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5 things to watch on the ASX 200 on Friday 5 August 2022

A young man sits at his desk working on his laptop with a big smile on his face due to his ASX shares going up and in particular the Computershare share price

Image source: Getty Images

On Thursday, the S&P/ASX 200 Index (ASX: XJO) gave back its morning gains and ended the day a fraction lower. The benchmark index fell 1 point to 6,974.9 points.

Will the market be able to bounce back from this on Friday and end the week on a high? Here are five things to watch:

ASX 200 expected to rise

The Australian share market looks set to end the week on a mildly positive note despite a mixed night of trade on Wall Street. According to the latest SPI futures, the ASX 200 is expected to open 10 points or 0.15% higher this morning. In the United States, the Dow Jones fell 0.25%, the S&P 500 edged 0.1% lower, and the Nasdaq pushed 0.4% higher.

Oil prices fall again

Energy producers including Beach Energy Ltd (ASX: BPT) and Woodside Energy Group Ltd (ASX: WDS) could have a tough finish to the week after oil prices tumbled again. According to Bloomberg, the WTI crude oil price is down 2.5% to US$88.42 a barrel and the Brent crude oil price is down 3% to US$93.91 a barrel. Fears of a demand slowdown after a build in US crude and gasoline inventories sent oil prices to multi-month lows.

Block results

the Block Inc. (ASX: SQ2) share price could tumble lower on Friday. This morning the payments company released its second quarter update. And while its earnings and revenue came in ahead of the market’s expectations, it guidance has disappointed. Management revealed that its Square ecosystem gross payment volume growth is expected to moderate. The Block share price has dropped 5% in after hours trade on Wall Street.

Gold price rebounds

The shares of gold miners such as Newcrest Mining Ltd. (ASX: NCM) and St Barbara Ltd (ASX: SBM) could have a decent end to the week after the gold price rebounded overnight. According to CNBC, the spot gold price is up 1.9% to US$1,810.5 an ounce. This followed a pullback in the US dollar and rising US-China tensions.

Elders rated as a buy

the Elders Ltd (ASX: ELD) share price could be great value after recent weakness according to Goldman Sachs. This morning the broker reiterated its conviction buy rating and $21.00 price target on the company’s shares. Commenting on the underperformance of its shares, Goldman said: “We believe the market is applying a higher weight to the potential of a cyclical downturn in seasonal conditions over the long term structural growth opportunities still in front of the company.”

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Sports

Watch the moment Aussie boxer Alex Winwood is left stunned after a bizarre knockout ruling robs him of a Commonwealth Games medal at Birmingham 2022

Young Aussie boxer Alex Winwood has lost his boxing quarter-final at the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham after bizarrely being ruled to have been knocked out at the start of the second round.

The 25-year-old had held his own in the first round of his Flyweight bout against Zambia’s Patrick Chinyemba.

See the blow that prompted the ref to call off the fight in the video player above

Stream Seven’s coverage of the Commonwealth Games 2022 for free on 7plus >>

Four of the five judges had scored the first round to have been in the Aussie’s favor after landing two massive right handers on his opponent.

But barely seconds into the second round, Chinyemba floored the Aussie with a one-two.

Young Aussie boxer Alex Winwood has lost his boxing quarter-final at the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham after bizarrely being ruled to have been knocked out at the start of the second round.

Credit: Seven

Chinyemba didn’t even look to have considered it a match-winning blow, walking over to his corner of the ring in preparation of the restart of the bout.

Credit: Seven

The force of the right hander fell Winwood, who hit the canvas.

As Winwood picked himself off the canvas, he was clearly stunned to see that the referee had waved off the match.

“The referee says ‘that’s that’,” said the commentator.

“It’s all over. Don’t count, nothing. Chinyemba has turned the tables spectacularly.

“I’m very surprised at the stoppage.”

Chinyemba didn’t even look to have considered it a match-winning blow, walking over to his corner of the ring in preparation of the restart of the bout.

As Winwood picked himself off the canvas, he was clearly stunned to see that the referee had waved off the match.

Credit: Seven

EVERYEVENT: Check out the full Commonwealth Games schedule

TALLY MEDAL: Every gold, silver and bronze at Birmingham 2022

LATEST RESULTS: Detailed breakdown of every event at the Games

The second commentator wasn’t convinced the fight should have been called off either.

