Categories
Business

UK braces for long recession after biggest interest rate hike in 27 years, ASX to open flat

Australian shares are likely to start the day relatively flat, after the Bank of England announced its biggest interest rate hike in 27 years and warned of a long recession for Britain.

ASX futures were up 0.1 per cent, to 6,891 points, by 8:40am AEST.

The Australian dollar was trading at 69.6 US cents, after rising 0.2 per cent overnight. This was largely due to a weaker US greenback.

It follows a lackluster session on Wall Street, which saw the Dow Jones index fall 0.3 per cent, to 32,727 points, the S&P 500 lose 0.1 per cent, to 4,152, and the Nasdaq Composite gain 0.4 per cent, to 12,721.

“The market is looking for direction after a strong bounce that highlighted the deep pessimism that had permeated the markets,” said Yung-Yu Ma, chief investment strategist at BMO Wealth Management.

“Many signs indicate that [US] inflation has peaked and the question now turns to how quickly it will come down or whether stickier components will keep it higher than the Fed [Federal Reserve] is comfortable with.”

Recession fears were also on the minds of oil traders, and the possibility this could sink energy demand, as crude prices dropped to their lowest level since before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February.

Brent crude plunged 3.6 per cent, to $US93.34 a barrel.

Spot gold jumped 1.5 per cent to a one-month high of $US1,792 an ounce.

Recession for the UK

Britain’s central bank raised interest rates by 0.5 percentage points on Thursday evening (AEST), its biggest increase since 1995.

This was despite the BoE warning that a long recession was on its way, as it rushed to smother a rise in inflation which is now expected to peak at 13.3 per cent in October — up from its previous forecast of 11 per cent.

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Categories
Entertainment

Gay son tells of shock as he discovers his ‘homophobic’ dad on Grindr

Young Australian man Jacob says his father disowned him when he came out as gay – so imagine his shock when he came across his married, “homophobic” father on the hookup app Grindr.

Jacob revealed the bizarre tale on Kyle Sandilands and Jackie O’s radio show, explaining that he’d been scrolling through profiles when he came across a photo of a man’s torso – with no head shown in the picture – and thought he noticed something a little familiar .

WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Moment Kyle asks Jackie O to be godmother

For more Real Life related news and videos check out Real Life >>

“They have one of those ensuites that are through the walk-in closet,” he told the surprised radio duo.

“I thought, that looks sort of like my parents’ house.

“I clicked through the profile to see if it could be my dad.”

Jacob explained that his mum and dad had been happily married for 27 years and he had never seen any sign of a “rift” in their relationship.

Thinking what he’d discovered may be a fake profile, he decided to engage with the user to see if it really was his dad.

“I wasn’t flirting with him, I just engaged in normal conversation, told him I liked his picture and asked where he is from,” Jacob explained.

“Then I asked for a picture of his face – when he felt it through it was my dad.”

Kyle and Jackie O. Credit: Supplied

Jacob said he was now faced with a difficult dilemma.

Should he tell his mum? Should he confront his dad about him?

“I am very open and forward-thinking, I don’t care if he is gay, I just don’t want him lying to mum,” he said.

Despite his father disowning him when he told his parents about his sexual orientation, they eventually reconciled.

Now, he said he wanted to talk to his father and “get his story.”

“I want to know why he has been hiding it from me for so long,” he said.

“He was super against it when I was coming out.

“He hated me.

“He was super angry and didn’t want anything to do with me in his life.”

A Grindr logo seen displayed on a smartphone. File image. Credit: SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Jacob asked those listening in to the radio segment for advice.

What should I do?

The overwhelming response was that Jacob should sit down with his parents and discuss what he had found out – as difficult as that might be.

“You have to discuss this with both your parents, they have to be aware,” one caller advised.

Another listener said the same thing had happened to his partner.

“My partner had a similar thing happen, his dad had six kids, was a construction manager and appeared happily married,” the caller said.

“Your dad will be happier if he can be true to his real identity, and your mum deserves the chance to be happy too.”

The man was looking at Grindr when he came across a photo of his dad. File image. Credit: Getty

A third caller suggested Jacob speak to his father first, then his mum, rather than addressing the issue with them both at the same time.

