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Mark McGowan v Clive Palmer trial judgment finds both guilty of defamation

Premier Mark McGowan and billionaire Clive Palmer have been found to have defamed each other during their vicious war of words in 2020 — but the harm done was minor, according to the Federal Court — as they were the damages awarded.

Delivering his judgment today, Justice Michael Lee said the defenses of both sides to allegations of defamation had failed — and the back-and-forth barbs had been defamatory.

But because the Federal Court judge found that both were involved in political argument — as nasty as it was — finding “real or material” damage was almost impossible.

He declined to award claimed aggravated damages to Mr Palmer, and said he could not find he suffered any real damage from Mr McGowan’s comments.

He assessed the damage to Mr Palmer’s reputation warranted an award of $5,000.

And Justice Lee then pointed to Mr McGowan’s landslide election victory as to the fact his reputation was not damaged by Mr Palmer — and might actually have been enhanced.

However, he said Mr Palmer’s comments warranted an award of $20,000 to the Premier.

In summing up the case, Justice Lee said arguments that neither side was involved in political posturing was “unpersuasive and superficial”.

He said amid the feud, the pair had both taken the opportunities to advance their political stance — particularly Mr McGowan, who he said “had a bully pulpit”.

And he concluded the “game had not been worth the candle” — taking up valuable resources from the court and the WA taxpayer.

“These proceedings have not only involved considerable expenditure by Mr Palmer and the taxpayers of Western Australia, but have also consumed considerable resources of the Commonwealth and, importantly, diverted Court time from resolving controversies of real importance to persons who have a pressing need to litigate ,” Justice Lee said.

“At a time when public resources devoted to courts are under strain, and judicial resources are stretched, one might think that only a significant interference or attack causing real reputational damage and significant hurt to feelings should be subject of an action for defamation by a political figure.”

The defamation case between the Premier and the billionaire stemmed from public barbs traded more than two years ago, as the pandemic was still spreading — and with Mr Palmer’s $30 billion claim against WA not yet public.

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RBA hikes interest rates further; Al-Qaeda leader killed in airstrike; 2022 Commonwealth Games continue; Australia COVID wave peaks; Clive Palmer, Mark McGowan case ends in draw; Stuart Ayres under pressure amid John Barilaro trade saga

Speaking of the Greens, Senator Lidia Thorpe – a DjabWurrung, Gunnai and Gunditjmara woman – says her tone in taking the oath of allegiance yesterday “was the tone that you use when you really, really, really don’t want to do something and you ‘re being forced to do it”.

“To be told that I have to swear allegiance to a queen from another country, I feel really uncomfortable about that given I’m a First Nations woman, and my allegiance is to this country and the people of this country, not to a queen who lives in England and who has not been elected,” Thorpe told Melbourne-based radio station 3AW.

Deputy Leader of the Australian Greens in the Senate, Senator Lidia Thorpe.

Deputy Leader of the Australian Greens in the Senate, Senator Lidia Thorpe.Credit:alex ellinghausen

Thorpe was made to redo her oath in the Senate after calling the Queen to colonize in her first try, which was ruled out of order by president Susan Lines.

Today’s 3AW interview descended into a fiery debate in which host Neil Mitchell accused Thorpe of being disrespectful and a hypocrite after she said she was part of an “illegitimate” parliament.

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“To be there with the Black Power salute, sarcastic tone, and in describing the Queen as a colonizer is divisive and destructive at a time where we need a unity of purpose,” Mitchell said.

Thorpe denied both accusations.

“I suppose what it does is it puts a spotlight on truth-telling,” she said. “This country was invaded, and this country does not have an agreement with its people.

“This country is rich and vibrant. And we have things here, our country and our own people, that we should be swearing allegiance to. So I wanted to inform the Australian public that we are still, today, swearing allegiance to someone who has nothing really to do with our everyday lives.”

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Australia

‘Like an alien obelisk’: space debris found in Snowy Mountains paddock believed to be from SpaceX mission | Space

The Australian Space Agency is investigating space debris found in farmland in the Snowy Mountains in southern NSW, after being notified by an astrophysicist who believes it to be from a SpaceX mission.

