Categories
Business

Falling house prices will weigh on profit season

Historically low unemployment and wage rises will soften the blow of falling house prices and rising mortgage rates for households, and the outlook for loan losses (currently also at historically low levels) will be closely watched.

Consumer spending is clearly going to fall in the second half of calendar 2022. What investors in the discretionary retail, gaming, consumer-facing manufacturing, media, travel, retail property, and financial services sector will look for this August is signs the slowdown is already biting, and guidance for what happens next.

Many stocks in these sectors have already failed anticipating what’s to come, so it may be that reporting season helps investors unearth some bargains.

Citi retail analyst Adrian Lemme, who has stress-tested discretionary retail earnings in a recessionary environment, says most stocks in the sector are trading around historically low valuations.

“The downside risk to share prices is mostly limited with potential for earnings to continue to positively surprise.”

The question of how resilient household spending goes to corporate margins.

As UBS strategist Richard Schellbach points out, February’s earnings season suggested companies had been able to push through hefty price rises without hurting demand and the June-quarter earnings season under way in the US also showed margins held up reasonably well. But how many more price rises will highly indebted Australian consumers take?

With some pressure on revenue likely, the focus on costs will be even more intense. Recent falls in commodity prices, decreasing shipping rates and easing supply chain disruptions bode well, but the trajectory of labor costs will concern investors.

June-quarter production reports from the mining sector make it clear rising wages and outright skills shortages remain an issue. How other sectors are faring on the labor front, and whether shortages are weighing on sales as some research has suggested, will be closely watched.

Schellbach argues margins are “elevated, but not extreme”. But they remain higher than they’ve been since the GFC and many of the tailwinds for profitability in the past decade – low-interest rates, low wage growth, cheap and easily accessible supply chains, falling tax rates – are now reversing.

It’s not just households dealing with higher interest expenses. Chris Nicol, equity strategist at Morgan Stanley, says net interest expenses in corporate Australia have been largely forgotten in recent years thanks to low rates, but the cost of short-term debt and working capital has risen sharply since May.

He says balance sheets are generally in strong shape, but warns investors could be surprised by rising debt costs.

Could caution around a higher cost of capital and the general outlook even lead companies to be more cautious about dividend payouts?

Rio Tinto certainly took a prudent approach to its interim dividend last week, and at the very least it seems unlikely that big dividend increases will be prevalent this reporting season.

Schellbach is more upbeat about the outlook for share buybacks, however, arguing that companies may look to seize on weakness in their share prices to put excess capital to work.

Investors should strap in for a bumpy four weeks, possibly with wild swings in share prices as companies report.

Given the pace at which macro conditions are changing, the potential for surprises when actual earnings are compared to outdated forecasts is elevated.

Secondly, companies may decide conditions are simply too unpredictable to provide guidance for the period ahead, increasing the likelihood of an uncertain market trades on uncertainty.

Categories
Technology

Destiny 2 Chat Shut Off After Players Abuse It To Crash Games

Over the weekend, Bungie disabled destiny 2‘s in-game text chat across all platforms after trolls discovered a way to use it to crash other players’ games. Now, the chat still remains off and Bungie hasn’t provided an ETA for when it will return.

On Saturday, I hopped online to play some destiny 2 and was hit with a small message telling me in-game text chat had been temporarily disabled across all platforms. I didn’t think much of it as I primarily play on Xbox Series X and don’t really use text chat. But it turns out that a nasty and simple exploit had been discovered in Bungie’s online sci-fi shooter and to avoid players abusing it, Bungie disabled text chat completely.

The exploit, if done properly, allows a troll to crash someone else’s game (or their own game) by simply entering a specific string of text. An example of this can be seen in a video clip uploaded on July 30 by destiny 2 player ritz. (It should be noted the text seen in the video isn’t the entirety of what’s needed to cause the exploit to trigger.)

According to some reports, players were experiencing crashes when playing online in multiplayer, as those areas have public text chat and were vulnerable to this particular exploit. Shortly after its discovery, players began sharing clips of the exploit and reporting it online, leading to Bungie swiftly disabling all text chat in destiny 2 on all platforms. Bungie confirmed this on his Twitter account on July 30.

“We have temporarily disabled text chat on all platforms in destiny 2 while we investigate an issue causing Weasel errors,” tweeted Bungie. “Stay tuned for updates.”