One man revealed that he had found gay magazines in his dad’s car and followed him after work one day.

“I found out what he was doing in the evening,” the man explained.

“I spoke to my siblings about it and we realized he had been doing it our whole lives.”

The caller added that his parents were still together after the family had a “sit-down chat” about his father’s sexual orientation.

At the end of the radio segment Jacob told Kyle and Jackie O that he was still feeling undecided about what to do and would have to give it more thought.

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Categories
Sports

Australia’s Grace Brown and Rohan Dennis complete Commonwealth cycling clean sweep | Commonwealth Games 2022

As Grace Brown was preparing for the first leg of an Australian clean sweep of the Commonwealth Games individual time trials, the task ahead was brought into harsh focus. English rider Hayley Simmonds, a bronze medalist on the Gold Coast four years ago now working as a commentator while injured, perfectly articulated the demands of the event.

“It’s called the race of truth,” Simmonds said on the BBC. “In the end, it’s just you and the pain in your legs and thoughts in your head. You cannot hide behind your teammates. It is literally the strongest rider who will win.”

By midway through Thursday afternoon on a complex course in the Black Country, Wolverhampton, the evidence was clear. Brown was the strongest woman by far. And Rohan Dennis, twice a world champion in the discipline, was finally the Commonwealth champion after posting a time of 46:21.20, with his early strength and speed critical.

In both races, English riders finished second. But that is generous to silver medalists Anna Henderson and Fred Wright. In reality there was daylight behind the Australian champions. Both gold medalists had plenty of time in the latter stages of the time trial to consider their thoughts.

Brown coasted home more than 33 seconds clear and Dennis eased late when triumphant over a field including 2018 Tour de France champion Geraint Thomas by just over 26 seconds.

While Australia’s netballers suffered a shock loss to Jamaica on day seven of the Birmingham Games, Brown and Dennis rode superbly to justify their favouritism. Watching Brown, who finished fourth in the Tokyo Olympics, over the course as she reeled in rival after rival was like watching Pac-Man mow down the ghosts in the classic arcade game. The 30-year-old chewed them up and charged on in pursuit of the next target on the way to a winning ride of 40:05.20 over the weaving, hilly and tactically complex 28.8km course.

“The team didn’t tell me I was ahead until the last five kilometers, so I assumed no news was good news,” she said.

Rohan Dennis storms round the course in West Park in Wolverhampton.
Rohan Dennis storms round the course in West Park in Wolverhampton. Photograph: David Davies/PA

Brown came to cycling later than most. Raised in the Victorian town of Camperdown, the gateway to the Otway Ranges and Great Ocean Road, she headed off to boarding school in the big smoke as a teenager.

In Melbourne she was an outstanding athlete. Long distances were her from her go from her. She was quick enough to compete at a national level, but her body was not designed for the rigors of long-distance running, with niggles and injuries ultimately frustrating her.

But her discipline to training, combined with the independence gleaned from leaving home early, served Brown well when she jumped on a bike in her early 20s. She drew fans with her aggressive, attacking riding and the wins at professional level started flowing. So strong a rider has the Australian become, Brown was the clear pick to win here.

Well before she crossed the line, it was clear the pre-race favorite was riding extremely well. As she said afterwards, she did was able to do what was expected of her. “I had the target on my back. I tried not to take on too much of the pressure of being the favourite, just staying calm and focusing on what I had to do,” she said.

Dennis claimed a silver medal at the event in Glasgow in 2014, a year he won the first to two successive world championships in team time trials. He added individual successes to his distinguished resume with successes in Innsbruck and Yorkshire in 2018 and 2019. Last year he won bronze in Tokyo. But he wanted to stand alone atop the podium with a gold medal in a major Games. Desperately.

“I’ve finally got that top step. It’s taken [me] 12 years since Delhi. The Olympics was my first individual medal at an Olympic Games, so it is hard to beat,” he said. “But it is a different feeling being on that top step. It is a little hard to compare. It is special, either way.”

