Categories
Sports

AFL team selection: Handful of Carlton changes

THE BLUES will welcome back five for Sunday’s trip to the Gabba.

Making a handful of changes from last week’s team, Caleb Marchbank will play his first game since Round 13, bringing up a long-awaited 50 career games in the process.

Fellow inclusion Jack Newnes also celebrates his 50th game in Navy Blue, marking three milestones for the Blues in what will also be Adam Saad’s 150th.

Also returning to the team are Paddy Dow and Jack Martin, while Jack Silvagni – who was activated as medical sub last weekend – has been elevated into the 22.

It will be Martin’s first game since being subbed out against Fremantle back in Round 15 with a calf complaint, while Dow is in the senior side after a consistent run of form with the Carlton Reserves.

He takes the place of the injured Matthew Kennedy in the midfield, who was confirmed as an exclusion last night alongside Nic Newman (knee) and Lachie Plowman.

Marc Pittonet has been managed, as has Corey Durdin, who underwent a fitness test today but the decision was made to not play him this week.

Durdin and Pittonet have both been named as emergencies alongside Brodie Kemp and Will Hayes, who have taken the place of Lachie Fogarty after pulling up sore following training today. The medical sub will be announced an hour before the game.

In conjunction with Co-Major partner Hyundai, this match will mark the annual Back Our ‘Baggers game, where the name of a Carlton supporter will feature on the back of each Navy Blue guernsey.

Sunday’s game begins at 3:20 p.m.

Round 21 squad v Brisbane

Backs:

adam saad
(Turkish R)

Lewis Young
(B Monks-Hamilton)

sam docherty
(D Stevenson)

Half backs:

Caleb Marchbank
(M Barber)

Jacob Weitering
(to Mountney)

Mitch McGovern
(R Thornbury)

Centreline:

Jack Newness
(S Adamthwaite)

patrick cripps
(T Kurtboganoglu)

Will Setterfield
(C Pires)

Half-forwards:

Zac Fisher
(R.Anderson)

Harry McKay
(J Romeo)

matthew owies
(P Pike)

forwards:

Jesse Motlop
(K. Hibberd)

charlie currow
(E Denning)

Jack Martin
(To Weir)

followers:

Tom DeKoning
(H Beavis)

Sam Walsh
(K Field)

adam cerra
(G Cooper)

Exchange:

Matthew Cottrell
(B Bergersen)

Paddy Dow
(G Spider)

Lochie O’Brien
(L Reeve)

Jack Silvagni
(T Bonus)

emergencies:

corey durdin
(T Russo)

Will Hayes
(R McLaren)

Brodie Kemp
(K.Healy)

Marc Pittonet
(J Williamson)

In: Paddy Dow, Caleb Marchbank, Jack Martin, Jack Newnes
Out: Corey Durdin (managed), Matthew Kennedy (concussion/jaw), Nic Newman (knee), Marc Pittonet (managed), Lachie Plowman

After being activated as medical sub last weekend, Jack Silvagni has been elevated into the starting 22.

Categories
US

Inside Brittney Griner’s possible new home locked up in Russian prison

WNBA star Brittney Griner was convicted of cannabis possession and smuggling in Russia on Thursday and was sentenced to nine years in prison.

While it’s not clear exactly where she will be serving out her unusually harsh sentence — which she is appealing — Griner may return to the female penal facility where she has spent the last six months outside of Moscow.

The prison, dubbed Correctional Colony No. 1 or IK-1, is no Stalin-era gulag but seems to bleak at best.

The facility is a former orphanage, rebuilt and converted ten years ago into a pretrial detention center and prison where women live out their sentences, the New York Times reported last month.

Located in the village of Novoye Grishino, the overwhelmingly gray and artificially lit prison has its own sewing factory and Russian Orthodox church inside.

An officer of the Russian Federal Penitentiary Service patrols with a service dog outside the penal colony ?1 in the settlement of Novoye Grishino
WNBA star Brittney Griner has spent the last six months locked up in Correctional Colony No. 1.
AFP via Getty Images
Women lined up walking into Correctional Colony No. 1, or IK-1, Novoye Grishino
The prison includes a pretrial detention center and area for female offenders to serve out their sentences.
DmitrovTV
Officers of the Russian Federal Penitentiary Service gather by the entrance to the prison
The prison was once home to Israeli-American Naama Issachar, who was detained by Russian police in 2019.
AFP via Getty Images

Video footage of the facility shows towering gray walls topped with barbed wire and gives a glimpse inside of the sewing factory where dozens of women appear to be working.