“It looks worse than what it probably is,” he said.

“He’s got up, he’s clear, and he’s fine, and I think he should have been allowed to continue.”

Chinyemba is now guaranteed of a medal after the knockout win sent him to the semi-final.

Winwood told Seven after his fight how he disagreed with the referee’s decision, but respected it nonetheless.

“I think it was a pretty fast call,” he said.

“I won the first round, and I felt like I won it quite clearly. And I wasn’t hurt previously, nor was I punched significantly.

“I really wanted to have a shot and prove myself. I know what I’m made of – I wanted to show Australia, and the world, what Australians are made of.”

Winwood then got emotional as he laid out a special message to his country.

“Thank you, Australia,” he said with tears beginning to well in his eyes.

“You mean so much to me, from the bottom of my heart.

“As an Indigenous Australian, I love you all, up the Aussies!”

See the emotional moment in the video player below

Alex Winwood’s emotional message to Australia

Alex Winwood’s emotional message to Australia

Was the ruling the right call?

Our 2018 Commonwealth Games gold medalist, Harry Garside, doesn’t believe it was a fair ruling.

“You’ve got to wait until the opponent gets up and then you’ve got to give him eight seconds, and you’ve got to look into his eyes and see where his legs are,” he told Seven after the fight.

“She waves it off way to prematurely.”

Harry Garside has weighed into the controversial call against Alex Winwood. Credit: 7Sport

Although Garside sympathized with the referee after Winwood turned his back on her as he started to get back to his feet, Garside said it was the wrong call to make so quickly.

“She should have given Winwood eight seconds to recover,” he said.

“You’ve got to look into the fighter’s eyes – that’s where you’ll see if he’s dazed or if he’s rocked, it’s always in the eyes.

“And she didn’t even get a chance to do that. She called it off way too quickly.”

Just like Tokyo 2020 on Seven, there will be one destination to watch every epic feat, every medal moment, every record attempt and every inspiring turn from the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games.

7plus is the only place to watch up to 30 live and replay channels of sport, see what’s on when, keep up to date with the medal tally, create a watchlist to follow your favorite events and catch up on highlights.

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Australia

Farmers reeling from ‘preventable’ summer bushfires demand inquiry

It has been six months since a devastating bushfire ripped through WA’s Wheatbelt region, and impacted farmers are still counting the cost.

The Shire of Corrigin, 220 kilometers east of Perth, was among the regions hardest hit.

About 45,000 hectares of land was burned, four homes, and dozens of buildings destroyed, and more than 1,000 livestock perished after a prescribed stubble burn reignited in what authorities labeled “catastrophic conditions”.

One farmer caught in the fire’s path was Steven Bolt, who estimated millions of dollars in losses from the February blaze.

Mr Bolt is deputy chief of Corrigin’s Volunteer Fire Brigade and said the fire, which engulfed his property, could have been prevented.

“We all knew the risk coming that weekend, and for a permit to be issued is absolutely staggering, and the fire should never have happened, and the permit should have never been issued,” he said.

A farm's shed and machinery burns.
A shed burns in Corrigin during the February bushfires.(Twitter: Ashley Jacobs)

The neighboring Shire of Bruce Rock permitted the stubble burn several days before the blaze started on February 6.

An investigation by the WA Department of Fire and Emergency Services (DFES) found the authorized burn-off was reignited in 43-degree temperatures before it spread rapidly in strong winds.

No total fire ban was in place at the time, but Mr Bolt contacted authorities with his concerns.

He said his pleas were ignored.

“I told [them] this was going to happen and now it has, and we need all the resources we can find, particularly air support, because we were never going to stop that fire,” he said.

‘We don’t like coming out here anymore’

Correcting farmers Tim and Shannon Hardingham look at a shed with clouds behind them
Tim and Shannon Hardingham survey the damage on their property.(ABC Midwest & Wheatbelt: Sam McManus)

Tim and Shannon Hardingham run a farm 10km east of Corrigin.

Between paddocks of vibrant yellow canola crops now lies a metal scrap yard.