Madison de Rozario claimed gold in the women's T53/54 1500m final on day seven.
Madison de Rozario claimed gold in the women’s T53/54 1500m final on day seven. Photograph: Luke Walker/Getty Images

At Alexander Stadium, para-wheelchair star Madison de Rozario claimed a second gold medal of the Games when adding the T54 1500m to her success in the marathon last week in a thrilling race.

The 28-year-old, who also completed the double on the Gold Coast four years ago, was able to hold off compatriot Angie Ballard in a tactical race when becoming the first Australian para-athlete to win four Commonwealth Games gold medals.

Australian world champion Eleanor Patterson and compatriot Nicola Olyslagers qualified for Saturday’s final when clearing 1.81m with their first jump. Oliver Hoare also qualified fastest for the men’s 1500m final in the morning session after recording a time of 3:37.57.

But there was disappointment for Stewart McSweyn, who was not able to start after falling ill with the flu. Fellow Australians Kathryn Mitchell and Ash Moloney have also been forced to withdraw due to illness, though Kelsey-Lee Barber is cleared to compete after recovering from Covid-19.

Matty Denny recorded a dominant victory in the men’s discuss after throwing two personal bests to end with 67.26m on his final effort of the night, while Sarah Edminston won a silver medal in the women’s F44 discus, continuing her strong run in international events since 2017 .

Elsewhere, China-born diver Shixin Li claimed a silver medal behind England’s Commonwealth Games flag bearer Jack Laugher in a superb performance in the 1m springboard diving. The 34-year-old recorded an overall score of 437.05 points, 10 points behind the triple Commonwealth Games gold medalist.

And the rhythmic gymnastics team of Lidiia Iakovleva, Alexandra Kiroi-Bogatyreva and Ashari Jesse Gill won silver behind gold medal winners Canada, but ahead of England in third.

Categories
Australia

Brisbane man Sulieni Layt bestowed royal honor as Australia’s first talking chief to the King of Tonga

A Brisbane man has become the first-ever Australian to be installed in the Tongan royal palace in a role that will see him speak on behalf of the island nation’s king.

In an Australian-first ceremony, Brisbane broadcaster and dual citizen Sulieni Layt has been appointed to speak for King Tupou VI.

Out of respect, Tongan royalty and nobles do not speak directly with citizens and vice versa. Instead, they speak through appointed representatives.

While there are dozens of speaking chiefs in the South Pacific island nation, Mr Layt is just the third non-Indigenous person to be given a role within the palace. The other two are from the United States.

Sulieni Layt with hands interlaced in a green park in traditional Tongan clothing.
Mr Layt now has the title of His Majesty’s Chief Attendant.(ABC NewsAlice Pavlovic)

Mr Layt grew up in Queensland, where his family operated a flying school that won a contract to train pilots for Tonga’s national airline.

This is when his passion for the island nation ignited, and when he learned from the trainee pilots what would soon be his second language.

“They were always speaking in Tongan and I always wanted to know what they were saying,” Mr Layt said.

“So spending more time with them, I picked up more words and started going to the Tongan church with them.”

Tongan king Tupou VI wearing regal dress and his crown walks towards the camera during his coronation
Tongan King Tupou VI at his lavish coronation in 2015.(Wikimedia Commons)

The 41-year-old dual Tongan and Australian citizen went on to become a key broadcaster in the region for more than 30 years, founding the Pasifika TV and Radio service.

“It hasn’t quite dawned on me yet the significance and the magnitude of today’s ceremony,” he said.

“I’ve worked so many years with our Tongan people. They’re my people and I’ve served His Majesty … for so many years and I wish to continue to do so.”

The role will require him to travel to Tonga to meet the King. He will also be required to travel with and speak for him when he visits Australia.

Historic ceremony attended by Royal Princess

Her Royal Highness the Princess Lātūfuipeka Tukuʻaho with eyes closed.
Her Royal Highness the Princess Lātūfuipeka Tukuʻaho attended the ceremony.(ABC News: Alfred Beales)

His appointment has added significance as the role is usually hereditary.

Mr Layt will now enjoy the official job title of His Majesty’s Chief Attendant and will be officially known as Lave ‘Iloa Ola going forward.

The elaborate chiefly title royal kava ceremony, held at the Brisbane Botanic Gardens yesterday, was the first ever held in Australia, and the first held outside Tonga in 30 years.