A large, rusting statue of Lenin sits in a snow-filled courtyard.

Journalist Yekaterina Kalugina visited Griner while she was at the facility, and told The Times that each day is repetitive and monotonous for the Phoenix Mercury Center.

Each morning inmates wake up, and eat a basic meal in her cell, Kalugina said. They are then permitted to walk around the courtyard. They then spend the rest of the day either reading books or watching Russian television.

A monument to the Soviet Union founder Vladimir Lenin stands in front of the prison
A large statue of Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin sits in the prison courtyard
AFP via Getty Images
Correctional Colony No. 1 was converted from an orphanage roughly 10 years ago.
AFP via Getty Images

Uniquely, the cells have a private washroom but the inmates are only allowed to shower twice a week, she said. They are permitted to order food online and keep food in an available refrigerator.

The prison was also formerly home to Israeli-American Naama Issachar, who was arrested in 2019 and sentenced to over seven years in prison after Russian police said they found marijuana in her luggage while she was connecting flights in Moscow. Vladimir Putin later pardoned her for drug trafficking in 2020.

Brittney Griner walks into a Russian courtroom in shackles
Brittney Griner was sentenced to nine years in Russian prison on Thursday.
POOL/AFP via Getty Images
Brittney Griner gives smirks for the camera behind bars
Griner was convicted of cannabis possession and drug smuggling.
REUTERS

Issachar was detained as a political pawn between Russia and Israel, just as Griner is with the United States now.

Yaffa Issachar, Naama’s mother, told The Times her daughter spent three months at IK-1. She said filling out the paperwork to enter the prison to visit Naama could take up to four hours followed by a tedious inspection of each item of food she had brought.

She was treated relatively well, her mother said, and was allowed to visit from a rabbi once a week. Issachar recalled the statue of Lenin as well as the sound of guard dogs barking.

Issachar’s mother told The Times her daughter sobbed when she heard about Griner and is worried that as a gay woman she could be subjected to much harsher treatment in conservative Russia.

.

Categories
Technology

How to get Cured Armu Sirloin in Xenoblade Chronicles 3

Cooking is one of many mechanics in Xenoblade Chronicles 3, and players can collect various food items for their recipes as they move along on their journey. One such item is Cured Armu Sirloin, which can be found from Armu, the female counterparts of the Ardun.

youtube-cover

Cured Armu Sirloin should be fairly easy to procure in Xenoblade Chronicles 3. However, some players may not have paid much attention to cooking in the past and may be looking to catch up and find the food items for themselves. Below, players can find a quick guide to procuring Cured Armu Sirloin for their cooking needs.


Collecting Cured Armu Sirloin in Xenoblade Chronicles 3

The Llyn Nyddwr Camp is a great place to hunt Armu in Xenoblade Chronicles 3 (Image via Nintendo)
The Llyn Nyddwr Camp is a great place to hunt Armu in Xenoblade Chronicles 3 (Image via Nintendo)

Before Xenoblade Chronicles 3 players can harvest meat from Armu, they’ll need to ensure that they’ve reached the second chapter of the story. This will unlock the Fornis Region, which comes complete with various areas where different creatures roam. One such area, Ribbi Flats, is a perfect location to hunt down Armu for their cured meat.

Finding and collecting Cured Armu Sirloin

youtube-cover
  1. For quick access to Armu, head to the Llyn Nyddwr rest camp in the Fornis Region. Right around the area, players should find a large number of Armu roaming the locale along with other creatures.
  2. Players can recognize the Armu by their distinct lack of horns compared to the Ardun. Their heads are more platelike in appearance, and they are also smaller in size compared to their male counterparts.
  3. Kill the Armu. These enemies are particularly low level (level 18), so they shouldn’t be tough to take down and should drop fairly quickly. Since Cured Armu Sirloin is a common drop, most Armu players kill should drop the food item.
  4. Once the Armu in the area have been cleared out, players can use their fast travel to return to the campfire at Llyn Nyddwr. Doing so will refresh the local wildlife, allowing Xenoblade Chronicles 3 players to continue farming the Armu as much as they need until they have all the sirloin they can carry.