Bungie has a hotfix planned to go live tomorrow following some maintenance today, but there’s been no confirmation from the devs on if this exploit is being fixed in this upcoming patch. Kotaku has reached out to Bungie about the exploit and if it has any updates on when players can expect a fix and for text chat to be turned back on.

Categories
Entertainment

Hunted stars Jake and Rob don drag disguises | Photos

Fans of Ten’s cat-and-mouse reality game show Hunted could have been forgiven for thinking they were watching Drag Race Down Under during Monday’s episode, as the four remaining fugitives all leaned heavily on drag to try to evade the Hunters.

After a season of contestants donning dodgy wigs and op shop dresses, leave it to friends Jake and Rob – who’ve been running rings around the Hunters since the start of the game – to bring some truly unrecognizable disguises.

Rob, a hairdresser and make-up artist, got he and police officer Jake into very convincing drag for their next outing, knowing that stepping out in public as themselves was just too risky.

Their mission: To go to a local pub and befriend some strangers, who would hopefully take them in separately for the night as they went their separate ways for the final stage of the game.

And Rob had come prepared, putting them both in wigs, make-up, breast plates and even facial prosthetics:

Cut to Jake and Rob in full drag, blending in very well as they sipped cocktails with a group of girls at a Footscray pub – one of whom announced, “You can come stay with us if you like.”

One complaint – hunted brushed over this undercover operation, showing us barely more than 30 seconds of Jake and Rob in drag at the pub before we skipped to the next scene.

It raised a lot of questions: How exactly did two large men in drag convince some strangers at the pub to let them crash? Release the extended pub scene, Have!

Also relying on the power of drag were contestants Stathi and Matt, who had fled to Daylesford’s LGBTI ChillOut Festival with a plan to meet a drag queen friend who would get them frocked up so they could move around the town in disguise.

Unfortunately, the Hunters intercepted their meeting (perhaps meeting a large, purple-wigged drag queen at the local pub wasn’t the best plan to evade detection), capturing Matt and leaving an emotional Stathi on the run by himself.

That means just Stathi, Rob and Jake are left in the game as the show heads towards tonight’s finale – will all, or indeed any, of them make it to the ‘extraction point’ and share in the $100,000 winnings?

Hunted concludes 7.30pm tonight on Ten.

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Categories
Australia

Sydney news: Former NSW Premier John Barilaro plum job review outcome due ‘very shortly’

Here’s what you need to know this morning.

Barilaro appointment outcome imminent

New South Wales Premier Dominic Perrottet says he is expecting an independent review into the appointment of former deputy premier John Barilaro to a lucrative trade role in New York “very shortly”.

Mr Perrottet initiated the review in late June and it has been conducted alongside one by the parliament.

The Premier has cited the review — which could be delivered as early as this week — was a key reason why he was not commenting about details from a series of papers that have raised more questions about the recruitment process, including what involvement was had by the Trade Minister, Stuart Ayres.

Another candidate was recommended ahead of Mr Barilaro before he was later ranked higher, documents released yesterday revealed.

While Mr Perrottet’s stance created “politically challenging circumstances” for his cabinet colleagues, he said the review would be comprehensive.

New regulator can fine casinos

A new regulator will have the power to fine casino operators up to $100 million and hold individual board members and executives liable for serious wrongdoing.

Under legislation set to be introduced to Parliament next week, the NSW Independent Casino Commission (NICC) will be given tough controls to target money laundering and other criminal activity.

Minister for Hospitality and Racing, Kevin Anderson, said the reforms will deliver on all 19 recommendations from the Bergin Inquiry into Sydney’s Crown Casino.

“The NICC will have scope to deal appropriately with serious misconduct of the type uncovered by various recent inquiries,” he said.

Mr Anderson said the regulator would continue assessing Crown Sydney’s suitability to hold a casino license.

Additional measures to strengthen casinos’ compliance requirements, including the phase out of cash transactions over $1000, will also be introduced.

Pork barreling could be ‘corrupt’ behavior

ICAC
The report found politicians and their advisers “do not have an unfettered discretion to distribute public funds.”(ABC NEWS)

The state’s corruption watchdog has found politicians who engage in pork barreling could be found to be corrupt, under existing NSW laws.

A report by the Independent Commission Against Corruption founds politicians who pressure public servants or use grant programs for personal or political gain would be engaging in serious misconduct.

The report found politicians and their advisers “do not have an unfettered discretion to distribute public funds” and that the use of ministerial discretion is subject to the rule of law.