Brad Tucker, an astrophysicist at the Australian National University, says he often gets calls from people who believe they’ve found space junk – and they are normally easy to rule out.

“This was different,” he said.

Tucker received a call last Thursday from Mick Miners and Jock Wallace, two sheep farmers in the small town of Dalgety, who reported having found a scorched object. Their report matched a SpaceX spacecraft which re-entered the earth’s atmosphere at 7am on 9 July, 20 months after its launch in November 2020.

The farmers were connected to Tucker via local ABC radio, where he is a regular guest to talk about space.

The SpaceX Dragon capsule was observed breaking apart above the area of ​​Australia where the farmers found the debris. Its re-entry was seen and heard by people from Canberra to Bendigo, with many sharing it on social media.

Tucker drove for two hours to Miners’ farm to see if the object they had found was the unpressurized trunk of the capsule – a structure that is needed to take-off but dumped prior to re-entry.

His first impression, he said, was something that “kind of just looks like a burnt tree … and then you come up to it, it’s like this alien obelisk almost”.

“I knew without a doubt this was a very real incident and a very real piece just sticking out of the ground.”

A large rectangle piece of charred metal that Brad Tucker, an astrophysicist at the Australian National University believes is part of a SpaceX mission.
One of the panels of the debris appears to have a part number on it – ‘a very easy way for SpaceX to confirm it,’ Tucker says. Photographer: Brad Tucker

Tucker said he could tell it was real because it was made of composite materials designed to withstand heat, including woven carbon fire for insulation. It also showed clear signs of scorching due to re-entry.

One of the panels of the debris appeared to have had a part number. “It’s a very easy way for SpaceX to confirm it because there’s a label on it,” he says.

I have documented the discovery on YouTube.

SpaceX has not yet confirmed to Tucker that the debris belonged to SpaceX Dragon, and has not yet responded to a request from Guardian Australia.

The debris has been assessed by the Australian Space Agency (ASA).

A spokesperson from ASA told Guardian Australia their technical experts had “visited a remote part of the Snowy Mountains area of ​​southern New South Wales, after the discovery of space debris”.

“The agency is actively working to support formal identification of the objects, and is engaging with our counterparts in the US, as well as other parts of the commonwealth and local authorities as appropriate,” the spokesperson said.

Tucker says space junk is intended to land in the ocean, and it’s a “super rare” occurrence for it to land in a populated area.

“It’s only happened a handful of times,” he says. “In 1979, the US Space station Skylab crashed over Western Australia in the first instance. There was a nuclear power Russian satellite that crashed in Canada in the 80s. And then China had a rocket booster that crashed and landed in West Africa a couple of years ago. SpaceX had part of a booster crash in the US state of Washington last year. And now this.”

It’s a short list, but the incidents are becoming more frequent.

Dr Sara Webb, an astrophysicist at Swinburne University, agreed with Tucker’s assessment that the debris was consistent with a SpaceX mission.

Webb said that this event and the Chinese booster rocket, which made an uncontrolled return to Earth on Saturday, underscored the importance of tracking space debris.

The Chinese booster rocket was particularly large, she said.

“Even if 80% of it burnt up, you’re still left with basically a car coming out of the atmosphere,” she said.

The spokesperson for ASA said the organization was “committed to the long-term sustainability of outer space activities, including debris mitigation”.

“This includes the ongoing development of a Space Situational Awareness and Debris Mitigation roadmap, to guide opportunities in this important area,” the ASA said.

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Australia

Alkimos death: Brittany McCulloch charged with manslaughter of her partner Jordan Chas Caine

The partner of a 34-year-old Perth man found dead in the garage of his Alkimos home has been charged with his manslaughter.

Police will allege Jordan Chas Caine was killed sometime between Friday and early Saturday with his body discovered at the Minoan Way home just after 6am on Sunday.

Brittany McCulloch, who sources say was Mr Caine’s partner, was arrested at the time and has now been charged with unlawfully killing Mr Caine under such circumstances as not to constitute murder.