COVID-19 restrictions meant the kava ceremony could not be held on palace grounds. At the Botanic Gardens it attracted an audience from across Brisbane’s Pacific Island diaspora.

Tongan community sit on grass in a park as part of a ceremony.
Pacific Islander families gathered to watch Mr Layt be bestowed the royal honour.(ABC NewsAlice Pavlovic)

It involved the ceremonial preparation of kava—a traditional psychoactive drink made from the root of the yoqona plant.

The drink was then presented to the circle, which is usually comprised of the nobles of Tongan clans.

The ceremony was attended by Princess Lātūfuipeka Tukuʻaho in place of King Tupou VI.

A ‘rare and special’ appointment

Sione Maile Molitika stands in a park.
Sione Maile Molitika is president of the Brisbane Tongan Community.(ABC NewsAlice Pavlovic)

President of Brisbane’s Tongan Community, Sione Maile Molitika, said it was an honor to be involved in the ceremony in his home city.

“For something to happen in Brisbane as part of our culture and our custom, it’s very important they can see part of who we are,” Mr Molitika said.

Pasemata Vi Taumisila stands in a field with a flower necklace.
Pasemata Vi Taumisila, daughter of the late noble Lord Ve’ehala, described the appointment as rare and special.(ABC NewsAlice Pavlovic)

Pasemata Vi Taumisila, the daughter of late noble Lord Ve’ehala and a member of the Tonga Traditional Committee – a branch of the royal palace — said the appointment was significant.

“This special occasion is very rare,” she said.

“They only install the title for special people.”

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Categories
US

Alex Jones must pay at least $4.1 million to parents of a Sandy Hook school massacre victim in defamation case, jury rules

An Austin jury on Thursday decided Infowars host Alex Jones must pay at least $4.1 million to the family of a 6-year-old killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting for the suffering he and his website and broadcast caused them by spreading lies about the 2012 massacre.

Scarlett Lewis and Neil Heslin, whose son Jesse died alongside 19 of his classmates and six educators at the school in Newtown, Connecticut, had sought $150 million for defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

An attorney for Jones, who has repeatedly suggested that the Sandy Hook shooting was a hoax, asked jurors to award Heslin and Lewis only $1.

The jury was only asked to decide whether Jones, who has already been found liable by a judge because he did not hand over critical evidence before the trial began, must also pay Jesse’s parents for the emotional distress and reputational damage caused by his false claims. The jury will also decide whether to award punitive damages. The panel will hear testimony on that subject Friday.

The trial included testimony from both parents and Jones, who has portrayed the lawsuit as an attack on his First Amendment rights. Following the shooting, he had asserted that it was manufactured and included crisis actors. He later acknowledged that it took place.

His attorney, Andino Reynal, argued that Jones has paid for his mistake by losing millions of followers after he was removed from social media platforms in 2018.

“I have made a terrible mistake,” Reynal told jurors, referring to Jones. “That mistake was weaponized by the same political forces that had descended upon Sandy Hook when it happened.”

As the jury deliberated Thursday, Reynal requested a mistrial because his team accidentally sent the contents of Jones’ cell phone to lawyers for Heslin and Lewis. A lawyer for Heslin and Lewis used some of the information on Wednesday to point out inconsistencies in Jones’ testimony. The judge denied the request.

Heslin and Lewis testified on Tuesday that Jones’ lies left them in fear for their lives and compounded their grief.

“Having a 6-year-old son shot in front of his classroom is unbearable and you don’t think you’re going to survive and then to have someone on top of that perpetuate a lie that it was a hoax, that it was a false flag,” Lewis said, speaking directly to Jones during her testimony. “I don’t think you understand the fear you perpetuate, not just to the victim’s family but to our family, our friends and any survivor from that school.”

The crux of the trial is a 2017 episode of NBC’s “Sunday Night With Megyn Kelly,” on which Heslin appeared and challenged Jones’ denial of the shooting. Heslin says in the episode: “I held my son with a bullet hole through his head.”

Jones and another Infowars host, Owen Shroyer, later implied that Heslin had lied.