The ‘Report on Investigation into Pork Barrelling in NSW’ found politicians who allocate public funds for personal or political gain would be in breach of the ministerial standards or even in breach of the criminal offense of misconduct in public office.

The report follows an investigation into the NSW Government’s $250 million Stronger Communities Fund, in which 96 per cent of grants went to projects in Coalition-held seats.

Varroa mite spreads

The destructive varroa mite has been found in a further three beehive sites north of Newcastle.

NSW Department of Primary Industries says the new detections were in the Port Stephens area, at Butterwick and Salt Ash.

They fall within the existing eradication zone but the boundary will be pushed slightly west due to the detection at Butterwick.

There have now been 59 detections of the mite since it was first identified at the Port of Newcastle in late June.

The mite weakens and kills European honey bee colonies, which are vital to Australia’s honey and farming industries.

Well-known Indigenous organization to close

National Center of Indigenous Excellence
The NCIE looks set to close after lengthy negotiations to keep it doors open failed. (Supplied: NCIE)

An Indigenous non-for-profit in Redfern is set to close after the two parties involved its transition process failed to reach agreement on the organisation’s future.

The National Center of Indigenous Excellence could close its doors by next Monday after the Indigenous Land and Sea Corporation failed to find a suitable arrangement with new owners, the NSW Aboriginal Land Council.

It follows a two-year due diligence process in which the Land and Sea Corporation divested the site to the land council.

The center provides programs and services to the local Indigenous community to improve wellbeing.

Up to 50 staff are expected to lose their jobs.

Police officer assaulted

Three boys have been arrested after allegedly assaulting an off-duty police officer with a bike seat pole in Sydney’s west yesterday.

The boys were allegedly behaving in an offensive manner at Rooty Hill Railway Station around 4:25am and abusing passengers and railway staff.

A chief inspector attached to a command within the North West Region placed one of the boys under arrest, however, it is alleged the boy resisted before verbally abusing and assaulting the officer.

It’s alleged the officer was struck multiple times to the head with a bike seat pole.

Further police from Mt Druitt police area command attended and arrested the boys.

NSW Ambulance paramedics treated the officer at the scene before he was taken to Blacktown Hospital with head injuries. He was treated and later released.

The boys — aged 14, 13 and 12 — were refused bail and will appear at the Children’s court today.

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Categories
US

Mother and five children among seven dead in wrong-way crash in Illinois

A mother, her four young children and one of the kids’ pals were among seven people killed in a horrific wrong-way crash in Illinois over the weekend, according to a report.

The family’s Chevrolet van — carrying Lauren Dobosz, 31, her four kids, husband and one of the children’s friends — was hit head-on by an Acura TSX going the wrong way in rural Riley outside Chicago around 2 am Sunday, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

The impact caused both vehicles to burst in to flames, killing Dobosz and the five kids.

The sole occupant of the Acura, Jennifer Fernandez, 22, was also killed.

Dobosz’s husband was airlifted to a hospital, where he remains in critical condition.

The mother was a cheerleading coach for a junior football team on Chicago’s Northwest Side, according to the outlet.

A fundraising effort by the shattered team had raised more than $12,000 for the family’s relatives Monday afternoon.

Lauren Dobosz and Thomas Dobosz
Thomas Dobosz, the husband and father of four, is the only survivor in the family vehicle.
Facebook/Lauren Dobosz
family car crash
The crash caused both cars to explode in flames.
Fox 32 Chicago
family car crash
The Acura TSX was going the wrong way.
Fox 32 Chicago
The sole occupant of the Acura, Jennifer Fernandez, 22, was also killed.
The Acura driver, Jennifer Fernandez, was pronounced dead.
Fox 32 Chicago
Lauren Dobosz and Thomas Dobosz
A GoFundMe raised $12,000 for the family’s funeral expenses.
GoFundMe/Lisa Torres

“Lauren always made a great impression on everyone she met, she was full of life, laughter, and always a good time,” the appeal read. “We’re going to miss you Lauren and your spunky, sweet, sassy kids and every so loved friend.”

The deceased Dobosz kids from Rolling Meadows were a 5-year-old girl, a 6-year-old boy, a 7-year-old boy and a 13-year-old girl, according to the ABC7 Chicago. The other killed child was a 13-year-old girl and friend of the eldest Dobosz kid.

The investigation into the crash is continuing.

