Categories
Sports

Media Statement: Michael Hooper | Latest Rugby News

Wallabies captain Michael Hooper has withdrawn from tomorrow’s Test and will be returning to Australia due to personal reasons.

The 121-Test openside flanker believes he’s not in the mindset to fulfill the responsibility that goes with leading and representing his country at this point in time.

He has addressed his teammates to tell them and that he has the utmost confidence in the group to get the job done tomorrow in Mendoza.

Fellow Test centurion James Slipper will lead the side in Mendoza tomorrow afternoon (local time), while Fraser McReight will replace Hooper in the number seven jersey.

Wallabies captain Michael Hooper said: “While this decision did not come easily I know it is the right one for me and the team at this point in time.”

“My whole career I’ve looked to put the team first and I don’t feel I am able to fulfill my responsibilities at the moment in my current mindset.”

Wallabies coach Dave Rennie said: “Michael’s one of the most professional and impressive men I’ve coached I know this has been a difficult decision for him.”

“He’s shown true courage by acknowledging where he is at and acting on it.

“We will support him in any way we can and I know the team will be focused on getting the job done tomorrow.”

Rugby Australia CEO Andy Marinos said: “Michael is an incredible leader, it takes a brave man to identify where he’s at and come forward whilst having the best interests of the team at heart.”

“His wellbeing is and remains the highest priority right now where Rugby Australia and the Australian Rugby community will do everything to support him and his family.”

Rugby Australia requests Michael and his family’s privacy is respected at this time.

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Categories
US

Strong storm takes down trees, power lines in Hollis NH

Several roads were closed Friday afternoon in Hollis after a quick but powerful storm blew through. The storm system cut through southern New Hampshire, bringing down trees and power lines. Wood Lane in Hollis was blocked off after a utility pole fell in the road, and a tree fell onto power lines on Federal Hill Road, forcing that road’s closure. Roadblocks were also set up on Rock Pond Road and Apple Lane, among others. Kevin Walker’s home is on a road that is impassable Friday due to debris.”We had probably 4 to 5 trees fell around our house,” Walker said. “A couple of them fell on it, and of them went through our son’s room. There is a sizable hole you could pretty much fit a body through.” crushed by a fallen tree, and Hollis police said the driver was not injured. “It’s pretty crazy,” said Owen Amigo, who was caught in the storm. “We were down the street working, and all of a sudden, the rain came out of nowhere and the wind, it was pretty crazy.” Crews were working to clean up the damage and clear the roads but said it would take some time. Scattered showers and storms were possible across New Hampshire Friday night.

Several roads were closed Friday afternoon in Hollis after a quick but powerful storm blew through.

The storm system cut through southern New Hampshire, bringing down trees and power lines. Wood Lane in Hollis was blocked off after a utility pole fell in the road, and a tree fell onto power lines on Federal Hill Road, forcing that road’s closure.

Roadblocks were also set up on Rock Pond Road and Apple Lane, among others.

Kevin Walker’s home is on a road that is impassable Friday due to debris.

“We had probably 4 to 5 trees fell around our house,” Walker said. “A couple of them fell on it, and of them went through our son’s room. There is a sizable hole you could pretty much fit a body through.”

Eversource said about 700 homes in the Hollis area were without power.

A pickup truck was crushed by a fallen tree, and Hollis police said the driver was not injured.

“It’s pretty crazy,” said Owen Amigo, who was caught in the storm. “We were down the street working, and all of a sudden, the rain came out of nowhere and the wind, it was pretty crazy.”

Crews were working to clean up the damage and clear the roads but said it would take some time.

Scattered showers and storms were possible across New Hampshire Friday night.

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Categories
Technology

Here’s a quick video with all the new Pokemon Scarlet and Violet news

Nintendo condensed their Pokemon Presents stream

Just the other day we got a lengthy Pokemon Presents video that dug deep into pokemon scarlet and violet news: now we have a distillation of that mainline focus while cutting out all the other stuff. Titled “world overview,” the video was put up separately the day after the presentation, and serves as a six-minute rundown of the Scarlet and violet bits.