Your local paper, whenever you want it.
Forensic officers combed the scene at the home on Minoan Way in Alkimos.
Camera IconForensic officers combed the scene at the home on Minoan Way in Alkimos. Credit: michael wilson/The West Australian

The 28-year-old woman appeared calm when she faced the Joondalup Magistrates Court on Tuesday and confirmed she understood her charge after a short pause when it was read out by the magistrate.

During the hearing, Ms McCulloch’s lawyer said she would not be making a bail application and asked to adjourn the matter for legal advice.

On Sunday, Deputy Police Commissioner Allan Adams said there was a “solid contingent” of homicide squad and local detectives working to determine the man’s cause of death.

“To those neighbors in the vicinity who have concerns, be assured that the police are taking this extremely seriously (which is) evidenced by the number of officers there and are very hopeful of coming to a resolution in the short term,” he said at the time.

Police said they were not looking for anyone else in relation to death and there was no threat to the community.

“There is a person helping police with their investigations but again, there’s still a fair bit of work to be done to determine exactly what’s occurred at that scene,” Mr Adams said.

Ms McCulloch will next appear at the Stirling Gardens Magistrates Court on September 14.

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Destructive winds, thunderstorms forecast as cold front bears down on Victoria

Strong winds and thunderstorms bringing heavy rainfall to Victoria have prompted multiple weather warnings as a cold front bears down on the state.

The front is forecast to enter the state’s west later this evening and continue traveling east through Wednesday, bringing showers, thunderstorms and powerful north-westerly winds.

The State Emergency Service (SES) said the weather system “could be the most significant cold front of the winter” and urged residents to prepare early and remain wary of the risk falling trees posed.

Watch and Act alerts warning residents to prepare and take shelter indoors have been issued for areas including Central Highlands, Dandenong and the Great Dividing Range, as well as the Grampians in the state’s west.

Severe weather warnings of destructive winds have been issued for the Central, South West and North Central districts, and for parts of the East Gippsland, North East, West, South Gippsland and Wimmera districts.

The Bureau of Meteorology has forecast winds averaging 65 kilometers per hour, with likes of up to 100 kph in some elevated areas.

Winds described as “locally destructive” reaching up to 130 kph are predicted over Alpine peaks from early Wednesday morning.

Possible flooding in state’s north-east

Senior meteorologist Kevin Parkin said the wind was of most concern.

“When we talk about wind likes 90 to 100 kph, that’s capable of breaking branches off trees and also capable of pushing over weakened trees as well,” he said.

He said the peak of the tastes was expected to move through Melbourne between midnight and 4am.

“For many people through central parts, when you wake up on Wednesday morning, be wary of widespread vegetation that may have been stripped from trees across roads,” Mr Parkin said.

“From sunrise onwards, the risk really is in the eastern part of the state and it will continue there for much of the day.”

There are concerns heavy rain could cause flooding in some north-east Victorian catchments.

Mr Parkin said it was going to be a “windy week” and severe weather warnings would likely continue cropping up until a change forecast to move into the state from the south this weekend.

SES chief officer of operations, Tim Wiebusch, urged Victorians to tune into messages from emergency services over the next 24 hours to 48 hours.

He said motorists on the road tonight should be extra vigilant about the risk of debris such as fallen trees, branches and powerlines.

“We can’t stress enough that if you do come across floodwaters, do not attempt to drive through floodwaters,” he said.

“It may be the last decision you make.”

Mr Wiebusch said people should prepare for localized power and internet outages and secure loose items around their homes, such as outdoor furniture and trampolines.

Meanwhile WorkSafe issued a reminder for managers to ensure workplaces are prepared for the wild weather.

“Strong winds can turn unsecured objects into dangerous projectiles, including partly completed structures, roof sheets, scaffold plans, temporary fencing, and unsecured tools,” health and safety executive director Narelle Beer said.

“Loose objects must be removed or suitably secured so that they don’t blow away and become a danger to workers and the general public.”

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Interest rates: RBA raises cash rate by 50 basis points to 1.85 per cent

For the fourth consecutive month the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has hiked interest rates as inflation runs rampant.

At 2.30pm during the RBA’s monthly meeting, it increased Australia’s interest rate by 50 basis points, or by 0.5 per cent.

