Peace Be With You
Prime Minister Scott Morrison questioning if Labor was loyal to China prompted the most heated exchange in a pre-election leaders debate that saw Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese outpoint the PM.
Mr Albanese landed no killer blow but countered attempts by Mr Morrison to lure him into a debate on home affairs policy and worked his advantages on COVID-19 management, a federal anti-corruption commission and Pacific security.
In the end, the Sky News “People’s Forum” in Brisbane was always about the wisdom of the undecided voter.
And on that measure, Mr Albanese emerged the winner of a 100-person straw poll, 40 to 35.
Although he charged hard on national security, the Prime Minister seemed less energised trying to talk up his economic record.
“Our strong economic plan has been delivering,” Mr Morrison said.
“Our strong economic plan is getting people off welfare into work, about helping Australians realise their big aspirations”.
Mr Morrison acknowledged the national debt had blown out under his watch but said the government had overseen a $100 billion turnaround in addition to falling unemployment.
Mr Albanese characterised the government as dithering instead of pursuing any substantial reforms.
‘You have to shape the future’
“The problem with this government is that it’s just treading water, not pursuing any significant economic, social or environmental reforms,” Mr Albanese said.
“You have to shape the future, otherwise the future will shape you.”
Labor leader Anthony Albanese has narrowly defeated Prime Minister Scott Morrison at The People's Forum debate which saw the pair make their pitch to the Australian population ahead of the Federal Election on May 21.
The clear result out of the first debate on Wednesday night was that neither leader dominated the support of the audience in Brisbane, with Mr Albanese securing 40 per cent of the vote to Mr Morrison’s 35 per cent.
A shocking 25 per cent were not convinced either way, after both leaders failed to land a firm blow on their opponent while going head-to-head.
Sky News Australia host Paul Murray said the result reflected recent opinion polls and indicated that “we are on our way to a hung parliament”.
A court has formally approved the extradition of Julian Assange to the US on espionage charges, in what will ultimately be a decision for the UK home secretary, Priti Patel.
The Wikileaks co-founder, who has the right of appeal, appeared by videolink during the Westminster magistrates court hearing, which one of his barristers described as a “brief but significant moment in the case”.
Mark Summers QC, for Assange, told the chief magistrate that he had no option but to send the case to the home secretary. It was not open, at this point, for Assange’s team to raise fresh evidence but there had been “fresh developments”, he added.
Summers said “serious submissions” would be made to the home secretary regarding US sentencing and conditions.
The brief hearing was taking place after the supreme court last month refused Assange’s appeal against his extradition. He had sought to challenge a judgment by the high court in December that ruled he could be extradited after assurances from the US authorities with regard to his prison conditions there.
An extradition order was issued by the chief magistrate, Paul Goldspring, during the seven-minute hearing.
Goldspring told Assange: “In layman’s terms, I am duty bound to send your case to the secretary of state for a decision.”
As well as being able to make submissions to Patel, Assange’s lawyers can also access other routes to fight his extradition. This could include mounting a challenge on other issues of law raised at first instance on which he lost and have not yet been subject to appeal.
Assange, wearing a jacket and tie, appeared via a video link from Belmarsh prison, where he was married last month to his partner, Stella Moris, and spoke only to confirm his name and date of birth.
When Harold MacMillan was asked what was most likely to throw governments off course, the former British prime minister is reported to have responded: "Events, dear boy. Events."
And in the Nerf war that has been the 2022 election campaign so far — in which 90 per cent of the noise has been candidates caterwauling about something dastardly their opponent is secretly planning to do — the arrival of an Event, an Actual Thing That Has Actually Happened, had a shocking effect today.
China has signed a security pact with Solomon Islands. The terms are undisclosed but if it's anything like the draft that leaked recently, it'll create a hell of a potential Chinese military toe-hold right in our backyard.
Such a decision was probably inevitable and most likely timed during an election campaign for strategic cover but Shadow Foreign Minister Penny Wong described the development as the greatest foreign policy failure in the Pacific region since World War II.
Dealing with local bullies is difficult, as any primary school kid knows. And if the bully is hugely cashed-up and renting out local tree houses for silly money so they can potentially get a clear shot at you, it's unsettling for sure.
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