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As it happened: US government shutdown begins over funding deal; Nicole Kidman files for divorce from Keith Urban, reports say

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’ll end today’s coverage.

Here’s a look back at today’s biggest stories:

  • The US federal government has shut down after a last-minute vote to extend funding past a midnight deadline failed in the US Senate, and President Donald Trump threatened to extend his purge of the federal workforce. The 55-to-45 vote ensured that US government agencies will now discontinue all but “essential” activities, potentially disrupting everything from air travel to the monthly unemployment report.
  • The government said it is concerned by reports that China has ceased buying BHP iron ore due to a breakdown in contract negotiations. Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the reports were “concerning” but ultimately a matter for the company to work through, not government.
  • Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has marked the anniversary of the 2005 Bali bombings, saying, “so many hearts are still heavy with the weight of loss”, two decades on. In a post to social media today, Albanese said the bombings – which happened three years after the first Bali bombing, in 2002 – brought devastation to families in Indonesia, Australia, and more broadly across the world.
  • The government today expanded its scheme to enables first home buyers to purchase a home with a 5 per cent deposit, “making it easier for young people and first home buyers to achieve the dream of owning a home”, Albanese said. The Coalition criticised it for not being means-tested and likely pushing up house prices.
  • Queensland’s largest and oldest coal-fired power station could be shut down within four years, dramatically expediting the timeline for the plant’s closure. The owners of Gladstone Power Station announced today the plant might be retired as early as March 2029, six years ahead of schedule.

Kamala Harris to visit Australia in 2026

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Former US vice president Kamala Harris will visit Sydney and Canberra in February for a female leadership summit.

Harris will attend the summit’s events in Sydney and Canberra to be interviewed by ABC journalist Leigh Sales.

The summit, a product of private company Hatchery, advertises itself as giving women the network and tools to step into leadership roles.

Former vice president Kamala Harris speaks at the first stop of her book tour in New York. AP

Police confirm new search as part of hunt for alleged police killer Dezi Freeman

By Alexander Darling

Police have confirmed there is a development in the manhunt for Dezi Freeman, who is accused of shooting dead two police officers in the north-east Victorian town of Porepunkah in late August.

Officers are currently in the farming area of Goomalibee, near the town of Benalla, a 75-minute drive west of Porepunkah.

Alleged Porepunkah gunman Dezi Freeman, pictured in 2018.Nine/A Current Affair

“This forms part of the ongoing investigation in the Porepunkah area in the search for Desmond Freeman,” Victoria Police said.

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ASX falls on BHP ore worries

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Australia’s share market has finished the day slightly lower, despite trade concerns for BHP weighing heavily on the raw materials sector.

The S&P/ASX200 fell four points, or 0.05 per cent, to 8844.8, as the broader All Ordinaries slipped 0.2 points, almost flat, to close at 9135.7

BHP shares tumbled 2.3 per cent during the session to $41.56, wiping more than $5 billion from the world’s biggest miner’s $216 billion market cap.

Five of 11 local sectors traded lower on Wednesday.

The Australian dollar is buying 66.01 US cents, on par with market close.

AAP

‘Hug a couple of pandas’: Liberal senator targets PM over China’s iron ore refusal

By Angus Delaney

Liberal senator Jane Hume has questioned the effectiveness of the prime minister’s diplomatic trip to China in July after reports China has stopped buying BHP iron ore.

The China Mineral Resources Group Co asked domestic buyers to suspend purchases of BHP iron ore after a breakdown in negotiations between both sides, Bloomberg reported.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Jodie Haydon visit the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding in Chengdu, China in July. Dominic Lorrimer

“What happened to the prime minister’s fantastic work with trade negotiations?” Hume told the ABC. “It sounds like a giant fail. If this is the case, all he did was go over and hug a couple of pandas.”

But Deputy Defence Minister Peter Khalil said it was a commercial matter and the government was not involved.

“It is a negotiation around contract pricing … between companies,” he said. “I hope they resolve it because it’s in everybody’s interest.”