The Hardinghams said the past six months had been the hardest of their lives, and much of the recovery was still ahead of them.

“People who haven’t been through it have a lot of empathy, but there’s a daily struggle in what to do next because there’s just so much to do,” Ms Hardingham said.

“The single biggest cost that is shocking to us is the asbestos clean-up, which we’ve been quoted around $250,000 to clean up.”

Bushfire damage on the Hardingham's property in Correction
More bushfire destruction on the Hardingham’s Correcting property.(ABC Midwest & Wheatbelt: Sam McManus)

The couple now avoids coming out to the farm and have chosen to keep their kids away.

“It doesn’t even resemble the same farm,” Mr Hardingham said.

Please for answers

The burning permit that led to the fire was issued by the Shire of Bruce Rock, which declined to comment on the issue.

Shire president Stephen Strange said it had been a difficult time for the region, but praised the work of local authorities, volunteers, and the state government.

“The recovery will be ongoing for years and years to come… the farmers themselves have done a good job getting the landscape back into pretty good condition,” he said.

“The communication has been very good between affected landholders, community members, and the shire.”

In a statement, DFES acting deputy commissioner Jon Broomhall said the Bruce Rock Shire was within its rights to grant the burning permit, and an “after-action review is currently underway, focusing on the four bushfires that occurred across the state that day.”

Correcting farmer Steven Bolt with one of his sheds destroyed by bushfire
Mr Bolt with one of his sheds destroyed by bushfire.(ABC Midwest & Wheatbelt: Sam McManus)

But local farmers and firefighters said they had so far been left in the dark.

Mr Bolt was calling for a separate investigation into the Correcting fire.

“This needs to be a standalone inquiry. The issue of the permit being given is different to what occurred in the other fires,” he said.

“We haven’t even come close to being able to discuss the issues that have led to this catastrophe through this area,” he said.

Law firm Hall & Wilcox has been engaged by insurers representing impacted landholders, with inquiries still in the early stages.

Ms Hardingham said a thorough investigation could help prevent similar incidents in the future.

“We don’t find ourselves privy to much information about what went wrong,” she said.

“It would be nice to think it will never happen to anyone again and that people could learn from our loss and what we’ve gone through.”

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US

Dick Cheney calls Donald Trump a ‘coward’ in new ad supporting daughter’s reelection bid

“In our nation’s 246-year history, there has never been an individual who is a greater threat to our republic than Donald Trump,” the former vice president says in the 60-second spot released Thursday. “He tried to steal the last election using lies and violence to keep himself in power after the voters had rejected him.”

“He is a coward. A real man wouldn’t lie to his supporters. He lost his election and he lost big. I know it, he knows it and, deep down, I think most Republicans know it,” Cheney says.

He goes on to say he “proudly voted” for his daughter, who is the vice chair of the House select committee investigating the January 6, 2021, insurrection. “There is nothing more important she will ever do than lead the effort to make sure Donald Trump is never again near the Oval Office.”

Though Cheney has occasionally criticized Trump and his administration’s policies, the new ad underscores his deep opposition to the former President, who has made defeating Liz Cheney a top political priority after she voted to impeach him last year and has remained a vocal critic.
Trump has endorsed Harriet Hageman in the August 16 primary, who’s one of four challengers taking on the three-term congresswoman for the nomination for the at-large House seat. Her rivals of her have attacked Cheney over her role as one of two Republicans on the January 6 panel, and have dismissed that probe’s importance of her.

Like Trump, Hageman has made false claims about the 2020 election, citing the “2000 Mules” film that peddles conspiracy theories about ballot drop boxes and “Zuckerberg money” — a reference to donations from Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan , through a nonprofit to help local election officials navigate the coronavirus pandemic.

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Business

UK woman’s viral TikTok after On The Beach didn’t share flight cancellation

A woman has revealed her horror experience after she turned up to the airport only to find out her flight had been canceled five months earlier.

The British woman who goes by the handle ‘Paris Hilton’ on TikTok explained in a series of viral clips she booked a holiday package through UK-based online travel agent On The Beach in October last year.

It cost a total of $A4500 and included flights, accommodation and transfers.

She and her partner were scheduled to fly out from Bristol Airport at 6am on May 4 to Thessaloniki, Greece on budget airline Jet2.