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Categories
Business

RBA increases to interest rates mean home buyers who bought at the peak are facing rapidly rising mortgage repayments

While some Australians may rejoice at the idea of ​​a drop in house prices, interest rate rises mean home owners face the prospect of their asset dropping in value at the same time their mortgage repayments steadily increase.

And those who bought recently, at the peak of the market, are more likely to have the most left to pay off on their loans, meaning interest rate rises will cause them the most pain.

Bobby Graham bought a house in January in Hobart’s outer suburbs for slightly more than he had hoped to pay, after saving for the past five years.

Just months before his purchase completed, as late as October, the Reserve Bank of Australia was still saying it expected interest rates would not rise until 2024.

There have now been three months of straight rate rises, and another due today.

While he is not struggling to meet payments, Mr Graham says the changing circumstances have meant he needed to adjust something else — his expectations.

He has had to make tweaks to his lifestyle and reassess his living expenses.

“It’s the perfect storm — you pay the higher price because you bought at the peak of the market then there is an increase in interest rates,” he said.

“And it becomes obvious that everything else is becoming more expensive due to inflation.”

He described the increases in his mortgage repayments as “a bit of a kick”.

  A bearded man in a hoodie smiles
Mr Graham has had to re-examine his budget and adjust his expectations.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)

As part of his changes he has had to cancel several interstate trips planned for this year in a bid to save money and meet home and mortgage commitments.

“You pay so much of your income, just to maintain your house,” he said.

His advice to others in his situation is to take a thorough look at the household budget and adjust expectations.

Home prices dropping but interest costs going up

According to figures released on Monday by property analysis firm CoreLogic, median house prices in most capital cities are falling at a steady rate — and are expected to continue the trend.

In Hobart, there was a 1.5 per cent drop in house and unit prices in the past month, in line with similar falls in Sydney and Melbourne.

CoreLogic compares the downswing to the same drop experienced during the Global Financial Crisis in 2008 and the 1980s recession.

Gray roofs in a Tasmanian suburb
The RBA has increased interest rates for three straight months, with another increase expected this afternoon.(abcnews)

The Reserve Bank (RBA) is acting to stem inflation by increasing the cash rate, which in turn is being passed onto consumers via higher mortgage rates.

The RBA is expected to lift the rate again when it meets today.

The head of research at CoreLogic, Eliza Owen, warns potential home buyers while they may feel like they are buying a house at a discounted price, the reality of interest rate increases will see more spent on repayments.

“The interest you pay on the debt you take out will be more,” she said.

Financial counselors expect demand spike

A woman with glasses stands in front of a sign reading Anglicare
Anglicare financial counselor Fiona Moore said people should call the National Debt Hotline if they were struggling.(Supplied: Anglicare)

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Categories
Technology

Lawn Mowing Simulator Landmark Addition comes to PlayStation

A video game entirely focused on mowing lawns has received an upgrade that allows players to cut grass around the world – virtually of course.

Lawn Mowing Simulator is one of a handful of new video games taking the chores of life and making them fun.

From the new PowerWash Simulatora game where you power wash the dirt from cars and buildings, to Construction Simulatorwhere you take control of diggers and dump trucks – there’s something for everyone.

The Landmark Edition of the game includes a dinosaur theme park to maintain. (Skyhook Games)

Lawn Mowing Simulator: Landmark Edition released on PlayStation and PC this week and now allows players to hop aboard a ride-on mower and maintain the Great British countryside.

In an odd promotion, Five Star Games are allowing people to literally watch grass grow 24/7, with a chance every few hours to win a copy of the game and more. (Five Star Games)

There’s also a new mode that sees you trimming around T-Rex footprints, navigating herds of Brachiosaurus, and keeping up with the movements of other ‘roaming’ dinosaurs, as well as iconic locations such as Stonehenge.

Games like these are considered cozy and therapeutic by gaming communities, with entire social media channels dedicated to their simplicity.

It’s worth noting there’s more to Lawn Mowing Simulator than just mowing lawns.

If you’ve ever dreamed of mowing the lawns around a historic British castle – now’s your chance. (Skyhook Games)

Players must grow their lawn mowing empire, take up jobs, hire staff, upgrade machines, advertise, pretty much everything you need to do in real life to grow a business – minus the financial stress and fear of failure.

Aussie game distributors Five Star Games have taken their game promotion to the next level, creating a live stream on Twitch where you can literally watch grass grow.

While that might not have the same effect as mowing the lawns of a Jurassic theme park, there are a few surprises on the stream that viewers can look out for, including download codes of the game.