In addition to being used in cooking, Cured Armu Sirloin is also quite handy with regard to Collectopaedia Cards. If players have some left over after their farming excursion, they may want to save the cured sirloin for the Collectopaedia. Otherwise, players can also always return to the Fornis Region and take down the Armu for additional sirloins if necessary. As long as players refresh the area with fast travel, they’ll never run out of Armu to defeat and loot.

It’s also important to note that many other food drops in-game can be given a very similar treatment. Simply clear out an area of ​​a certain enemy, collect their drops, then fast travel back to the nearest rest point to respawn the creatures. It then simply becomes a process of lather, rinse, and repeat until players have the items they require.


Edited by Siddharth Satish

.

Categories
Entertainment

Kuon Omakase review Sydney Review 2022

shop 20 2 Little Hay St
sydney,
NSW
2000

view map

opening hours Lunch Thu-Sat; dinner Tue-Sat
Features Licensed, Accepts bookings, Tasting
Prices Expensive (mains over $40)
payments eft pos, Visa, Mastercard

Quick, pinch my napkin. Is this real? Have we made it? Am I actually here? After months of trying to land a booking at one of Sydney’s most popular omakase restaurants, it is finally time to experience a level of seafood that can cause fellow food critics to cry in fatty tuna rapture: “Blessed are we for this sliver of moderately dry -aged fish!”

Kuon Omakase opened two years ago in Haymarket’s neon-tinged Darling Square which, depending on who you talk to, is either a soul-sucking boil on the rear end of Chinatown or a family-friendly precinct for bubble tea and Pancakes on the Rocks.

To plonk your own rear end on one of Kuon’s nine seats you need to be hovering over its website at midday on the first (but sometimes fourth) Tuesday of each month when reservations open a few weeks in advance. Refresh, refresh, refresh. Click, click, click. Refresh. Click. Refresh. Click. Throw laptop at wall.

Go-to dish: Blue fin tuna otoro.

Go-to dish: Blue fin tuna otoro. Photo: Wolter Peeters



Infuriating booking systems are a hallmark of Japanese omakase restaurants, which have been popping up like mushrooms after a downpour over the past two years. The set-menu format – usually about 20 small fishy things for north of $150 – is a smart way to lock in customer spend and staffing requirements. It’s also a fun and mindful way to eat.

After more than a year of failed attempts, I managed to secure a Tuesday night spot at Kuon’s elegant, blond-wood counter. It’s a calming, sparsely decorated room that says, “You’re here to pay attention to the chef hand-molding each piece of sushi.” One very attentive waiter clears plates, pours wine and shows guests to the loo across the laneway.

Before nine mouthfuls of nigiri (raw fish served on vinegared rice), there’s a procession of free-form creations that showcase head chef Jun Miyauchi’s skill at assembling pretty things on nice plates. Seared scampi is a highlight; sweet and delicate and served with perilla leaf and a hunk of avocado, it requires a Certificate IV in Chopsticks to pick up on your first go.

Chawanmushi with dried scallop, sweet corn, lily flower root, potato and edamame.

Chawanmushi with dried scallop, sweet corn, lily flower root, potato and edamame. Photo: Wolter Peeters



Steamed chawanmushi custard is a warming lucky dip of dried scallop, turnip-like lily root, edamame and corn; ponzu butter adds luster to a jumbo Pacific oyster served in a shell that looks like a souvenir ashtray; wagyu tenderloin with fatty monkfish liver – the foie gras of the sea – is enhanced by a lick of red vinegar-based sauce. Is it delicious? Oh yeah.

I’m taken less with the optional $25 course of tempura sea-urchin gonads. While I’ve had the occasional spiritual moment with sea urchin when it’s served fresh from deep waters, much of the stuff served in restaurants seems to be chefs having a laugh: “Hey, let’s see how much we can charge for this kraken snot that tastes like a fishmonger’s armpit.”

Then it happens. Thealpha. Theomega. The emperor nigiri. Crowned with a daub of salted kelp, it’s a moment of balance and harmony and pure essence of the ocean, the buttery New Zealand fish firm and sweet against each al dente grain of rice. The heavens open and Gabriel’s trumpet blasts. Lo and behold, this perfect piece of sushi.

Akami zuke (marinated ruby-red prickly pear) nigiri.