As a recap, here is what the pokemon scarlet and violet news video entails:

  • The overview of the “partner legendary” system, which allows you to use the new box legendaries as vehicles (land, sea, and air)
  • A breakdown of the story, and how you’re playing the role of a student at either the Orange (Scarlet) or Grape (violet) academy
  • There are “eight gyms, three stories, and no set path” for conquering the gyms and story progression
  • An intro to some of the cast (Professors Sada and Turo, Director Clavell, Mr. Jacq, your friend Nemona, Arven the upperclassman, Penny the “shy student,” and Grusha the ice type gym leader)
  • A reminder of some existing old Pokemon, as well as the regional Wooper Paldean form, Fidough, and Cetitan
  • Footage of the multiplayer function, involving co-op with up to three people and raid battles
  • The Terastal gimmick, where Pokemon crystalize and can change types

After this presentation, I’m pretty into Scarlet and violet, mostly due to the promise of the partner exploration system and multiplayer, in tandem. It sounds like a good time to just connect with someone and roam around the Paldea region.

Chris Carter

Reviews Director, Co-EIC – Chris has been enjoying Destructoid avidly since 2008. He finally decided to take the next step, make an account, and start blogging in January of 2009. Now, he’s staff!

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Categories
Sports

Ricky Stuart calls Jaeman Salmon a weak gutted dog, press conference video, Raiders vs Panthers, NRL news, scores

Ricky Stuart launched a stunning tirade at Penrith Panthers five-eighth Jaeman Salmon after he was placed on report for a kick aimed at Canberra Raiders hooker Tom Starling.

In the 60th minute Salmon lashed out with his boot after he was tackled by Starling.

“He has got one in the lunch box and one on the chin,” Michael Ennis said.

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Stuart was fuming at Salmon in a stunning outburst in his press conference after the 26-6 defeat.

“The James Fisher-Harris and Joe Tapine tackles are accidents and in this coalition game I understand that,” Stuart said.

“But where Salmon kicked Tommy (Starling), it ain’t on.

“I have had history with that kid (Salmon). I know that kid very well.

“He was a weak gutted dog as a kid and he hasn’t changed now. He is a weak gutted dog person now.”

Watch Ricky Stuart’s visceral spray in the video player above

Panthers coach Ivan Cleary was asked about the tackle and Stuart’s comments in his press conference.

“I don’t know, it is hard to see on our small screen,” Cleary said.

“I can’t imaging Jaeman would have deliberately done that, but I honestly didn’t see it.

“I don’t think I need to respond to those comments (from Stuart.”

“I know what Jaeman is like and he is valuable in our club and we love him, so that is all that matters to us.”

Originally published as ‘Weak gutted dog’: Ricky Stuart’s stunning spray aimed at Panthers star Jaeman Salmon over low blow

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Categories
US

Sinema gives her nod, and influence, to Democrats’ big bill

WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Joe Manchin sealed the deal reviving President Joe Biden’s big economic, health care and climate bill. But it was another Democratic senator, Kyrsten Sinema of Arizonawho intently, quietly and deliberately shaped the final product.

Democrats pushed ahead Friday on an estimated $730 billion package that in many ways reflects Sinema’s priorities and handiwork more than the other political figures who have played a key role in delivering on Biden’s signature domestic policy agenda.

It was Sinema early on who rejected Biden’s plan to raise the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28%, as she broke with the party’s primary goal of reversing the Trump-era tax break Republicans gave to corporate America.

Sinema also scaled back her party’s long-running plan to allow Medicare to negotiate lower drug prices with the pharmaceutical companies as a way to reduce overall costs to the government and consumers. She limited which drugs can be negotiated.

Her insistence on climate change provisions forced the coal-state Manchin to stay at the table to accept some $369 billion in renewable energy investments and tax breaks. She also is tucking in more money to fight Western droughts.

And it was Sinema who in one final stroke gave her blessing to the deal by extracting an ultimate demand — she forced Democrats to drop plans to close a tax loophole that benefits wealthy hedge fund managers and high-income earners, long a party priority. Instead, the final bill will keep the tax rate at 20% instead of hiking it to the typical 37%.

“Kyrsten Sinema’s proven herself to be a very effective legislator,” said Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., who has negotiated extensively with his colleague over the past year, including on the tax loophole.