The decision brought the cash rate from 1.35 per cent to 1.85 per cent, largely in line with economist’s predictions.

This marks the first time the RBA has lifted the rates for four months in a row since the introduction of the two to three per cent inflation target in 1990.

This follows last week’s increase in annual inflation, which hit 6.1 per cent, which was its highest level in 21 years since 2001.

Tuesday’s rate rise means those paying off the average home loan of $500,000 will need to cough up an extra $140 a month.

And the August hike isn’t expected to be the last, with economists forecasting that interest rates could peak up to two per cent by the end of the year.

As soon as news of the interest rate rise broke, Treasurer Jim Chalmers weighed in and acknowledged it was a tough time for Australian borrowers, saying the announcement would “sting”.

“It’s another difficult day for Australian homeowners with a mortgage,” he said.

“The independent ReserveBank has just announced its decision to increase interest rates by another 0.5 per cent, bringing the cash rate to 1.85 per cent.

“Australians knew this was coming, but it won’t make it any easier for them to handle.

This cycle of interest rate rises began before the election in response to inflationary pressures that began accelerating at the beginning of this year.

“Average homeowners with a $330,000 outstanding balance will have to find about $90 a month more for repayments as a consequence of this decision today, on top of around $220 extra in repayments since early May.

“For Australians with a $500,000 mortgage, it’s about an extra $140 a month, in addition to the extra $335 they’ve had to find since early May.

“As I said, Mr Speaker, this decision doesn’t come as a surprise. It’s not a shock to anybody, but it will still sting.

“Families will now have to make more hard decisions about how to balance the household budget in the face of other pressures like higher grocery prices and higher power prices and the costs of other essentials.”

‘Misleading’: Calls for bank boss to resign

Ahead of the interest rate rise, there were growing calls for the RBA’s board and its governor, Philip Lowe, to resign after a series of missteps.

Chief among them was the promise that interest rates wouldn’t rise until 2024 which one top economist said was “misleading” for borrowers.

Critics also pointed out that the rapid rate rises could inadvertently lead to a recession while at the same time inflation is running rampant.

Warren Hogan, chief economist at both ANZ and Credit Suisse, told The Daily Telegraph that the RBA was guilty of some “pretty bad errors” in recent months.

The RBA lowered the cash rate to 0.1 per cent at the end of 2020 amid the Covid-19 pandemic – the lowest it had ever been – and throughout the pandemic said they didn’t plan on raising the cash rates until 2024.

When it lifted the cash rate for the first time in May and then every month since, Mr Hogan said it was “misleading people, basically”.

He also said Australia’s central bank had taken on risky strategies including spending lots on insurance and sinking funds into a bonds program which had not paid off.

Mr Hogan, who was also the former principal adviser to federal treasury, said: “It’s unforgivable. I think they should resign – the whole board.”

Mr Lowe “should have the character to stand down,” Mr Hogan added.

RELATED: Find out how much the rate rise will cost you

Mr Lowe said the cash rate would remain at its record low of 0.1 per cent until at least 2024, but the rapid rise in inflation this year – caused in part by Russia’s war in Ukraine and supply chain issues on home soil – prompted the monthly hikes .

It comes as Australia’s cost of living crisis is worsening, making borrowers even more cash-strapped than usual.

In the last quarter, transport costs rose 13.1 per cent as the price of fuel rose to record levels for the fourth quarter in a row.

Meanwhile, grocery shopping is also causing hip pocket pain, with Australians outraged to find lettuce heads selling for $10 a pop and capsicums marked at $15 for a kilo.

Interest rates in Australia reached an all time high of 17.5 per cent in January 1990. Since then, they have averaged 3.93 per cent.

Before this year, the last time the RBA hiked up rates was in 2010. It has only been going down ever since.

As a result, more than one million home borrowers have never experienced an increase in mortgage rates, because they bought a home after 2010.

The official cash rate has been at a record low of 0.1 per cent since November 2020 in response to the Covid-19 pandemic until May 2022.