Akami zuke (marinated ruby-red prickly pear) nigiri. Photo: Wolter Peeters



If you’re into this sort of thing, these 10 seconds of bliss really help to justify the $230 price tag.

Unfortunately, the imperador was absent from the menu a week later when I sent a photographer as Kuon only uses the best seasonal catch of the day, et cetera, et cetera. Bermagui-caught bluefin tuna is a little more consistent though, and almost as wonderful.

Miyauchi serves three cuts of the noble fish on my visit: marinated ruby-red akami (lean meat from the tuna’s back); luscious, highly marbled otoro (from the fattiest part of the belly) and chutoro, a pale-pink, medium-fatty cut with a flavor that pings every pleasure receptor.

Wagyu tenderloin, monkfish liver, truffle and red vinegar sauce.

Wagyu tenderloin, monkfish liver, truffle and red vinegar sauce. Photo: Wolter Peeters



There’s also pearly-white southern calamari dotted with caviar, meaty scallops that melt on the tongue, and the sweetest of prawns from New Caledonia.

Many of the jewel-box morsels are seasoned with Nikiri, a secret soy blend brushed just before serving.

Qualms, I have a few. The only white wine by the glass is a dry and textural 2019 Grace Koshu Toriibira from Japan and it’s $27. Sake is better value, but still far from a bargain.

But, well on my way to becoming one of Sydney’s many omakase fanatics chasing seasonal fish and signature specials, I will absolutely return.

How does Kuon stand up to Yoshii’s Omakase at Crown which is – wait for it – $350 per person? I’ll have to let you know when I’ve landed a bloody booking.

Vibes: Revered sushi temple for delicious moments of zen

Go to dish: Bluefin tuna otoro (as part of a set menu)

Drinks: Short and pricey list of mostly French whites, one red and lots of sake

Cost: $230 per person for a 20-course omakase menu

Kuon Omakase in Sydney

.

Categories
Entertainment

Prey release date and time: How to watch Predator prequel online

Predator fans will watch Prey online on Hulu with mixed expectations. While the trailer looks great, recent Predator sequels have left fans underwhelmed to put it nicely. So, we’re happy to see that Prey looks to deliver a simple approach to its storytelling, giving us a glimpse at a Predator attack on Earth that took place 300 years ago.

Prey release date and time

Prey premieres on Friday (August 5) at 12 am ET on Hulu (opens in new tab).

Naru (Amber Midthunder) is a young Comanche warrior, who is concerned and on the hunt after seeing a very ominous set of clouds that looked electric. After one encounter with a bear, she’s given more reason to be concerned, as that bear is levitated into the air.

Categories
Australia

University of New England vice-chancellor Brigid Heywood charged with teen assault

The University of New England vice-chancellor has been charged with the assault of a 16-year-old girl.

Police allege Brigid Heywood assaulted the teenage girl at a club in the NSW town of Armidale on March 8.

The teen was not physically injured during the alleged incident.

Professor Heywood, 65, was issued with a court attendance notice on Monday.

UNE Vice Chancellor and CEO Professor Brigid Heywood.  Picture: Facebook
Camera IconUNE vice-chancellor Brigid Heywood is facing assault charges. Facebook Credit: NCA NewsWire

She is facing charges relating to common assault and offensive behavior near a public place or school.

Professor Heywood has been UNE’s vice-chancellor and chief executive since 2019.

The National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) said it was shocked to learn of the criminal charges.

“Professor Heywood is one of just 39 vice-chancellors of Australia’s public universities. She holds a position of public trust and national significance,” NTEU NSW secretary Damien Cahill said.

University of New England campus.  Picture: Facebook
Camera IconThe University of New England campus. Facebook Credit: NCA NewsWire

“Professor Heywood is entitled to the presumption of innocence. Nevertheless, the seriousness of the allegations requires an appropriate response.”

The union is calling on Ms Heywood to step aside immediately until an outcome has been decided by the courts.

It says if she doesn’t voluntarily resign, the university should stand her down.

WSU STRIKE
Camera IconThe National Tertiary Education Union is calling for Professor Heywood’s resignation. justin samson Credit: News Corp Australia

“Australians must have confidence that those entrusted with overseeing our public institutions are honest, have integrity and conduct themselves in a proper manner,” Dr Cahill said.

Professor Heywood and The University of New England were contacted for comment.