In a 50-50 Senate where every vote matters, the often inscrutable and politically undefinable Sinema puts hers to use in powerful ways. Her negotiating at the highest levels of power — she appears to have equal access to Biden, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and even Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell — has infuriated some, wowed others and left no doubt she is a powerful new political figure.

While other lawmakers bristle at the influence a single senator can wield in Congress, where each member represents thousands if not millions of voters, Sinema’s nod of approval late Thursday was the last hurdle Democrats needed to push the Inflation Reduction Act forward. A final round of grueling votes on the package is expected to begin this weekend.

“We had no choice,” Schumer told reporters Friday at the Capitol.

Getting what you want in Congress does not come without political costs, and Sinema is amassing a balance due.

Progressives are outraged at their behavior, which they view as beyond the norms of sausage-making during the legislative process and verging on an unsettling restacking of party priorities to a more centrist, if not conservative, lane.

Progressive Rep. Ruben Gallego is openly musing about challenging Sinema in the 2024 primary in Arizona, and an independent expenditure group, Change for Arizona 2024, says it will support grassroots organizations committed to defeating her in a Democratic primary.

“The new reconciliation bill will lower the cost of prescription drugs,” Gallego wrote on Twitter last weekend. “@SenatorSinema is holding it up to try to protect ultra rich hedge fund managers so they can pay a lower tax.”

In fact, on the left and the right, commentators lambasted her final act—saving the tax breaks for the wealthy. Some pointed to past legislative luminaries—the late Sen. Robert Byrd, for example, used his clout to leave his name on roads, buildings and civic institutions across the West Virginia hillsides. They scoff at Sinema establishing her legacy of her in such a way.

“Astonishing,” wrote conservative Hugh Hewitt on Twitter. “@SenatorSinema could have demanded anything she wanted — anything that spent money or changed taxes — and with that leverage for Arizona she choose … to protect the carry interest exemption for investors. …Not the border. Not the country. A tax break. wow.”

Democratic former Clinton-era Labor Secretary Robert Reich wrote, “The ‘carried interest’ loophole for billionaire hedge-fund and private-equity partners is now out of the Inflation Reduction Act, courtesy of Kyrsten Sinema.

“She’s up in 2024. Primary her and get her out of the Senate.”

But Sinema has never cared much about what others say about her, from the time she set foot in the Senate, breaking the rules with her whimsical fashion choices and her willingness to reach across the aisle to Republicans — literally joining them at times in the private Senate GOP cloakroom.

The Arizona senator seeks to emulate the maverick career of John McCain, drawing on his farewell address for her maiden Senate speech, and trying to adopt his renegade style alongside her own — a comparison that draws some eyerolls for its reach and scope.

Still, in her short time in the Senate, Sinema has come herself to be a serious study who understands intricacies of legislation and a hard-driving dealer who does not flinch. She has been instrumental in landmark legislation, including the bipartisan infrastructure bill Biden signed into law last summer.

“There’s not been a bipartisan group that she’s not been a part of,” Warner said.

In the end, the final package is slimmer than Biden first envisioned with his lofty Build Back Better initiative, but still a monumental undertaking and a bookend to a surprisingly productive if messy legislative session.

The bill would make health care gains for many Americans, capping pharmacy costs for seniors at $2,000 out of pocket and providing subsidies to help millions of people who buy health insurance on the private market. It includes what the Biden administration calls the largest investment in climate change ever, with money for renewable energy and consumer rebates for new and used electric cars. It would mostly be paid for by higher corporate taxes, with some $300 billion going to deficit reductions.

On the climate provisions, a priority for Democrats, Sinema may have played a role in keeping the sweeping provisions in the bill, when Manchin was less inclined to do so.

Environmental leaders, who have been involved in talks on the bill since last year, said Sinema has helped shape the bill all along. She was especially helpful last year when she made it clear she supports the climate and energy provisions, and her commitment to climate issues has remained steadfast, environmentalists said.

She tacked on her own priority, money to help Western states dealing with droughts, in the final push.

Jamal Raad, executive director of Evergreen Action, an environmental group that has pushed for the climate bill, said: “Senator Sinema needed money for drought relief to help her constituents stave off the worst effects of climate change. If that’s what was needed to gain her support from her, then good on her.

