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As it happened: Scott Morrison wants to slash unemployment as Labor lashes government’s aged care bonus; total COVID-19 cases continue to grow across the nation

Broede Carmody and Kate Rose
Updated ,first published

The day in review

By Kate Rose

Good evening and thank you for reading our live coverage of the day’s events, here’s what you need to know:

Ben Roberts-Smith arrives at the Federal Court in Sydney on Wednesday.Flavio Brancaleone
  • Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce has called on the minister who allegedly made derogatory comments about Prime Minister Scott Morrison in a text message conversation with the former NSW premier to identify themselves.
  • From Senate hearings in Canberra we heard from Deputy Secretary for Social Policy Alison Frame that Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s department did not factor in the possibility of the PCR testing system collapsing and the rush for rapid antigen tests while planning to reopen the economy after COVID-19 lockdowns.
  • Also from those hearings, Aged Care Services Minister Richard Colbeck says he stands by his decision to go to the cricket while a deadly Omicron outbreak swept through the sector, saying he “continued to pay attention to aged care” while at the three-day Ashes test.
Minister for Senior Australians and Aged Care Services and Minister for Sport Richard Colbeck. Alex Ellinghausen

Why do homes cost 22.4 per cent more than a year ago?

By Jessica Irvine

Today on Please Explain, national property editor Chris Harrison joins Jess Irvine to discuss the rising prices of Australian homes.

The median price of an Australian home increased 22.4 per cent over the past year – the biggest annual percentage gain in more than three decades. That’s a $131,000 jump in just 12 months, according to CoreLogic data.

A separate Domain survey of the value of free-standing houses (excluding apartments) shows the median house will now set you back $1.6 million in Sydney and $1.1 million in Melbourne.

Historically low-interest rates and COVID-19 disruptions both played a role in pushing up home values last year. So, amid talk of interest rate rises, what does 2022 hold in store for home values?

Three Canberra convoy protesters arrested after assaulting police

By Amelia McGuire

The third day of the Convoy to Canberra protests has seen three people arrested after an assault on police.

At around 4pm police attempted to advise the anti-vaccine mandate protesters they were camping and parking illegally on Canberra’s Patrick White lawns, adjacent to the National Library.

Convoy to Canberra protesters near the National Library of Australia.Alex Ellinghausen

One woman responded to the request by attacking police officers, and was subsequently arrested and charged with assault, two men attempted to interfere in the arrest and were also arrested and charged with obstruction.

ACT Ambulance Service paramedics attended the scene and treated two people with minor injuries.

The protest – coined the “2022 Official Convoy to Canberra Terra Australis” – congregated for a third day to demand the government stop COVID-19 vaccination mandates.

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PM defends Israel following Amnesty International report

By Anthony Galloway

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has defended Israel’s policies towards Palestinians after Amnesty International accused the country of a system of apartheid, saying “no country is perfect”.

An Amnesty International report has accused Israel of subjecting Palestinians to a system of “segregation, dispossession and exclusion”, arguing it meets the international definition of apartheid.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison at the National Press Club yesterday.Alex Ellinghausen

The finding of apartheid evokes the South African policy of institutionalised racial segregation until the early 1990s.

Asked for his response to the finding, Mr Morrison said “no country is perfect”.

“There are criticisms made of all countries, but I can assure you that Australia and my government in particular will remain a staunch friend of Israel,” he told ABC radio.

Israel has branded the report “false, biased, and anti-Semitic” and accused Amnesty of endangering the safety of Jews around the world.

No eating or drinking up to 30 minutes before home tests, TGA says

By Rachel Clun

Still on rapid antigen tests, if you eat or drink too soon before taking a saliva one, your results may be wrong.

That’s according to an update from the medical regulator, which today highlighted the need for people to abstain from eating, drinking, or even brushing their teeth for up to half an hour before using a home saliva testing kit.

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The Therapeutic Goods Administration says it’s important that people do not eat, drink, smoke, chew gum or brush their teeth for 10 to 30 minutes before using a rapid antigen test.

“Not using the test properly may produce an incorrect result,” the regulator said on Twitter, linking to its fact sheet on rapid tests.

Read more: Don’t eat or drink before using saliva rapid antigen tests, regulator says

PM says he’s been ‘very honest’ about the lessons of the past two years

By Broede Carmody

Circling back to an interview from earlier today, and Prime Minister Scott Morrison was on ABC radio where he was grilled about whether he should say sorry to the Australian public for some of the things his government has done over the past two years.