She will appear at Armidale Local Court on September 26.

.

Categories
US

Recount confirms that indicted Colorado clerk Tina Peters lost election

DENVER — A recount has confirmed that an indicted Colorado county clerk who alleged voting fraud lost the primary election she ran in last month in her attempt to win the post of running the state’s elections, officials announced Thursday.

The results barely changed, with Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters picking up 13 more votes in the recount of the votes cast in the June 28 election to determine the Republican candidate for secretary of state. Peters received about 29% of the vote, Democratic Secretary of State Jena Griswold said in a statement.

The winner of the GOP primary for the job of overseeing Colorado’s elections, Pam Anderson, received 13 more votes during the recount and finished with 43%. A third candidate, Mike O’Donnell, got 11 more votes.

Peters’ voicemail was full and she did not immediately return a text message or emails seeking comment on the recount results.

She filed a lawsuit Wednesday against Griswold and the state’s county clerks alleging the recount was not conducted according to state law. The lawsuit claims that the accuracy of randomly selected machines used to count ballots should have been verified with a hand count before the recount began.

Griswold’s office said in a statement that the lawsuit was meritless.

“The allegations in the lawsuit are based on debunked conspiracies that have been rejected by judges in previous cases. The recount is over and was conducted under Colorado election law and rule,” the statement said.

Peters faces several felony charges for her alleged role in allowing unauthorized people to break into her county’s election system in search of proof of the conspiracy theories spun by former President Donald Trump after his 2020 election loss.

She has denied she did anything illegal and contains the charges are politically motivated. She has issued reports purporting to show suspicious activity within voting systems, but those have been debunked by various officials and experts.

A judge prohibited Peters from overseeing last year’s and this year’s local elections in Mesa County, a western region of the state that is largely rural and heavily Republican. Trump lost Colorado in 2020 but won the majority of the vote in this county.

Peters’ margin of loss in the GOP secretary of state primary did not require an automatic recount but she raised more than the $256,000 required to pay for one, reportedly mostly from supporters outside the state after making a plea for help on Steve Bannon’s podcast.

During the recount, 37 ballots that had been filled out and returned by voters were discovered in a bin with ballots returned as undeliverable that were being prepared for storage in Elbert County, which is near Denver.

Those ballots were opened and counted for the first time during the recount but did not change the results of any race, the secretary of state’s office said.

A breakdown of county recount results provided by Griswold’s office showed that there were also some small changes in ballot tallies in other counties that changed the vote results.

Categories
Technology

One day deal: get a free Xbox Series S + Game Pass with any Galaxy S22 on Telstra

It’s now been one full year of Telstra spruiking its own Telstra Day once a month, and to mark the occasion, the telco is offering its best deal yet. Today only (August 4), you’ll get a free Xbox Series S and a subscription to Xbox Game Pass Ultimate (opens in new tab) when you purchase any Samsung Galaxy S22 device outright or on a plan.

The bonus console comes as part of Xbox All Access, which gives you the Series S console and 24 months of Game Pass Ultimate – a total value of AU$792!

Categories
Entertainment

Chrissy Teigen announces she’s expecting fourth baby almost two years after the stillbirth of son Jack

Musician John Legend and his model wife Chrissy Teigen have announced they are expecting a baby, two years after the devastating stillbirth of their son.

Teigen made the unexpected announcement to her 38 million followers, showing off her growing baby bump in a cropped t-shirt and lace underwear.

“The last few years have been a blur of emotions to say the least, but joy has filled our home and hearts again. 1 billion shots later (in the leg lately, as u can see!) we have another on the way,” she wrote.

The 36-year-old, who hasn’t disclosed how far along she is in her pregnancy, said it took her some time to announce the news publicly after losing her son Jack in 2020.

Chrissy Teigen shows off her growing bump.
Camera IconChrissy Teigen shows off her growing bump. Credit: Instagram

“Every appointment I’ve said to myself, ‘ok if it’s healthy today I’ll announce’ but then I breathe a sigh of relief to hear a heartbeat and decide I’m just too nervous still,” she wrote.

“I don’t think I’ll ever walk out of an appointment with more excitement than nerves but so far, everything is perfect and beautiful and I’m feeling hopeful and amazing. Ok phew it’s been very hard keeping this in for so long!”