At home in Arizona, business allies that have been crucial to Sinema’s efforts to build an independent image have cheered on her willingness to resist party pressure over the tax increases.

The Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the National Association of Manufacturers ran ads against the deal, though they didn’t target Sinema by name, and bent her ear in a phone call this week.

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Associated Press writers Matthew Daly in Washington and JJ Cooper in Phoenix contributed to this article.

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Categories
Technology

Twitter Spaces bar on top a turn-off for some, official response

Twitter recently launched Spaces through which you can have live audio conversations with others on the platform.

Spaces are public, so anyone can join as a listener, including people who are not your followers as long as they have a link to the Space.

The conversations in the Spaces can be recorded by the host which can be replayed later. There can only be 2 co-hosts and 11 speakers but there is no restriction on the number of listeners.

Twitter Spaces bar on top a turn-off

Well, it would be an understatement to say users don’t like the new Spaces bar and want to get rid of it as soon as possible (1,two,3,4,5,6,7).

In order to make it ecstatically more pleasing, Twitter introduced a new Spaces purple bar on the top. Here, you can see info like who’s hosting, topics being discussed, who’s shared a tweet, and much more.

Twitter Space bar to turn off
Source

@TwitterSpaces I don’t know how you user test things but new spaces top bar is just pain and unusable. Can you instead of waiting minute for that flowing text make change on tap? It would save me 90% of the time. Wen I see 3+ spaces like that I just surrender
Source

Stop trying to make spaces a thing @twitter. I don’t care, I don’t want it and yet I can’t seem to remove it from the top of the app. Does anyone know how to get rid of these?
Source

Many users find it forced and instead would have liked it to be a customizable feature where they could have the option to turn it on or off in the settings.

Issue acknowledged

As it turns out, Twitter support has shed some light on this issue and said that there isn’t a way to remove it, but are exploring ways to give users more control over Spaces in the future.

Twitter Support
Source

As always, we will be keeping an eye out on the matter and update this space as and when we come across more information.

note: We have more such stories in our dedicated Twitter section so be sure to follow them as well.

PiunikaWeb started as purely an investigative tech journalism website with main focus on ‘breaking’ or ‘exclusive’ news. In no time, our stories got picked up by the likes of Forbes, Foxnews, Gizmodo, TechCrunch, Engadget, The Verge, Macrumors, and many others. Want to know more about us? Head here.

Categories
Sports

SpeedSeries news | NRL legend Lockyer goes for the lap of a lifetime

NRL great Darren Lockyer was left grinding from ear to ear after his first flying laps on track with the son of Australian touring car legend Allan Moffat.

Lockyer jumped onboard James Moffat’s Renault Megane for a hot lap around Queensland Raceway ahead of this weekend’s Supercheap Auto TCR Australia Series round.

Speaking with Stan Sport commentator Molly Taylor, the Brisbane-born rugby league legend was left speechless.

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To watch Lockyer’s visceral on-track experience, tune into the Sunday Footy Show tomorrow on Nine and 9now at 11am AEST.

“I remember going around the turn and I could see the rubber on the track and I could smell the rubber,” said Lockyer.

“And then also the thing that surprised me is you’re going into a corner at full speed and I’m thinking ‘when is he going to brake?’ and when they do brake, it’s really effective.The cars are wonderful machines and the drivers behind them know their craft.

“The pace coming into the corners, the pace coming out of the corners, it was really enthralling and exciting.”

Moffat, who has twice finished second in the Bathurst 1000, said he was “a little bit nervous” taking the former State of Origin-winning Queensland Maroons captain for a lap.

“It’s not every day you get to take Queensland royalty for a lap in your race car,” said Moffat.

“I guess that’s really one of the unique things about motor racing is we get the opportunity to take people like yourself, corporate partners – without that we can’t go racing – we put you in the actual race car, put you on the race track with us, so it’s a really unique experience.

“It’s something that I really like to be able to give back to the people.”

READMORE: Dancing Aussie favorite cannons into final

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Lockyer’s laps came on the eve of the fifth SpeedSeries event this year, which takes place at Queensland Raceway.