Heslin and Lewis are among several Sandy Hook families who have filed lawsuits against Jones arguing that his statements that the mass shooting was a hoax have led to years of abuse from his followers.

Categories
Entertainment

Marilyn Monroe’s estate defends Ana de Armas over biopic accent criticism | Anne of Arms

The estate of Marilyn Monroe has come to the defense of Ana de Armas after criticism of her accent in her portrayal of Monroe in a forthcoming biopic.

The movie Blonde, based on a novel by Joyce Carol Oates, covers Monroe’s rise to fame. It is directed by Andrew Dominik and will be released by Netflix on 28 September.

When the trailer for the film was released in late July, some watchers said they could hear hints of De Armas’s Spanish accent in her rendering of Monroe’s famous breathy tone. De Armas was born in Cuba and acted in Spain before moving to Hollywood.

In an interview with the Times last year, De Armas spoke about the struggle to perfect Monroe’s accent, saying it took nine months of dialect coaching.

“It was a big torture, so exhausting. My brain was fried,” she said.

Marc Rosen, president of entertainment of Authentic Brands Group (ABG), which owns Monroe’s estate, defended the casting.

“Marilyn Monroe is a singular Hollywood and pop culture icon that transcends generations and history,” he said.

“Any actor who steps into that role knows they have big shoes to fill. Based on the trailer alone, it looks like Ana was a great casting choice as she captures Marilyn’s glamour, humanity and vulnerability. We can’t wait to see the film in its entirety!”

De Armas also said Dominik, the director, was confident in her ability to portray Monroe after one audition, but she “had to audition for everyone else”.

“The producers. The money people. I always have people I needed to convince. But I knew I could do it. Playing Marilyn was groundbreaking. A Cuban playing Marilyn Monroe. I wanted it so badly,” she said.

In a separate interview with Netflix Queue, De Armas said she “read Joyce’s novel, studied hundreds of photographs, videos, audio recordings, films – anything I could get my hands on. Every scene is inspired by an existing photograph. We’d pore over every detail in the photo and debate what was happening in it.”

Brad Pitt, whose production company Plan B is producing the movie, also praised De Armas amid criticism of her accent in the film.

“She’s phenomenal in it,” Pitt told the New York Post. “That’s a tough dress to fill. It was 10 years in the making. It wasn’t until we found Ana that we could get it across the finish line.”

Categories
Australia

Sydney news: Political staffer, public servants to appear at Barilaro’s fourth US trade job hearing

Here’s what you need to know this morning.

Barilaro US trade job inquiry to meet again today

The New South Wales upper house inquiry into the appointment of former deputy premier John Barilaro to the lucrative US trade role will agree again on Friday.

An additional fourth hearing comes after the resignation of Trade Minister Stuart Ayres on Wednesday, following questions raised about his involvement in the process.

Mr Ayres denies any wrongdoing but will be investigated for a possible breach of the Ministerial Code of Conduct.

Mr Barilaro’s former chief of staff, Siobhan Hamblin, the managing director of Investment NSW, Kylie Bell, and the Public Sector Commissioner, Kathrina Lo, will give evidence from 10am.

Earlier in the week, in her second appearance before the committee, Investment NSW chief executive Amy Brown granted the appointment was not done “at arm’s length” from the state government.

Mr Barilaro — who has withdrawn from the $500,000-a-year job — is due to appear at the inquiry on Monday, August 8.

Meanwhile, the NSW opposition leader Chris Minns said it does not make sense to have highly paid Trade Commissioners based overseas when the state’s finances are under extreme pressure.

He said Labor would abolish the six Senior Trade and Investment Commissioner positions, if it wins the state election in March.

“The modern Australian economy, particularly when you’re chasing export opportunities, is so diverse and so big that a single person driving that agenda around the world just doesn’t make sense,” Mr Minns said.

COVID-19 cases in state slowdown

NSW Health says its latest surveillance data suggests that COVID-19 infections have peaked and hospital admissions have plateaued across the state.

The report — which analyzes the week ending July 30 — found the rate of COVID-19 notifications per 100,000 people had decreased, or remained stable, across all local health districts.

Infections have also decreased, or remained stable, across all age groups, except those aged between 10 and 19 years.