“All was fine up until the day before the holiday,” she said in a viral clip.

“We booked a hotel for the night at Bristol as we were flying at 6am the following morning and [the airport] is about two hours from us.”

“We arrived at the hotel at 9pm the night before and decided to check in online,” she said.

After struggling to find the flight number online, the woman and her partner decided to go to the airport where she explained the situation to a Jet2 staffer.

However, she was told it “doesn’t exist”.

“[The woman] said they do not fly to Thessaloniki and there is no flight tomorrow at 6am. I am such a nervous flyer as it is, I absolutely hate it, so to hear this gave me the biggest anxiety of my life.”

Paris said the staffer told her the flight was canceled back in December, five months before they were due to fly out.

“We were not told about any of this. We even got an email to fill in a form for our flight two days before,” she claimed.

She also called the Thessaloniki hotel to triple check it was still booked and thankfully she was told they were expecting her and her partner.

The woman said, given the holiday was booked and planned months ago and she had taken the time off work, she and her boyfriend decided to book another flight and go ahead with the trip.

The only other available option was a flight for the same time but from London Gatwick Airport – three hours away from Bristol.

The new flight cost £517 ($A900) plus petrol and parking – “and the hotel went to waste because we didn’t even stay there”.

They arrived at Gatwick Airport at 2.30am, and by the time the pair eventually arrived in Greece they’d had “no sleep for 30 hours”.

“We couldn’t even comprehend we were on a holiday or get excited because we were just not even with it,” she said.

“We spent the whole holiday trying to catch up on sleep.”

The woman emailed On The Beach about the issue and claimed she didn’t receive a response until five weeks later.

“The only excuse they had to give us was that there was an error and apparently they tried to give us a refund but it didn’t go through.”

She shared a screenshot breaking down all the extra expenses involved because of the issue, which included $A260 for parking at Gatwick Airport and $A104 in petrol money for a total of 11 hours of driving.

Overall, the trip cost them almost double the original price.

“All they were willing to give back was £800 ($A1400) which was the difference in the flight and the parking and the transfers,” she said.

“It’s not so much about the money as they offered to give us something back. It’s more the fact we feel completely cheated of this holiday and it [was] nearly ruined.”

She said holidays are meant to be fun and exiting, but for her it was tarnished by her horrible experience, adding that she was expecting more of a sympathetic response from the company.

“I know people who have had great experiences [with the company] but it’s from my experience and what has happened to me.”

She said she understands mistakes happen, but the company had five months to let her know.

“I don’t have the spare cash, my partner did. I would have had to go home and there couldn’t be another week I could have taken this holiday,” she said.

“I want them to take accountability and responsibility. They said it was an error and that’s not good enough.”

In the comments section on her viral TikTok, the company wrote: “You’re right, this sounds like a terrible experience and I can only apologize!”

But the traveler hit back, saying: “An apology isn’t going to cut it.”

“We will be taking this a lot further ’til we feel we have been fully compensated and you won’t do this again to anyone ever.”

She also shared a screenshot of an email she had received from the company apologizing over the matter.

It read: “Thank you for contacting us about your recent holiday. Feedback, whether good or bad, is extremely important to us.

“We also understand that a lot of time and effort goes into the planning of your holiday, so naturally we want everything to run as smoothly as possible for you. Consequently I’m really sorry to note your concerns in relation to On the Beach’s service.

“I understand that due to system error on arrival at the airport the airline had no booking for you. We do apologize that this occurred and I have arranged a refund of the flight costs which is the cost of your original flight plus the difference for you new flight. We are sorry to disappoint you but we would not reimburse you for the hotel you chose at Bristol, nor the carparking at this location.”

Paris said she found the response to be lacking empathy, adding: “I don’t even know how this even happens. I get even more angry each time I look at it!”

She said she still has not received the reimbursement and warned viewers to triple check flights, accommodation and transfers, if they book with online agents.

“I did not want someone to go through the same thing. If this has reached as many people who have booked a holiday through these companies all I can ask you to do is take it in your own hands.

“Ring the airline, make sure that flight is there, ring the hotel make sure you still have a hotel.”