God of War: Ragnarok (2022)

The most anticipated video games of 2022 and beyond

The standard edition of Lawn Mowing Simulator is also available on Xbox GamePass.

Categories
Entertainment

Albert Namatjira’s work hitting new highs on the art market as demand arises

In the 1950s, Albert Namatjira’s iconic watercolor artwork would often sell on the streets of Alice Springs for just a few shillings.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this article may contain images of people who have died.

Over the years and following his death in 1959, his paintings of the vast Central Australian landscape became highly sought after, with collectors across the world clamoring to own a piece of his work.

Now there’s been a renewed interest in the Arrernte artist and father of the Hermannsburg School with his work setting new records.

Namatjira’s Glen Helen Gorge on paper fetched more than $120,000 when it went under the hammer in Melbourne earlier this year.

In July his painting The Granseur – Mount Sonda sold in Adelaide for $54,000, an unprecedented price almost $10,000 above expectations.

Albert Namatjira, photographed by Jim Gallacher at Areyonga in 1950.
Albert Namatjira was a pioneer of the Hermannsburg School of painting.(Supplied: Northern Territory Library)

“Namatjira’s work doesn’t come on the scene very often, but those works … bringing enormous value,” said Jim Elder, auctioneer and proprietor at Elder Fine Art in Adelaide.

“I don’t feel that the people in Alice Springs would be would au fait with what has actually happened to his work.

“He should be taken a lot more seriously and I think it’s at this present time that people are waking up to how important an artist he really is.”

Born and raised at the remote Hermannsburg Lutheran Mission, southwest of Alice Springs, Namatjira was taught the art of watercolor by visiting European artist Rex Battarbee and greatly encouraged by the local pastor.

His status grew rapidly in Australia, and as a result he became the first Indigenous person to gain full citizenship, enabling him to vote and buy alcohol in 1957.

A Christmas card with watercolor painting of a landscape
A Christmas card from 1954 featuring artwork by Albert Namatjira.(Supplied)

Mr Elder said the whole Australian art market was enjoying a rush of buoyancy of late, but Namatjira’s work had far surpassed the market trend.

“What’s driving all this is availability, naturally, and people are coming more au fait with where this artist actually stands in the history of Australian Art,” he said.

“One wonders today, if Namatjira didn’t come along and Rex Battarbee didn’t come along and discover him, that whole school of paintings wouldn’t have existed.

“We owe a debt, a great debt, to the likes of Albert Namatjira, Rex Battarbee, and the Hermannsburg School of artists.”

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Categories
Australia

Victorian animal rights MP proposes ‘Veticare’ scheme to offer public care for pets and animals

Vet care in Victoria would become free or subsidized under proposed new laws to introduce a Medicare system for animals dubbed “Veticare”, to make seeing a vet more affordable and accessible.

Australia is experiencing a national vet shortage and combined with an increase in pet ownership during the pandemic, it has resulted in some vets closing their doors, particularly in rural and regional areas.

In response to the issue, the Animal Justice Party will introduce a motion into the Victorian parliament which includes establishing public vet hospitals, upskilling vet nurses and setting up a bulk-billing model for vet care.

It remains to be seen how many supporters the minor party will be able to win over with its bold new plan — but here’s how it says it would work.

Why has it been introduced?

Pets and wildlife are not getting the care they need because animal owners and rescuers simply cannot afford it, according to the Animal Justice Party leader Andy Meddick.

“Victoria has a vet shortage crisis, and it is not just creating animal welfare issues, it is driving up prices and placing unimaginable pressure on vets to work overtime, unsupported,” Mr Meddick said.

“Just like we can visit our doctor with a Medicare card, Veticare creates public clinics allowing for free or low-cost appointments.”

Penny Hocking has been a vet for more than three decades and said Veticare could make a huge difference, particularly in rural and regional areas.

Penny wears glasses and smiles at the camera
Vet Penny Hocking says free veterinary care would help ease the burden on animal rescue groups.(Supplied: Animal Justice Party)

“Some people are driving hours to get vet care in regional Victoria, because there is very limited after-hours services there and in the cities it can be very expensive,” she said.

“When people cannot afford vet care, not only does the animal not get adequate care but often they can be euthanized or surrendered to a rescue group who are burdened with the vet expenses.”

What would it cover and how would it work?

The system would cover everything from companion animals needing minor care, including a yearly check-up and injections, to more serious operations.