The seven-day, rolling average of daily hospital admissions also decreased by 14.8 per cent.

Meanwhile, the highly “sticky” BA.4 and BA.5 Omicron sub-variants are still the dominant strains, rising to 97 per cent of specimens sampled at the end of last week, compared to 94 per cent at the end of the previous week.

NSW Health says there is still no evidence of a difference in disease severity between these and previous Omicron variants.

Monkeypox doses available soon

A woman holds a mock-up vial labeled "Monkeypox vaccine"
The vaccine will be eligible for some people from Monday.(Reuters: Given Ruvic/Illustration)

Those most at risk from monkeypox in NSW can access the first doses of the smallpox vaccine from Monday 8 August, as part of a targeted rollout across the state.

NSW Health has secured the first 5,500 doses for high-risk groups, such as people with suppressed immune systems, sex workers and homeless men who have sex with men.

Chief Health Officer Dr Kerry Chant said doctors will identify people who should be vaccinated against Monkeypox and more information will be released in coming days about how to register interest.

Australia has recorded about 60 cases of Monkeypox, which is a usually mild disease similar to smallpox, and until May was endemic to Central and West Africa.

Another 30,000 doses will be delivered to the state next month.

Man charged with stalking teacher

A man has been charged with intimidating and stalking a teacher at Auburn in Sydney’s West.

Police say the 26-year-old threatened the teacher at the basketball courts of the PCYC on Wednesday.

He has been granted bail and is due to face court next week.

Natural disaster organization under fire

a man looking and standing outdoors
The future is unclear for Shane Fitzsimmons, who leads Resilience NSW.(AAP: Mick Tsikas)

New South Wales cabinet is expected to approve a recommendation to dismantle the organization created to lead the response to natural disasters.

A report into this year’s floods has recommended dismantling Resilience New South Wales.

Flood victims have criticized the organisation’s performance.

It’s thought the agency’s responsibilities will be reallocated to existing government departments.

Varroa mites spread

Varroa mite infestations have been identified at nine more properties in the Newscastle region.

The nine new detections bring the total number of infested premises to 73.

All of the new detections have been linked to other cases or to the movement of other hives and equipment, and were found within existing emergency zones.

Varroa mites spread viruses that cripple bees’ ability to fly, gather food and pollinate crops, leading hives to collapse and die off.

Australia was the last continent to be free of the parasite, with previous detections in Queensland and Victoria eradicated.

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Categories
US

Hungary’s Orbán tells CPAC: ‘We must coordinate a movement of our troops’ to fight liberal order

Viktor Orbán, Hungary’s controversial prime minister and an ally of former President Trump, issued a call for conservatives in Europe and the United States to unite in the fight against the liberal global order, in remarks delivered to the Conservative Political Action Conference in Texas on Thursday .

Orbán, who has exercised authoritarian rule over Hungary and employed rhetoric evoking Nazi propaganda, criticized the Biden administration as displaying weak leadership on the global stage and putting Brussels, the seat of the European Union, under “ideological pressure.”

“We must take back the institutions in Washington and in Brussels,” Orbán said.

The Hungarian leader’s remarks were largely met with cheers from the audience, which also issued loud boos when Orbán brought up billionaire-philanthropist and Democratic donor George Soros.

Soros, who is Jewish and Hungarian American, is a high-profile target of the conservative right, with some criticism tying in anti-Semitic conspiracy theories.

Orbán called Soros his “opponent” and attacked him as having an “army at his service,” citing civil society and largely independent institutions like nongovernmental organizations, universities and the civil service.

Action for Democracy Board and Advisory Council, a US based nonprofit and nonpartisan organization, slammed CPAC for inviting Orban and condemned his remarks as helping “legitimize fascist ideas and further fan the flames of intolerance in the US.”

“He railed against the free media, vilified George Soros, equated communists with liberals, and promoted culture war and civilizational confrontation, all the while staying silent on his close relationship to Vladimir Putin and the Chinese communist leadership,” the group said in a statement .

“We join Hungary’s chief rabbi Róbert Frölich, the International Auschwitz Committee, and many others who have condemned the use of fascist terminology and call upon US political leaders on both sides of the aisle to condemn Orbán’s hateful rhetoric.”