As you might recall, the PM fronted the National Press Club in Canberra yesterday and said he was perhaps too optimistic about this summer in public comments. And that he would do certain things differently if he’d have his time again.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison during his address to the National Press Club of Australia in Canberra on Tuesday.Alex Ellinghausen

The relevant exchange is below. It has been edited for length and clarity:

Sabra Lane: You’ve acknowledged many Australians are frustrated with the government, and that perhaps you raised hopes for a summer that were dashed. But you’re appear unwilling to say that you’re sorry [for your own actions]. Why is sorry the hardest word for you to say?

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‘Don’t wait to be outed’: Joyce urges minister who criticised PM to come forward

By Amelia McGuire and David Crowe

There was a lot of airtime spent this morning on mysterious text messages between former NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian and an unnamed federal Liberal cabinet member in which Ms Berejiklian purportedly called the Prime Minister a “horrible, horrible person” and the unnamed Liberal cabinet minister reportedly called Mr Morrison “a complete psycho”.

Now Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce has called on the minister who allegedly made the derogatory comment to identify themselves, as Amelia McGuire and David Crowe report.

Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce. Alex Ellinghausen

Mr Joyce told a media conference in Tamworth it was only a matter of time until the minister’s identity was revealed and called for them to come forward.

“Three people know who this is. Did I say three? I meant 3000. This is about one dinner and two bottles of red wine away from the whole world knowing who this is,” he said.

Country’s top medical officials defend end of year RAT approvals

By Rachel Clun

The head of Australia’s medical regulator says half of all rapid antigen test results would have been “garbage” if the tests were rolled out too early last year.

TGA boss Professor John Skerritt has been facing questions at a senate COVID-19 committee hearing this afternoon, around why the regulator did not approve tests for home use earlier than November.

Professor John Skerritt from the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)Alex Ellinghausen

Professor Skerritt said the reason was it would have been “outright dangerous” to have people testing themselves earlier in the year, when there were fewer cases and health authorities were still heavily relying on contact tracing to suppress the virus.

“You would have had people with false positives, and immediately you also would have missed a significant number of infections,” he told the hearing.

Omicron’s impact on the economy appears to be behind us: Lowe

By Kate Rose

Reserve Bank Governor Philip Lowe spoke at the National Press Club today, forecasting strong demand for labour, inflation of around 2.75 per cent and drops in both unemployment and underemployment.

RBA governor Philip Lowe speaking at the National Press Club on Wednesday.Louise Kennerley

He had the following to say, highlighting that the last time Australia’s unemployment rate was below 4 per cent for any stretch of time was in the 1970s and that key indicators were promising as the economy starts its recovery from the pandemic:

The decline in the unemployment rate has been accompanied by a welcome decline in under employment...

Underemployment is the lowest that it’s been in 13 years. There’s also been a sharp rise in labour force participation in Australia.

This stands in stark contrast to what’s happened in the United States, in the United Kingdom, where labour force participation has declined quite significantly. In Australia today, a share of the working age population with a job is as high as it’s ever been.

Again, a significant achievement which we shouldn’t underestimate. The forward-looking indicators suggest that the demand for workers remains strong.

Mr Lowe also said once Omicron’s disruption to the economy had passed, he believed labour force participation would increase, for both full-time and part-time workers.

Once again, the economy has shown remarkable resilience. The worst of the disruptive effects from Omicron now appear to be behind us.

Supply chains and workforce management issues which have been significant are gradually being addressed. And I think as case numbers trend lower over the weeks ahead, the economy will bounce back strongly and we’ll see a sharp pick-up in spending.

While Omicron has delayed the recovery of the Australian economy, it’s not derailed it.

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Religious principal sends video to parents, extends contract signing date

By Cloe Read

This morning Lisa Visentin and Cloe Read reported that federal moderate Liberal MPs will renew their push for fast-tracked protections for LGBTQ school students after reports that Citipointe Christian College in Brisbane had issued contracts requiring students to agree to specific gender roles and denounce homosexuality.

But Citipointe Christian College’s principal has pushed back on the Queensland government over its referral to have the school reviewed, and has instead extended the signing date for the controversial contract that sparked an uproar.

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Principal Brian Mulheran issued a six-minute-long video to parents on Tuesday night in a bid to reassure families that the school “does not judge students on the basis of sexuality or gender identity”.

The Brisbane school this week copped a backlash over its enrolment contract issued to families on Friday asking for students and parents to agree to gender roles and to denounce homosexuality.

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