People who have domestic animals would pay an annual fee and receive a Veticare card.

The Veticare card means pet owners would pay a scheduled fee (as with Medicare) and depending on an owners financial situation, they would be charged a gap fee.

A sick dog
The ‘Veticare’ system would cover a range of procedures from yearly vaccinations to serious operations.(abcnews)

The laws would also introduce government-funded public veterinary hospitals which would be bulk-billed with no over-the-counter fees.

Vet clinics are privately owned and there are currently no public clinics in Victoria.

Who would be eligible?

Every Victorian pet owner would be eligible to have the scheduled fee covered for their vet appointment, but the gap fee would differ based on a person’s financial situation.

Concession, pension and healthcare cardholders would have the entire costs covered, receiving the same benefits as Medicare, for their pets through Veticare.

Animal rescuers and carers would be provided with a Veticare card but would not have to pay an annual fee, to recognize the contribution they make to protect animals.

A black dog with gray markings stars at the camera on a sunny day
‘Veticare’ would work in a similar way to Medicare, with scheduled fee coverage but gaps would be based on a person’s financial situation.(abcnews)

“Vets are often under stress because they have to attend to wildlife and use resources at their clinics they are not reimbursed for, we want to make sure they get that reimbursement,” Mr Meddick said.

As part of the laws, dedicated wildlife hospitals would also be set up in regional areas with wildlife-skilled vets to reduce the burden on other clinics, with the first hospital to be located on the Great Ocean Road near the Surf Coast.

“There is currently no wildlife vet or specialty service for the entire area of ​​western Victoria,” Mr Meddick said.

Is there anywhere else in the world that does it?

The proposal is an Australian first, and could be the first in the world.

“The idea sprung from the question how do we fix the vet crisis?” Mr Meddick said.

“We had to find a way to alleviate pressure on vets and their mental stress, alleviate financial stress on people who want their animals to be seen and the burden wildlife rescuers are placing on vets and vet nurses, so we looked to the health system and Medicare.”

Andy Meddick smiles, dressed in a dark blue shirt as he holds a small dog dressed in a warm coat, under gray skies.
Victorian Animal Justice Party MP Andy Meddick believes his bold vision will attract some support in parliament.(Supplied: Andy Meddick)

What about the issue of vet shortages?

Vets are leaving the industry in record numbers because of increasing stress and patient load.

The proposed laws would supply extra training and upskilling for vet nurses to become technicians and nurse practitioners.

In human medicine, nurse practitioners and technicians are allowed to do minor surgical procedures and the same principles would apply in the animal healthcare sector to reduce the patient load and burden on vets and enable more animals to be cared for.

Vet nurses would also be able to assess wildlife in a bid to free up time for vets to take on other appointments and improve access and encourage them to stay in the industry.

Dana hugs two dogs while sitting in a sunny yard
Vet Dr Dana Kolosky says many veterinarians have left the industry during the pandemic.(Supplied: Animal Justice Party)

Last year the Victorian government introduced vet nursing as a free TAFE course to help address the shortage.

Vet Dana Kolosky said since the pandemic the industry had lost a lot of staff.

“It is busier than ever, a huge amount of staff have left and the public has gone out and taken a lot more animals,” Dr Kolosky said.

“We experience a lot of stress and fatigue, it is not the well-paid, easy job that people perceive it to be, we take a lot of stress home and emotional blackmail is a huge issue – people say to us things like ‘if you don’t do this our animal will die’.”

“People look at vet care and think it is very expensive, but they are comparing it to a heavily subsidized human system.”

What happens next?

Today, the Animal Justice Party’s sole MP, Andy Meddick, is introducing the motion into the Victorian Parliament’s Upper House, where the state government does not have a majority.

A whippet sleeps under a doona with its head on a pillow
Mr Meddick argues his proposal would make access to vet care more equitable.(abcnews)

Mr Meddick said he had some crossbench support and he had been discussing the plan with the government.

“I would like to see it up and running within 12 months, but I can appreciate the government might want to spend more time on this,” Mr Meddick said.

As for the cost?

“I would be lying if I said it was going to be cheap, I would expect it to be over $10 million,” Mr Meddick said.

“But the benefit would far outweigh the costs.”