Government troubled by reports of China’s refusal of BHP iron ore

By Angus Delaney

The Australian government does not want any disruptions to its iron ore trade with China, says Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles, following reports that Beijing’s state-run importer has told major steelmakers and traders to temporarily halt purchases of all new BHP Group cargoes.

Bloomberg reports the China Mineral Resources Group Co asked domestic buyers to suspend purchases of BHP iron ore after a breakdown in negotiations between both sides.

A cargo ship carrying iron ore. Robert Peet

Marles told the ABC: “Obviously we’re looking at this carefully. We do not want to see any hindering of the trade that is undertaken between our two countries in general terms and specifically in relation to iron ore.

“We want to allow commercial processes to play out and to take their course and that’s appropriate. I think it’s reasonable in that context to say that we obviously want to see trade continue in a way which is not hindered.”

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Trump’s Gaza plan the best prospect of ceasefire says Taylor

By Angus Delaney

Donald Trump’s 20-point plan for a ceasefire in Gaza is the best prospect for peace in the Middle East, says shadow defence minister Angus Taylor.

The proposal, accepted by Israel and under consideration by Hamas, would see an immediate truce in Gaza as long as Hamas agreed to release all Israeli hostages – alive and dead – including 47 who were abducted in the October 7 attack on Israeli civilians in 2023.

Opposition defence spokesman Angus Taylor.Alex Ellinghausen

This would be followed by the increased flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza and the rebuilding of local infrastructure, overseen by a transitional authority led by Trump.

Speaking on the ABC, Taylor said this was the best chance for a ceasefire “but obviously the prerequisite is that Hamas agrees to it”.

“I think it’s important that the supporters of Hamas do everything they can to make sure that Hamas comes to the table and agrees to this because it is our best chance and I think it’s a big step forward.”

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese yesterday came out in support of the plan.

Reports of China iron ore ban ‘concerning’: treasurer

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Treasurer Jim Chalmers will meet with the boss of BHP amid a shock report that the world’s largest mining company faces a Chinese blockade on its iron ore shipments.

Beijing’s state iron ore buyer has told steelmakers to pause imports of BHP ore, amid hardball negotiations over the price of the crucial resource, Bloomberg reported on Tuesday.

Both Treasurer Jim Chalmers and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the report was troubling. Alex Ellinghausen

Chalmers said the reports were “concerning” but ultimately a matter for the company to work through.

“I’ll have discussions with [BHP chief executive] Mike Henry about that in due course, when we can set that up,” he told reporters in Brisbane on Wednesday.

91 students missing after Indonesian school collapse

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Sidoarjo, Indonesia: Parents were desperately searching for scores of missing teenage boys feared trapped under huge piles of concrete, after an Islamic boarding school collapsed in Indonesia yesterday as pupils were praying inside.

Authorities said 91 people were listed as missing after the Al Khoziny school building collapsed while pupils held late afternoon prayers in a mosque housed on a lower floor of a building whose upper floors were under construction.

Search and rescue officers search for survivors in the rubble of a collapsed school in East Java, Indonesia.Robertus Pudyanto/Getty Images

The boarding school is in the East Java town of Sidoarjo, about 780 kilometres east of Jakarta.

By late yesterday evening, three bodies had been recovered, with the vast majority of presumed victims still trapped under huge slabs of concrete. Ninety-nine children and workers at the school survived.

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Mushroom cook killer Erin Patterson returns to court as appeal deadline looms

By Erin Pearson

Mushroom cook killer Erin Patterson will return to court tomorrow as the deadline looms for her legal team to appeal her conviction and sentence.

A new barrister has been brought in to look at Patterson’s case, with her defence team expected to apply in the Supreme Court tomorrow for an extension of time to appeal.

Erin Patterson arriving at the Supreme Court.AP

Patterson’s 28-day window to appeal ends at midnight on October 6. While prosecutors must decide before then if they wish to push for a sentence increase, a new procedural rule will give her defence team longer to lodge their paperwork.

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