– with NCA NewsWire

Read related topics:Reserve Bank

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Australia

Peter Dutton readies to fight to keep $2.9b fuel excise cut going

The Coalition has challenged Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to extend the $2.9 billion temporary cut to fuel excise in a move to exploit discontent over the cost of living when petrol prices have exceeded $2 per liter in some cities.

Liberal and Nationals MPs are preparing to back the extension despite the fact they voted only months ago to pass a law that ensured the temporary budget measure would end on September 28.

The move sets up another fight over a budget deadline after Albanese shifted position two weeks ago and agreed to extend the $750 paid pandemic disaster payment for workers with COVID-19 who had to go into isolation.

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton interrogates the Prime Minister about the fuel excise and cost of living.

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton interrogates the Prime Minister about the fuel excise and cost of living. Credit:alex ellinghausen

While the original COVID-19 payment ended on June 30, the Prime Minister agreed to reinstate it until September 30 after calls from the states and the federal Coalition.

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton cleared the way for the fight over fuel by asking Albanese in parliament on Monday about what the government would do to help Australians deal with rising costs including on fuel.

“Households are facing rising power bills and your plan to address this is in disarray,” Dutton said in question time.

“Will your government compound the pressure on household budgets by not extending the fuel excise relief? Why is Labor making a bad situation worse?”

Albanese did not rule out an extension to the fuel excise cut but expressed surprise at the question and reminded parliament that Dutton was one of the federal cabinet ministers who decided on the excise cut and its September 28 expiry date.

“I point to the fact that he was in the cabinet that put together the budget, it had the end date for the measure he talks about,” the Prime Minister said.

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YouTube sensation TrainGuy 659 turns childhood passion into unique career on the tracks and online

Joe Dietz has loved trains ever since riding the railways of Europe on family holidays as a child.

As a young man now living in Cairns, he has turned his boyhood passion into a unique career on and off the tracks.

His day job is driving locos during the far north Queensland sugarcane crushing season, which stretches from May to November.

man leans on cane train with load of sugar cane in background
Joe Dietz has been driving cane trains, or locos, in far north Queensland since finishing high school.(Supplied: Joe Dietz)

Mr Dietz, aka TrainGuy 659, says winding his way through the neighborhoods and farmlands on the cane train tracks of far north Queensland is a dream job.

“I’ve just always had a thing for trains,” he says.

“I’ve always wanted to work on the railways.”

Mr Dietz’s family moved to the region when he was in high school.

“I was just lucky that, after graduating, I ended up getting a gig on the cane locos,” he says.

“You get the best of the city life, but you also have the countryside too and making connections with the farmers and the community in those areas is something unique.

“I’m living the best of two worlds.”

Mr Dietz is also living in two worlds when it comes to train driving — the real world and the online world.

Young man in high vis at controls of train
Joe Dietz says driving trains is his dream job.(Supplied: Joe Dietz)

During the other half of the year, he drives miniature Lego trains on intricate tracks around his family home, and millions upon millions of people watch him do it.

Seven years ago, I started the YouTube channel TrainGuy 659.

His unique work-life balance has allowed him to build a massive audience and become a professional YouTuber.

“When I first started, I wasn’t getting paid or anything from YouTube, so every season, I go back [to the cane trains],” Mr Dietz says.

“The YouTube audience grows every year because I have that time off, so I’m just lucky to work six months on, six months off.

“The YouTube thing pays the bills but isn’t something I can live off independently… but there is more potential.”

Massive miniature feats of engineering

Mr Dietz became an internet sensation when he began producing his annual Christmas Lego train videos, all of which have attracted audiences in the tens of millions.

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These involve constructing about 120 meters of Lego train track around his parents’ home, across obstacles including the backyard swimming pool, and even through the neighbours’ yard.

Lego train runs across bridge built in pool
Joe Dietz’s train videos involve constructing around 120 meters of Lego train track through various obstacles.(Supplied: Joe Dietz)

Mr Dietz says it is a painstaking process that can be up to a month of work.

“It’s like building an actual railroad but in miniature,” he says.

“It takes three to four weeks to set up. It takes about a week or two to film, and it’s packed up within three days.

“There’s a lot of trial and error, and you do a lot of testing too. There’s a lot of time that goes into it.”