Famous friends, including Emmy-nominated actor Lily James, model Irina Shayk, and West Australian model Nicole Trunfio were among the first to congratulate the model.

Legend shared a screenshot of her post with heart emojis to her fans.

Chrissy Teigen and John Legend miscarriage.  Caption: We are shocked and in the kind of deep pain you only hear about, the kind of pain we've never felt before.  We were never able to stop the bleeding and give our baby the fluids he needed, despite bags and bags of blood transfusions.  It just wasn't enough.  .  .  We never decide on our babies' names until the last possible moment after they're born, just before we leave the hospital.  But we, for some reason, had started to call this little guy in my belly Jack.  So he will always be Jack to us.  Jack worked so hard to be apart of our little family, and he will be, forever.  .  .  To our Jack - I'm so sorry that the first few moments of your life were met with so many complications, that we couldn't give you the home you needed to survive.  We will always love you.  .  .  Thank you to everyone who has been sending us positive energy, thoughts and prayers.  We feel all of your love and truly appreciate you.  .  .  We are so grateful for the life we ​​have, for our wonderful babies Luna and Miles, for all the amazing things we've been able to experience.  But everyday can't be full of sunshine.  On this darkest of days, we will grieve, we will cry our eyes out.  But we will hug and love each other harder and get through it.  Source: @chrissyteigen/Instagram
Camera IconChrissy Teigen and John Legend after the heartbreaking stillbirth of their son Jack. Credit: @chrissyteigen/Instagram/@chrissyteigen/Instagram

The news comes months after the author posted on Instagram that she had begun IVF treatment and told fans to stop asking her if she was pregnant.

In March, she told Entertainment Tonight that she had completed a round of IVF treatment.

In October 2020, the couple, who met on set of Legend’s music video for Stereo, shared their heartbreak of losing their son.

Chrissy Teigen and John Legend miscarriage.  Caption: We are shocked and in the kind of deep pain you only hear about, the kind of pain we've never felt before.  We were never able to stop the bleeding and give our baby the fluids he needed, despite bags and bags of blood transfusions.  It just wasn't enough.  .  .  We never decide on our babies' names until the last possible moment after they're born, just before we leave the hospital.  But we, for some reason, had started to call this little guy in my belly Jack.  So he will always be Jack to us.  Jack worked so hard to be apart of our little family, and he will be, forever.  .  .  To our Jack - I'm so sorry that the first few moments of your life were met with so many complications, that we couldn't give you the home you needed to survive.  We will always love you.  .  .  Thank you to everyone who has been sending us positive energy, thoughts and prayers.  We feel all of your love and truly appreciate you.  .  .  We are so grateful for the life we ​​have, for our wonderful babies Luna and Miles, for all the amazing things we've been able to experience.  But everyday can't be full of sunshine.  On this darkest of days, we will grieve, we will cry our eyes out.  But we will hug and love each other harder and get through it.  Source: @chrissyteigen/Instagram
Camera IconChrissy Teigen shared heartbreaking pics of her stillbirth. Credit: @chrissyteigen/Instagram/@chrissyteigen/Instagram

She wrote a blog about her experience and revealed she had to deliver the son they had planned to name Jack, knowing that he would not survive.

“My mom, John and I each held him and said our own private goodbyes, mom sobbing through Thai prayer,” she wrote.

“I asked the nurses to show me his hands and feet and I kissed them over and over and over again. I have no idea when I stopped. It could have been 10 minutes or an hour.”

Chrissy Teigen, left, and John Legend attend City Harvest's 35th Anniversary Gala at Cipriani 42nd Street on Tuesday, April 24, 2018, in New York.  (Photo by Andy Kropa/Invision/AP)
Camera IconChrissy Teigen and John Legend in 2018. Credit: Andy Cropa/Andy Kropa/Invision/AP

In May 2021, Teigen took time away from the spotlight after she faced backlash after she was accused of bullying other celebrities.

The new arrival with be a sibling for Legend and Teigen’s children Luna, 6, and Miles, 4.

.

Categories
Australia

Climate change vote strands Peter Dutton’s opposition on core issue

Peter Dutton made a captain’s call in declaring the opposition would vote against the legislation. While most of his colleagues from him were so inclined, it was a poor precedent for the new leader to preempt this week’s party room discussion.