The four-time NRL Grand Final winner said he was in awe of the atmosphere trackside.

“When I turned up, the noise captures you and you sort of look at the trucks and for me, it was like as a kid growing up I remember watching Days of Thunder, it was like I’m at a scene of Days of Thunder ,” Lockyer said.

“Just the machines and the noise, it’s got a vibe and energy about it.”

The Supercheap Auto TCR Australia Series headlines the action at Queensland Raceway across August 5-7 for what will be the fifth round of its calendar.

Turtle Wax Trans Am will play support as well as Fanatec GT World Challenge Australia Powered by AWS, Porsche Michelin Sprint Challenge Australia, the Australian Production Car Series, GC Marine Australian Prototype Series and Radical Australia Cup.

SpeedSeries coverage will be live and ad-free on Stan Sport with a bumper 12 hours of broadcasting across Saturday and Sunday.

For a daily dose of the best of the breaking news and exclusive content from Wide World of Sports, subscribe to our newsletter by clicking here!

Categories
Australia

Complete rubbish’: Deputy Liberal leader Sussan Ley rips into Labor and the Greens over Australia’s political landscape

Deputy Liberal leader Sussan Ley says Labor and the Greens believing Australia had become a “lefty country” is “complete rubbish”.

Ms Ley made the remarks during a speech to the NSW Liberal state council meeting on Saturday as she discussed the Coalition’s defeat at the May Federal Election.

“Two months on from the Federal Election and the Labor Party, the Greens, their supporters, their cheerleaders on Twitter, want you to believe that the Liberal Party will never form government again,” she said.

“They want you to believe that Anthony Albanese will be Prime Minister for the next 20 years.

“They want you to believe that Australia, the lucky country, has become Australia, the lefty country – it is complete rubbish.”

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The Coalition was reduced to 58 seats nationwide following the Federal Election, which saw them booted from office after nine years in power.

The Liberals lost the NSW seats of Bennelong, Reid and Robertson to Labor, and Mackellar, Wentworth and North Sydney to teal independents.

Peter Dutton took over the Liberal Party leadership from Scott Morrison in the wake of the election defeat, while Ms Ley became deputy leader after Josh Frydenberg lost his seat of Kooyong in Melbourne.

Ms Ley said Australians were “relying on us to pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off and stand up for them”.

“The Liberal Party has been written off before but let me assure you, under Peter Dutton’s leadership we’ve got a big three years ahead,” she said.

“Because Peter and I have a three year plan. It’s not a six year plan, it’s not a nine year plan, it’s a three year plan. And NSW is central to that plan.”

NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet, in his speech to the meeting, noted a lesson from the Coalition’s federal election loss in May was how the Liberal Party chooses its candidates.

He said he wanted the party to have more female and culturally diverse candidates contesting the March 2023 state election.

“One of the most important rights of our party members is the power to select candidates that represent your values. This state council made a decision for democratic reform,” Mr Perrottet said.

“Today I can announce that within two weeks we will open preselections across the state for the next election.

“As the leader of the parliamentary party, I want to see more women, I want to see more cultural diversity, I want the best talent to put their hands up for a future government in 2023.”

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Categories
US

Flash floods bury cars and strand tourists in Death Valley | national parks

Flash flooding at Death Valley national park closed all roads into the park, buried cars and stranded about 1,000 people on Friday.

A deluge brought “nearly an entire year’s worth of rain in one morning” into the famously hot and dry park in the California desert. At least 1.7in (4.3cm) of rain fell in the Furnace Creek area; the park’s average annual rainfall is 1.9in (4.8cm).

About 60 vehicles were buried in debris and about 500 visitors and 500 park workers were stranded, park officials said. There were no immediate reports of injuries and the California transport department estimated it would take four to six hours to open a road that would allow park visitors to leave.

It was the second major flooding event at the park this week. Some roads were closed on Monday after they were inundated with mud and debris from flash floods that also hit western Nevada and northern Arizona hard.

The rain started around 2am, said John Sirlin, a photographer for an Arizona-based adventure company who witnessed the flooding as he perched on a hillside boulder where he was trying to take pictures of lightning as the storm approached.