Mr Dietz says there is no shortage of derailments during the shoots, which have resulted in some highly entertaining blooper reels, usually featuring cameo appearances from the family pets.

Blue Healer cattle dog sitting next to Lego rail track and bridge.
The Dietz family’s dog, Matilda, has been responsible for numerous Lego train derailments, which appear in the TrainGuy 659 blooper videos.(Supplied: Joe Dietz)

“We’ve got a blue heeler, and you know what cattle dogs are like… they go after the train… [in one video] she’s nipping at it, she’s knocking it over,” he says.

“They actually end up doing better than the main video — everyone loves bloopers.

“There’s one time the train accidentally fell in a pool, which was like, ‘Oh no!'”

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He says the odd, stray Lego piece also poses hazards for his supportive but long-suffering family.

“The amount of sore toes around the house during Christmas and New Year’s, it’s not funny,” Mr Dietz says.

The secret building blocks of internet stardom

Mr Dietz’s YouTube channel has amassed 660,000 subscribers, while his combined views are in the tens of millions.

Young man in pool with Lego set
Joe Dietz is a professional YouTuber having attracted an audience in the tens of millions who watch his Lego train videos online.(Supplied: Joe Dietz)

He’s often asked what the secret is to becoming internet famous. His answer to it is relatively simple.

“Find something that’s unique that hasn’t been done before,” he says.

“And if you’re doing something that’s already out there, find what makes you stand out to make it different to the others.”

In addition to his annual Christmas specials, Mr Dietz began producing a series of Lego train road trip videos.

“I started doing these tunnels with some PVC pipe, the Lego train goes through this, and it’d transition to a different scene,” he says.

“I did this one around Australia, and that really took off.”

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The initial concept film in 2019 was well-received, attracting 10 million views, but his grand plans were ultimately derailed by COVID-19.

Now that national and international borders have re-opened, Mr Dietz says he is hoping to get his Lego train road trip dream back on track with plans to take his train set through Europe when the crushing is over next season.

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Indigenous Voice to parliament: Ken Wyatt backs referendum

Asked what his message was to Coalition opponents of the Voice, Wyatt said “no government in Australia has provided continuity of advisory structures to Indigenous Australians”.

“They change with every government and we have seen organization after organization come and go and the advice they give to make a difference to quality of life never changes. We have to have something that is more permanent so that a minister or government can’t abolish it,” he said.

Liberal MP James Stevens said he was supportive of constitutionally enshrining the Voice, but disagreed with the government’s view that the Australian people be asked to vote in a referendum on the principle without the detail of how it would operate.

“We can’t risk holding a referendum that proceeds to be unsuccessful. That would be a disaster for reconciliation in this country,” Stevens said.

“It’s my view that it’s much more likely to pass if we’re very clear with the people of Australia on what the Voice will be that they are voting to create.

“Whether people like or not, Indigenous Australians have lived on this continent for 60,000 years and they need certainty, they need to be part of the co-designing process at the community and regional level. That includes having an impact on federal thinking for solutions to address the 17 targets for closing the gap.”

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese during the Garma Festival.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese during the Garma Festival.Credit:Getty

Wyatt said he did not support direct election of representatives to the proposed 24-member Voice and backed the 2021 report prepared by professors Marcia Langton and Tom Calma, which recommends selecting them from regional and local Voice bodies around the country.

However, in an appearance on the ABC’s Q&A program on Monday evening, Indigenous Australians Minister Linda Burney flagged that a directly elected model would be on the table.

“What the Leeser-Dodson [2018 parliamentary] report [on constitutional recognition] said is that the Voice will be representative. The point I was attempting to make was, in fact, that there is obviously – as the prime minister has pointed out – consultations, particularly with First Nations people, that need to be had about the way in which a Voice would be constituted,” Burney told the ABC on Monday.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese insisted that the detail on how the Voice would work was readily available.

“Hundreds of pages of detail have been worked through by Marcia Langton and Tom Calma – they’re all out there for people to see,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told The Project on the Ten Network on Monday night.

Noel Pearson threw his support behind Albanese’s weekend speech on Monday, telling ABC TV’s 7.30 the proposed three-sentence addition to the constitution was “the detail we have been waiting on”.

