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As it happened: Suspected Medibank hackers post stolen data; ADF review ordered following reports China asked former pilots for intel

Broede Carmody and Caitlin Fitzsimmons
Updated ,first published

The headlines today

By Caitlin Fitzsimmons

And that’s a wrap. I’m signing off from the national blog for the afternoon and will see you tomorrow.

Watch the home pages for more breaking news, or tune into Latika Bourke’s live blog for the US mid-term elections.

For those just joining us, here is a recap of today’s headlines:

  • The royal commission into the failed robo-debt scheme continued. In question time, Labor MPs asked at least six Dorothy Dixers to highlight the former government’s role in the controversial program, which falsely accused welfare recipients from owing money.
  • Indigenous leaders Pat Anderson and Megan Davis told the National Press Club the referendum for the First Nations Voice to Parliament could be as soon as next October, and delays would risk losing momentum.
  • Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek challenged supermarkets to step up on plastic recycling.
  • A ransomware group followed through with its threats and started posting customer data stolen from Australia’s largest health insurer, Medibank Private.
  • In Canberra, a group of climate protesters spray-painted and tried to glue themselves to an Andy Warhol artwork that’s being displayed at the National Gallery of Australia.

Democrats poised to lose House but avoid wipeout in US elections

By Caitlin Fitzsimmons

Let’s check in on the progress in the midterm elections in the United States, which President Joe Biden has described as the most consequential in modern history.

Latika Bourke is hosting the election blog.

Our North American correspondent Farrah Tomazin reports that Republicans are still favoured to wrest control of the US House of Representatives away from Democrats based on early returns, while the Senate remains too close to call.

However, the prospects of a “red wave” – the Republicans routing the Democrats – appeared to have diminished.

Former president Donald Trump backed a number of the Republican candidates in the primaries, and was expected to use strong results from his favoured candidates as a springboard to announce a 2024 run.

US broadcasters are saying the results may not be known for days.

Public servant ‘lacked courage’ to challenge robo-debt scheme

By Caitlin Fitzsimmons

We reported earlier today that the royal commission on the robo-debt scheme had dominated question time in the House of Representatives today.

The inquiry is investigating how the scheme went ahead despite government departments knowing the debt calculation method was illegal.

The evidence at the royal commission today included testimony from a public servant who said she was ashamed about lacking the courage to speak up against the robo-debt scheme despite knowing it was illegal.

Serena Wilson, former deputy secretary at the Department of Social Services, told the royal commission that deliberate, specific and comprehensive legal advice was provided to the Department of Human Services (now called Services Australia) before the program was rolled out.

She believed this advice was not passed on to Scott Morrison - then social services minister - because there was some “role confusion” between the two departments.

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‘It’s time to go’: Voice referendum could be as soon as next October

By Lisa Visentin and Caitlin Fitzsimmons

In case you missed it, First Nations elder Pat Anderson and lawyer and Indigenous leader Professor Megan Davis addressed the National Press Club earlier today.

Lisa Visentin in our Canberra bureau reports that Anderson warned the referendum to enshrine an Indigenous Voice to Parliament in the Constitution should be sooner rather than later, and risked losing momentum if it was delayed beyond 2025.

“It is definitely time to go. There’s no doubt about that,” Anderson told the press club.

Pat Anderson and Professor Megan Davis at the National Press Club.Alex Ellinghausen

Anderson said the government was considering holding the national vote as early as October next year.

Superannuation tax concessions placing pressure on the budget, Treasury says

By Rachel Clun

If the government wants to reduce its structural budget deficit, it needs to look at changing the tax concessions around superannuation. At least that’s the advice from the Department of Treasury.

Yesterday, Financial Services Minister Stephen Jones said the government wanted to enshrine a definition of superannuation in law, and also flagged the budget cost of tax concessions for high-value funds needed to be considered.

There are 32 self-managed super funds with more than $100 million in assets and the largest has more than $400 million. Concessional contributions are taxed at 15 per cent – by comparison, the current top income tax rate is 45 per cent.

Under questioning at senate estimates this afternoon, Treasury Deputy Secretary Robert Jeremenko pointed out that the department had this week outlined the budget pressures facing the government.

“[Treasury Secretary Stephen Kennedy] made quite clear the likely combination of spending restraint and increases in taxes that are going to be required to reduce deficits and lower debt over time,” Jeremenko said.