Some Republicans in the US view Orbán’s tenure as laying the groundwork for the far-right conservative movement internationally. His appearance by him in Texas followed his delivering a keynote address at a CPAC conference in Budapest in May, the first-ever European conference for the organization.

The Hungarian leader said he had come to Texas to tell the audience “how you should fight. My answer is play by your own rules.”

“We must coordinate a movement of our troops because we face the same challenge,” he continued, calling the 2022 midterm elections and 2024 presidential and congressional elections part of “the fight for civilization.”

Orbán emphasized Hungary’s hard-line policies criminalizing illegal migration and restricting marriage and adoption for same-sex couples.

“To sum up, the mother is a woman. The father is a man, and leave our children alone, full stop, end of discussion.”

Orbán also reiterated a call for the US to negotiate with Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.

“We, in the neighborhood of Ukraine, are desperately in need of strong leaders who are capable of negotiating a peace deal. … We need a strong America and a strong leader.”

The Biden administration has limited communication with Moscow and said it is only interested in talking with the Kremlin if they determine the Russians are serious about diplomacy.

Orbán secured a fourth term as Hungary’s prime minister in April and, while the election was considered fair according to international monitors, it was criticized as marred by an uneven playing field that favored Orbán’s Fidesz party.

The Hungarian leader is widely viewed as an autocratic leader that is eroding his country’s democratic institutions and promoting an isolationist, racist and discriminatory ideology.

Freedom House, which monitors the state of civil freedoms and democracy worldwide, rated Hungary as “partly free” in its 2022 Freedom in the World report, saying Orbán and his Fidesz party have passed laws restricting operations of opposition groups and free media, instituted ant -migrant and anti-LGBTQ policies and asserted government control over independent institutions, including the judiciary.

Orban is widely seen as an ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, despite saying that he is in “full solidarity” with Ukraine.

In a speech in Romania last month, Orban spoke out against European Union sanctions against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine and said that Washington should negotiate with Moscow over Kyiv’s fate.

His speech was criticized as a “Nazi diatribe” by his longtime adviser Zsuzsa Hegedus, who resigned in protest over remarks in which he doubled down on wanting an “unmixed Hungarian race.”

Orban is also a close ally of Trump, whom he met earlier in the week at the former president’s golf club in New Jersey.

In January, Trump issued an endorsement for Orbán’s reelection, an unusual gesture that broke with diplomatic norms for potentially giving the impression of the US interfering in a foreign country’s democratic process.

Updated at 6:16 pm

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Categories
Business

Why buying a cheap used electric car from Japan could prove costly

Nissan Australia has warned it may not have the correct parts or service back-up if things go wrong on a privately imported Leaf electric car.


An aging battery pack or service problems on a used Nissan Leaf imported privately to Australia could become a money pit instead of an affordable first step into electric motoring.

Nissan Australia has warned it may not be able to provide the normal back-up for Leaf owners who have purchased used cars outside the official Australian sales system – because of subtle but significant technical differences in key components on cars sold by Nissan versus those imported privately .

“Customers sometimes get frustrated because we cannot rectify a problem because we never sold the car,” a spokesperson for Nissan Australia told Drive.



“They probably think that because it has our logo on the bonnet that we can automatically help them, but you cannot supply spare parts for every single model the company has ever built, everywhere in the world. It’s just not feasible.

“We love to support the growth of electric vehicles in Australia and we don’t want to do anything to derail that, so we encourage people to do their research,” the spokesperson said.

A growing number of early-model Nissan Leaf hatchbacks are landing in Australia from Japan – priced from about $23,000, which is less than half the new-car cost – as importers take advantage of the Federal government’s revised Specialist and Enthusiast Vehicle Scheme.



In the case of the Leaf, the scheme provides an opportunity for small independent used-car dealers and private buyers to import vehicles that were never part of the official Nissan Australia showroom line-up.

There were problems in the past with what were called ‘grey imports’ — parallel privately imported cars sold in Australia, including the Toyota LandCruiser — before the loophole was closed.

Buying an imported used Leaf from Japan could cause problems, Nissan said, if it does not have the parts for servicing or repairs in stock, because they are different from the ones fitted to the cars sold through its dealerships.