In fact, it would have been better for the opposition to refrain from a stand, and just wave through the legislation. The government had a clear mandate for this policy, which was spelled out in detail well before the election. The Coalition’s opposition has exposed the unhappy position of the much-diminished Liberal moderates.

Liberal MP Bridget Archer (back row, centre) crossed the floor to support the legislation.

Liberal MP Bridget Archer (back row, centre) crossed the floor to support the legislation.Credit:alex ellinghausen

Tasmanian Liberal Bridget Archer crossed the floor to vote with Labour. Opposition Senate leader Simon Birmingham said if the 43 per cent target had required legislation, then “I would have wanted to vote for it in a heartbeat. However, it doesn’t require legislation.” This reasoning made no sense.

The opposition has been left looking like a stranded asset on the climate issue, adrift from a pragmatic business community that wants to promote confidence. Anthony Albanese relished quoting what he described as “an alphabet soup” of business groups supporting “a vote for certainty”.

He hit where it hurt when he taunted the opposition about “what the business community are saying about them in private”.

loading

The government, with a majority in the House of Representatives, did not need any crossbenchers to get its bill through. But, in a gesture, it accepted modest amendments from some of them.

It was a sign of the government’s desire where possible to be inclusive towards the teals (“good manners” as well as “good government”, Climate Change Minister Bowen called it). The teas, incidentally, had met together to discuss their amendments.

The climate vote was the culmination of what was, in legislative terms, a flying start for the government in its first parliamentary fortnight.

Albanese, anxious to reinforce the perception of momentum (that he had first generated on his overseas trips), piled the maximum number of bills into the parliament.

Among them were his aged care reforms, that passed both houses. Also on the agenda, as a private member’s bill but facilitated by the government, was the removal of the ban on the ACT and Northern Territory legislating for voluntary assisted dying. This passed the lower house overwhelmingly, with both sides giving a conscience vote. It is set to go through the Senate in September.

While it’s been a happy fortnight for the government on the legislative front, it was punctuated by a darker moment, when Treasurer Jim Chalmers delivered his sombre economic update to the house last week. Followed by Tuesday’s interest rate rise, the government can’t escape that the months ahead will become increasingly tough as cost of living increases bite deeply.

The Albanese government’s early days have sent some signals about who has influence on it. Its determination to stare down the Greens was firm. On the other hand, we’ve seen his willingness to give concessions to the unions.

Labor’s policy to scrap the construction industry “watchdog”, the Australian Building and Construction Commission, was a well-known policy plank. It was more surprising, however, that Workplace Relations Minister Tony Burke acted so quickly to draw the ABCC’S teeth by regulation, well ahead of legislation being introduced later in the year.

Even more unexpected – and highly questionable – has been the government’s intention to wind back the more detailed disclosure requirements the Morrison government introduced for superannuation funds. This can only be seen as a sop to industry funds, with no good argument that it is in the interests of fund members.

“We're learning from history”: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese at the Garma Festival over the weekend.

“We’re learning from history”: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese at the Garma Festival over the weekend.Credit:Getty

While the victory on the climate bill was the fortnight’s parliamentary showstopper, Albanese’s most ambitious play was made outside parliament, when he attended the Garma festival in Arnhem Land last weekend. There he announced draft wording for his proposed constitutional amendment for an Indigenous “Voice” to parliament.

Albanese has a deep commitment to achieving the Voice, beginning his election night victory speech with a pledge to “the Uluru Statement from the Heart in full”, and talking about it often since. One influence is his chief of staff Tim Gartrell, who a decade ago went to work for the Recognize campaign, under the auspices of Reconciliation Australia. Recognize aimed to raise awareness about constitutional reform, without committing to a specific model.

Later this term, legislation will come before parliament for the referendum. It will easily pass both houses. But unlike the climate legislation, on which the Coalition’s stance ultimately didn’t matter, except to its own credibility, on the referendum bill its position will be crucial. Not to whether the bill gets through – but to the prospects for the referendum doing so.

If the referendum passed without bipartisan support, it would be defying history. This exercise needs a united stand across the political spectrum.

Yet, it is already clear the opposition is divided on the Voice. Finding its way to a common position on the Voice referendum will be even more difficult for the Coalition than forging a new climate policy.

Michelle Grattan is a professorial fellow at the University of Canberra. This article was first published on The Conversation.

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley. Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter here.