive year, which has never happened before.

Australia’s largest salt lake may even top its 1974 depth record of six metres.

‘Rise on the horizon’: Inflation fuels rate hike fears

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Mortgage holders might be spared an interest rate rise at the next Reserve Bank meeting, but fresh inflation figures have placed further pressure on the board for future hikes.

Underlying inflation ticked up for January to 3.4 per cent, up from 3.3 per cent in December.

The Reserve Bank’s preferred measure of consumer prices, trimmed mean inflation, increased by 0.3 per cent in January, according to Australian Bureau of Statistics figures released on Wednesday.

Headline inflation, which includes a broader spread of goods and services, held steady at 3.8 per cent in the year to January, the same as the December reading.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers said stubborn levels of inflation would likely stick around for some time.

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International student fined and sent home after sinister find at airport

By Isabel McMillan

A young Chinese student hoping to study early childhood education in Australia had his visa cancelled at an airport this week, after Australian Border Force officers allegedly found child abuse material on his phone.

The ABF said the man arrived in Adelaide on a flight from China on a student visa. During a baggage search in Adelaide Airport, officers allegedly found 21 videos “deemed to be child abuse material”.

The man was issued a $660 fine and his student visa was cancelled. He was then detained and “removed from the country on the next available flight”.

Australian Border Force said officers at Adelaide Airport found a man in possession of child abuse material.Alex Ellinghausen

The ABF said travellers who had their visa cancelled might be subject to a re-entry ban of up to three years, or in some cases, permanently excluded.

AI job losses hit Australia hard as WiseTech axes 2000 jobs

By David Swan

Australia has suffered its first major round of AI job cuts as the country’s largest locally listed software company axed almost one-third of its workforce to manage deep fears in financial markets that new coding tools will make big technology firms vulnerable to disruption.

WiseTech Global will cut about 2000 staff – nearly one-third of its workforce of 7000 – over the next two years as chief executive Zubin Appoo bets the logistics software giant’s future on artificial intelligence.

WiseTech co-founder Richard White (left) and CEO Zubin Appoo in November.Sitthixay Ditthavong

Some teams face headcount reductions of up to 50 per cent, starting with product development and customer service, after the company realised that recent AI tool releases such as Claude Opus 4.6 from the US giant Anthropic in February had changed how software could be built.

Appoo rejected the suggestion that cutting nearly a third of the workforce risked degrading the company’s products, which are ubiquitous for freight forwarders and customs documentation.

“We’re not halving the capacity,” Appoo said. “We’re halving the human capacity, but we’re significantly increasing the overall capacity through agentic AI.”

Read the full story by David Swan here.

Bondi gunman denied family jail visit

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Bondi gunman Naveed Akram has been denied a visit from his family members after a search of their car found a fruit knife and a handwritten note.

NSW Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon confirmed Corrective Services stopped the family of the 24-year-old prisoner outside the super-max jail in Goulburn on Saturday.

“A search was conducted with the vehicle and found what has been described as a fruit knife and other pieces of writing,” Lanyon told reporters on Wednesday.

Counter-terrorism police investigated the note and deemed it unrelated to terrorism matters. Lanyon would not divulge details of what the note contained.

AAP

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Rising Tide claims responsibility for heckling PM

By Brittany Busch

Climate activist group Rising Tide has confirmed its members disrupted Anthony Albanese’s speech today to protest against new coal and gas projects.

Two protesters were removed from the Future Victoria Summit in Melbourne, minutes into the prime minister’s address.

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The organisation said in a statement that 18-year-old Myles Wilkinson asked Albanese: “Why are you selling my future to gas companies in the Otway basin?”

Rising Tide said a second protester, Nell Sudano, lived four kilometres from Harcourt, the Victorian town devastated by bushfire last month, and demanded polluters pay for social and environmental damage.

Too many young people locked out of housing market: former Treasury secretary

By Shane Wright

Former Treasury secretary Ken Henry has revealed how the “disaster” in Australian housing policy has affected him and his family.

Henry said he had stood alongside his children as they sought to buy a home in Sydney, only to be out-bid by investors who had the financial advantage of the tax system supporting them.

Former Treasury secretary Ken Henry.AAP

“There would be tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, if not millions of parents in Australia who could tell the same story: stories of standing at an auction, seeing their kids – potential owner-occupiers – being out-bid by investors,” he said.

Henry pushed back at claims by the housing industry that the sector was over-taxed.

He noted that because of negative gearing, rental housing actually cost the federal budget.

Former Treasury secretary bemoans state of tax system

By Shane Wright

Former Treasury secretary Ken Henry has bemoaned the state of the nation’s tax system, saying it was full of holes, suffered from deliberate negligence and encouraged higher-income earners to find “creative ways” to reduce their tax.

Henry, giving evidence this afternoon to a Senate inquiry into the capital gains tax, said the tax system was clearly struggling with little reform in recent years.

Ken Henry says Australia’s tax system needs reform.Alex Ellinghausen

He said given the Hawke and then Howard governments had sliced the top marginal tax rate from 60 per cent to 45 per cent, it should be even lower today.

“After all the work that was done, we should have been able to get the top marginal rate of tax ... to [one with] a 3 in front of it,” he said.

Henry said the current tax structure, including capital gains tax and negative gearing, effectively made investment in the rental market a tax avoidance system.

“Rental property investments are primarily under Australian tax law a vehicle for sheltering wage and salary income from tax,” he said.

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Bomb threat on The Lodge linked to performances by Chinese dance troupe

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An email sent to organisers of a Chinese dance troupe yesterday falsely claimed that explosives placed around The Lodge would be detonated unless performances were cancelled, and forced Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to evacuate his Canberra residence.

The Shen Yun group. pictured performing in 2025, received threatening emails.YouTube/Shen Yun

A report in The Epoch Times, a news outlet affiliated with the Falun Gong religious movement banned in China, said Chinese language emails sent to the Shen Yun Performing Arts dance troupe linked to the movement threatened that performances must be cancelled or the prime minister’s residence would be “blown into ruins”.

The reports, confirmed independently by this masthead, the ABC and news.com.au, say the dance troupe received the emails in the afternoon and referred them to the Australian Federal Police.

Albanese was evacuated at 6pm.

Police spent three hours combing The Lodge before judging it was safe for the prime minister and his staff to return. No signs of explosives were found.

The AFP refused to comment on the incident.

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