Pearson, an Indigenous lawyer, academic and land rights activist, said Australia needed to come together behind the proposal.

“In order to succeed we have got to rise above the culture wars, we’ve got to rise above our tribal divides and see that this is the one question that requires Australians to make common cause. Because if we make common cause on this, we will make our country better,” he said.

“I think that this is a modest proposition, modest but profound, capable of being consistent with liberal and conservative thinking.”

Professors Megan Davis and Pat Anderson, who co-chaired the Uluru Dialogue, which produced the Uluru Statement from the Heart that proposed a Voice model, both said more detail on the proposed model would need to be released before the referendum was held. But it would not be necessary for the model to be finalized or the draft legislation prepared.

Anderson said “we won’t have every ‘i’ dotted and ‘t’ crossed before we go to the referendum” but “governments have held referendums in the past without all of the background information”.

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“This national conversation is going to require a level of sophistication and maturity. This is an opportunity for Australia to decide what kind of country we are, what our principles and values ​​are. This can change the country, this is nation building, let’s suspend the knocking attitude and lift this debate,” she said.

Davis said there did not need to be a “fully fledged structure” to the proposed Voice before the referendum was put but enough detail so people could make an informed decision.

Both women dismissed claims from opponents of the Voice that there was insufficient detail about the proposed model, pointing to the Uluru statement, the 2019 parliamentary inquiry and the 2021 Langton-Calma report.

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Matthew Guy’s chief of staff Mitch Catlin resigns after details of proposed payment arrangement emerge

The chief of staff to Victorian Opposition Leader Matthew Guy has resigned, after reportedly asking a Liberal Party donor to make a $100,000 payment to his private marketing business.

The Age has reported that Mitch Catlin asked Mr Guy to forward a proposed contract to a donor that would have seen the donor pay more than $8,000 a month to Mr Catlin’s private marketing company, Catchy Media Marketing and Management.

The Andrews government this afternoon said it would refer the issue to the state’s corruption watchdog, as well as agencies including Victoria Police, the Victorian Ombudsman and the AFP.

In response, Mr Guy said he would cooperate with any investigation and looked forward to the state’s integrity agencies “confirming this referral for what it is — an unfounded and desperate political stunt.”

Earlier, Mr Guy said while “there was nothing signed” and he had not passed on the proposed contract, he had this morning accepted Mr Catlin’s resignation.

“I make it very, very clear that I value integrity in government and also in opposition,” he said.

“To that end, my chief of staff Mitch Catlin has this morning offered me his resignation.”

a man in a suit smiles at the camera.
Mitch Catlin runs a private marketing company called Catchy Media Marketing and Management.(LinkedIn)

The Liberal leader pledged to establish a code of conduct for opposition staff.

“I accept that as an issue that needs resolution, I will fix that and I will make sure there is a code of conduct for opposition staff as there is, and should be, for government staff,” he said.

Mr Guy said there were no agreements in place within the party that resemble Mr Catlin’s proposed contract.

“We’ll make sure that any issues, even the perception of integrity, is taken seriously. We’re acting on a perception — this wasn’t even put in place,” he said.

MPs call for greater transparency

Labor minister Danny Pearson said Mr Guy needed to “come clean” and reveal his level of involvement.

“Matthew Guy is putting himself up as the alternative premier,” he said.

“He may be the premier by Christmas, and this goes to his credibility.”

The state government has put out a list of 14 questions directed at Mr Guy, asking why the documents have not been released and how the proposed contract would have benefited the donor.

Reason Party MP Fiona Patten said greater integrity was needed in the state’s political system and renewed calls for the urgent introduction of a parliamentary ethics committee.

“We know that the system needs greater transparency and greater integrity,” she said.

“What the major parties do affects us all.”

Addressing media this morning, Shadow Police Minister Brad Battin denied all knowledge of the proposed deal and took aim at the government’s recent issues with integrity.

“We need to make sure that integrity is the highest priority here in this state,” Mr Battin said.

“That includes in the parliament, that includes in your party and that includes trust across the whole sector.”

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