Video and photos posted by Sirlin on social media showed fast flowing water, toppled palm trees and cars trapped by debris.

Major flash flooding in Death Valley National Park this morning. Approximately two dozen vehicles trapped in mud and rock debris at the Inn at Death Valley. Took nearly 6 hours to get out. #cawx #stormhour pic.twitter.com/3rDFUgY7ws

— John Sirlin (@SirlinJohn) August 5, 2022

“It was more extreme than anything I’ve seen there,” said Sirlin, who lives in Chandler, Arizona, and has been visiting the park since 2016. He is the lead guide for Incredible Weather Adventures and said he started chasing storms in Minnesota and the high plains in the 1990s.

“I’ve never seen it to the point where entire trees and boulders were washing down. The noise from some of the rocks coming down the mountain was just incredible,” he said in a phone interview on Friday afternoon.

“A lot of washes were flowing several feet deep. There are rocks probably 3 or 4 feet covering the road,” he said.

Sirlin said it took him about 6 hours to drive about 35 miles (56 kilometers) out of the park from near the Inn at Death Valley.

“There were at least two dozen cars that got smashed and stuck in there,” he said, adding that he didn’t see anyone injured “or any high water rescues”.

During Friday’s rainstorms, the “flood waters pushed dumpster containers into parked cars, which caused cars to collide into one another. Additionally, many facilities are flooded including hotel rooms and business offices,” the park statement said.

A water system that provides it for park residents and offices also failed after a line broke that was being repaired, the statement said.

A flood advisory remained in effect into the evening, the National Weather Service said.

Associated Press contributed reporting

Categories
Business

Inflation: Why you could soon be back earning what you did back in 2008

It’s the grim graph that suggests Australian workers face a horror “back the future” scenario on wages.

Real wages – workers’ income that has been adjusted to reflect the rising cost of living – are going backwards.

Perhaps, that’s no surprise to anyone who has tried to buy fresh fruit and vegetables at the supermarket lately amid rising prices and massive interest rate hikes.

But Dr Greg Jericho, the Center for Future Work’s Policy Director has some bad news.

It’s even worse than it sounds.

As households struggle with the rising cost of essentials, real disposable household income is set to fall for months to come sending workers back to what they were earning in real terms over a decade ago.

“The latest Reserve Bank Statement on Monetary Policy estimates that real wages will continue to fall until the end of next year, at which point they will be back to 2008 levels,” he said.

Dr Jericho describes the graph as “horrific”.

“In real terms, prices and wages since 2008 will have gone up by exactly the same amount. So there’s no improvement,” Dr Jericho said.

“Your wages might have gone up 20 per cent. But prices have gone up by 30 per cent.

“It’s horrible. Normally it goes up. Before the pandemic, it was rising, perhaps a bit slower than it was during the mining boom, for example, but it still keeps going up. It’s pretty drastic.”

For three years, the RBA predicts wages are going backwards.

The RBA now estimates that real wages will fall fourteen consecutive quarters from the Sept 2020 quarter through to the Dec 2023 quarter.

The situation won’t improve until 2024 according to the Reserve Bank’s latest monetary policy update released on Friday.

“It’s most pronounced for low income people because what we’re seeing with inflation at the moment is that the prices of what we call non-discretionary items or essential items are rising faster than sort of discretionary luxury items,” Dr Jericho said.

“So the prices of things that you can avoid paying like food, like energy, bills, rent are rising faster than the things you can decide not to buy, like a holiday.

The big drivers of inflation are the war in Ukraine and the supply chain disruptions caused by Covid.

“Higher prices, especially for food and fuel, are likely to impact low-income households in particular (which tend to spend a larger share of their income on these necessary items),” the RBA said.

“While household balance sheets are generally strong and many households should be able to absorb these price increases, others have limited savings buffers and may have to reduce spending elsewhere.

“For some of these more vulnerable households, the impact of price rises will be mitigated to some extent by the indexation of social assistance payments twice per year, though price rises will reduce recipients’ real incomes in the near term.”

But the RBA’s grim predictions also raises fresh questions about Labor’s pledge to address cost of living.

Labor’s election campaign was based around the slogan that “everything is going up except your wages.”

This data suggests that’s not going to improve for months to come.

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