Nissan is also worried about what could happen if — and when — a car’s battery begins to fail or needs replacing.

It provides an eight-year warranty on the batteries for cars it sells via its dealer network, but cannot provide similar coverage for used imports.

“We don’t really have a lot of history on these cars,” said the Nissan spokesperson. “The first-generation Nissan Leaf was sold with different battery sizes in Japan, but we only sold one type in Australia.”



There could also be problems, according to Nissan, with equipment in cars intended for Japan and not Australia.

“There are variations of the car that we have never seen or sold here,” the spokesperson said.

“The challenge is they are normally Japanese-specified cars. So they come with things like Japanese infotainment systems and satellite navigation.”



Nissan also says it has no ability to track the history of the used imports, or their local owners, and that could cause problems if there is any sort of safety recall or production problem.

“The best recent example is the Takata airbag recall,” the spokesperson said.

“When there are significant safety recalls, the vehicles are not covered under our record keeping. So we are unable to contact those owners to advise them.”

Paul Gover

Paul Gover has been a motoring journalist for more than 40 years, working on newspapers, magazines, websites, radio and television. A qualified general news journalist and sports reporter, his passion for motoring led him to Wheels, Motor, Car Australia, Which Car and Auto Action magazines. He is a champion racing driver as well as a World Car of the Year judge.

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Delivery of full Gen3 Supercars field expected in December

The Gen3 Camaro (top) and Mustang (bottom)

Supercars’ Head of Motorsport, Adrian Burgess, predicts some teams will be testing their Gen3 cars in December.

Production of the next generation of Supercar chassis is now underway, ahead of their competitive debut in a Newcastle season-opener tentatively scheduled for March 10-12.

Gen3 has recently gone through a late redesign, potentially adding to turn-around pressures for teams, who may need to assemble cars over the Christmas break.

Walkinshaw Andretti United, Erebus Motorsport, and Triple Eight will construct their own chassis, while PACE Innovations will turn around another batch of builds for select teams to then assemble themselves.

Burgess gave an update on the timeline of Gen3’s rollout, outlining the project is on track, with an expected delivery of chassis to teams in December.

“You always want more time, that’s just life,” Burgess told Speedcafe.com.

“We’re on track; we’re certainly not saying it’s easy, there will be a lot of work between now and the end of the year.

“Hopefully the cars will run in team hands in December, but if not, it’ll be January. That’s what we’re working towards.

“Chassis are back in production now; we obviously had to halt production while we did the big ergonomic changes earlier.

“So the four manufacturers that are making the chassis are back in production there.

“Every seven or eight days there’ll be another chassis from [PACE]; I think they’re making 15 or 16 cars so they’ve got quite a good production plan in how quickly they can make them.”

It’s the finalizing and signing off of the various control components that is also a time-critical point, enabling teams to begin manufacturing parts for the in-house assembly phase.

“The fuel systems are being made now…the teams are making rear suspension, they’re making uprights, spindles,” explained Burgess.

“A lot of that information has gone out to the teams and they’re starting to manufacture.

“The further we go in the programme, we’re signing off on a lot more parts.

“We’re trying to give the teams as much information as we can, but equally, we’ve got to make sure we validate it correctly and sign it off correctly before we hand the information over.

“Otherwise, there’s going to be a million updates and they’re going to be making stuff that’s redundant.

“So we don’t want to do that, obviously. Every time we go testing, we’re finalizing or validating particular parts, and then that information gets released.”

As reported by Speedcafe.com last month, Triple Eight is in fact ahead of schedule on its eight Chevrolet Camaro builds.

It could present a situation where some teams are on track testing before others, based upon assembly timelines.

Burgess affirmed the process will run smoothly.

“It’s certainly not perfect. And it never is,” he added.

“We’re comfortable and the teams know they’ve got a good amount of work in front of them.

“But this is what they do, and this is what we will do together, and we’ll make it as painless as we can.

“Everyone’s confident we’ll be on the grid with 25 cars next March and hopefully we’ve got a number of those testing towards the end of this season.

“If it’s not December, then January then we should be out with the full field.”