NSW minister calls to protect renters from ‘oversharing’ information in light of cyberattacks

By Tawar Razaghi

As we reported earlier, hackers have started posting the private medical information of Medibank customers online.

The news, and the large Optus hack, drawn attention to which other industries hold a lot of personal data and could be vulnerable to a cyberattack.

The real estate industry, which collects copious amounts of information from renters with little protection in place, is one of those in the spotlight.

In NSW, the state’s Customer Service Minister Victor Dominello has asked the NSW Fair Trading Commissioner to investigate ways of limiting real estate data collection.

He wrote to Commissioner Natasha Mann to ask the Rental Bond Board, which holds tenants’ bonds, to look at ways to use its online platform to securely collect and validate identifying documents from potential tenants.

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Albanese talks down need for sanctions against Iran

By Caitlin Fitzsimmons

In international news, the protests in Iran are continuing despite an intensifying violent crackdown.

In question time earlier, Liberal MP Keith Wolahan asked the prime minister about sanctions.

The Victorian MP, a former commando and lawyer who was elected in 2022 after Kevin Andrews lost preselection, asked:

Iranian Australians are pleading with us to follow the lead of the United Kingdom, Canada and the EU and impose sanctions against a regime which has violated the rights of Iranian women.

Beyond the [statements] of support and condemnation, what action does the government intend to take?

Australia has 70,899 people born in Iran, nearly two-thirds of whom are Australian citizens, according to the 2021 census. Iranians are also one of the biggest groups of asylum seekers by nationality, both in detention centres and in the community.

What to do with your soft plastics

By Caitlin Fitzsimmons

Circling back to the issue of plastic recycling, I know many readers will be wondering: what now?

Plastic bags can be reused to an extent, but the soft plastic recycling scheme went far beyond that and took all “scrunchable” plastics, including cling film, bread bags, biscuit packets, and other food packaging.

Like many Australians, I have a separate bin for soft plastics in my kitchen and was due – OK, I mean overdue – to take a trip to the supermarket to empty it.

They can’t go in the recycling bin, so should we put them out with the regular rubbish and accept their fate as landfill?

Should we personally stockpile them in the hope of a quick fix? Or should we do as Jeff Angel from the Total Environment Centre suggests and continue taking our soft plastics to the major supermarkets to keep the pressure up?

The headlines so far

By Caitlin Fitzsimmons

Now that question time is over, there’s time to take a breath and catch up on the main headlines of the day so far:

  • The US midterm elections are on. Latika Bourke is running live coverage of that in a separate blog. By her account it’s a nailbiter so far, but it’s already clear it is not the Republican routing of the Democrats that many predicted.
  • Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says he would welcome the opportunity to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping next week. Meanwhile, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has accused China of interfering in Canadian elections.
  • A ransomware group followed through with its threats and started posting customer data stolen from Australia’s largest health insurer, Medibank Private. In question time, Cybersecurity Minister Clare O’Neil warned media companies and social media platforms not to republish private information.
  • In Canberra, a group of climate protesters spray-painted and tried to glue themselves to an Andy Warhol artwork that’s being displayed at the National Gallery of Australia.
  • Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek called on the supermarkets to step up on soft plastic recycling after reports millions of soft plastic items dropped off at Coles and Woolworths are being stockpiled in warehouses and not repurposed.
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‘Human services stripped of humanity’: Robodebt royal commission dominates question time

By Caitlin Fitzsimmons

Robodebt dominated much of question time today, with at least six Dorothy Dixers from Labor MPs highlighting the evidence heard in the royal commission.

The commission is investigating how the controversial welfare debt recovery scheme was rolled out despite departmental advice raising significant questions about its legality when it was proposed.

The opposition has repeatedly tried to rule the questions out of order because it is the subject of ongoing legal proceedings, but Speaker Milton Dick has ruled that there was extensive precedent for parliaments to discuss royal commissions in progress.

Government Services Minister Bill Shorten said he did not know whether former prime minister Scott Morrison, who was social services minister at the time, or other former ministers would be called to give evidence to the royal commission.

“But we do know this ... they cannot simply pass the buck onto the public service for their almost five-year illegal, unlawful shakedown of hundreds of thousands of Australia’s most vulnerable citizens,” Shorten said.

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