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Categories
US

Trump, declining to pick one candidate, endorses ‘ERIC’ in Tuesday’s US Senate primary | politics







Eric Greitens Eric Schmitt Donald Trump

From left: Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, former President Donald Trump, and former Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens


St. Louis Post Dispatch and AP photos


ST. LOUIS — Former President Donald Trump, declining to make a single endorsement in Tuesday’s US Senate primary, announced he trusted Missouri voters to “make up their own minds” between former Gov. Eric Greitens and Attorney General Eric Schmitt.

In a statement posted after 5 pm Monday on Truth Social, a blogging site similar to Twitter, Trump wrote, “I trust the Great People of Missouri, on this one, to make up their minds, much as I did when they gave me landslide victories in the 2016 and 2020 Elections, and I am therefore proud to announce that ERIC has my Complete and Total Endorsement.”

The late nod to two of the frontrunners in the Senate race represented an anti-climatic end to the sweepstakes in which Republican candidates sought to ingratiate themselves with the former president, who dominated the Democrats in his two elections here.

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Top Republicans had raced to tie themselves to the former president, betting his support would be the key to success in deeply conservative Missouri, where the former president has been widely celebrated.

Without an early endorsement, the candidates crisscrossed the state Monday, hoping to seal up support heading into Election Day.

The former president had been warming to Greitens, Politico reported in early March — weeks before Greitens’ ex-wife accused the ex-governor of spousal and child abuse in court documents.

After those reliefs, US Rep. Billy Long said Trump contacted him and talked about the allegations against Greitens, indicating concern from the former president about Greitens’ viability.

After the phone call, Trump issued a statement signaling he’d like to back Long, but wondered if voters had “been considering” Long, indicating Trump wanted to endorse a candidate with strong public support.

Greitens has been the subject of a multi-million dollar campaign financed by GOP donors and operatives to paint him as unfit for office. After leading the polls in the early going, Greitens began to fade, with Schmitt appearing to take the lead in the closing week.

Trump, on his social media website on Sunday, conveyed disapproval with Schmitt and Axiom Strategies, a political consulting firm working for Schmitt. Axiom’s polling arm, Remington Research Group, had released polls showing Schmitt leading.

On Sunday, Trump shared a link to a Breitbart article that accused Remington of underestimating Trump’s support in Missouri to boost the attorney general in polls.

“Wow, great dishonesty in politics,” Trump said in his social media post, with a photo of Schmitt below his statement. “Too bad!”

At a campaign stop in the St. Louis area, Schmitt was asked about a possible endorsement.

“I’d love to have it,” Schmitt said.

Trump made clear in early July there was one candidate he definitely wouldn’t endorse: US Rep. Vicky Hartzler, one of the leading candidates in the primary.

Trump said Hartzler called him for his endorsement, but he declined, saying she doesn’t have “what it takes to take on the Radical Left Democrats, together with their partner in the destruction of our Country, the Fake News Media and, of course , the deceptive & foolish RINOs.”

On Monday, Hartzler, R-Harrisonville, hosted a press conference in a St. Louis Lambert International Airport parking lot to criticize her two main competitors in the US Senate race.

To Greitens, she pointed out that he’s accused of abusing his family.

“That’s not conservative,” Hartzler said.

To Schmitt, she said he tried to use millions of dollars in tax credits to lure the Chinese to build a hub at the airport behind her.

“That’s not conservative,” Hartzler said.

And she criticized both of them for not sitting down for a debate.

“I guess they are afraid to fight a farm girl from Missouri,” said Hartzler, 61, describing herself as the “true conservative” in the race.

Nationally, political scientists, analysts and journalists are watching the race, to weigh Trump’s impact on mid-term elections.

Asked Monday about expectations that Trump still may endorse a Republican in the race, Hartzler shook off her non-endorsement, acknowledged the unpredictability of the former president.

“President Trump is going to do what he wants to do,” she said. “He may even endorse me.”

She left the airport, driving to other last-minute campaign stops in Rolla and southwest Missouri.

“We are getting a lot of support from every corner of the state,” she said.

On the Democratic side of the race, former Marine Lucas Kunce touted endorsements from US Sen. Bernie SanderI-Vermont, and former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich, who served under President Bill Clinton.

Democrat Trudy Busch Valentine, meanwhile, announced her election night watch party would be at the Sheet Metal Local 36 union hall in St. Louis.

On the GOP side, Greitens wound up his campaign with a statewide fly-around that included a scheduled stop at the Spirit of St. Louis Airport in Chesterfield.

updated at 5:24 pm with Trump’s endorsement. This story will be updated.

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