Read related topics:TikTok

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Sports

A week of reconnection with family and culture has reunited Robert Muir and the St Kilda football club

It had already been a week of emotional homecomings when Robert Muir returned to St Kilda Football Club’s Moorabbin training facility last Friday, but the Boon Wurrung greeting written in giant letters above the Saints’ new players’ entrance heralded an important new beginning: “Womindjeka — eat with purpose”.

It didn’t need repeating that Muir hadn’t always felt so welcome in the 38 years since he played the last of his 68 games in the red, white and black.

Robert Muir and his grandson Nathan at St Kilda's training base in Moorabbin.
Robert Muir and his grandson Nathan were impressed by St Kilda’s many visible signs of respect for Indigenous culture.(ABC News: Russell Jackson)

Yet his passion for St Kilda is undimmed. Two years on from telling his painful and poignant story about him, his purpose was to reconnect and see what’s changed. St Kilda, after some false starts, was eager to show its progress.

Saints CEO Matt Finnis and the club’s Indigenous development manager Aunty Katrina Amon showed the way, guiding Muir and a strong contingent of his grandchildren and great-grandchildren around the rebuilt Moorabbin.

There was one hitch: in Muir’s wilderness years, much of the extended family’s allegiance had shifted to Hawthorn. A dozen Saints scarves quickly materialized and there was talk of a mass conversion, but a lifetime habit seemed hard to break when they swamped Saints assistant coach Jarryd Roughead for photos.

Jai Walker and his son Kaiden meet Hawks great Jarryd Roughead.
Jai Walker and his son Kaiden meet Hawks great Jarryd Roughead, who is now an assistant coach at St Kilda.(Supplied: Jail Walker)

His partner Donna Pickett at his side, Muir was wide-eyed at the club’s transformation from what he’d known in the bad old days — not just the sincerity of his efforts to reconcile with him, but its gleaming new facilities and the general air of professionalism.

An eager trainer in his playing days, Muir responded with amazement to the well-appointed gym.

“If I was playing now, I’d be in here seven days a week,” he says.

I didn’t want to leave.

Most important to Muir and his family was St Kilda’s embrace of them and the many visible displays of pride in the club’s Indigenous players of the past and present.

On the walls of the “Yawa” room, a key meeting place for the nine Indigenous players on the Saints’ current playing list, hang framed photographs of each of their forebears.

Robert Muir and his family inside St Kilda's Yawa room.
Among the many transformations at St Kilda’s Moorabbin base is the club’s Yawa room, whose walls are lined with photographs of the club’s Indigenous players.(ABC News: Russell Jackson)

It gladdened Muir that Jade Gresham, also a Yorta Yorta man, could see the tradition he was part of. After training, Gresham was one of several players to stop by for a chat.

Building on work done by Nathan Lovett-Murray, Amon, a Quandamooka woman with more than three decades of experience in the education sector, talks of her work with passion and pride. It has made an immediate impact in both the club’s football and administrative departments.

Robert Muir and partner Donna Pickett speak with Bradley Hill and Ben Long.
After training last Friday, Bradley Hill and Ben Long were among the Saints players to connect with Robert Muir and his partner Donna Pickett.(St Kilda Football Club)

Many small things St Kilda tended to get wrong in the past are now being done right. A voice among the Muir party summarized Amon’s approach well: “ella She gets it.”

“The club has been working really hard to make Indigenous people feel comfortable in our space — to feel welcome and that we honor and respect Aboriginal culture,” Amon says.

“We also want non-Indigenous people to feel comfortable enough to ask questions and investigate our culture, because our culture is their culture.”

The Muir family’s week of reconnection had begun days earlier with a trip back to Yorta Yorta country — an overdue and profound experience they hope is the beginning of a deeper connection to their culture.

Robert Muir and his family in Yorta Yorta country.
A highlight of the trip for Muir’s family was being back in Yorta Yorta country and hearing stories.(Supplied: Donna Pickett)

“It felt good,” Muir says.

“I just sat there, watching the kids. They had a ball. We showed them all the canoe trees and made a walking stick. I told them stories and we had a smoking ceremony. It bonded them all.”

“We just need to do it more and get more of the family involved.”

Muir’s grandson Jai Walker, who lives in Victoria’s Gippsland region, said he was determined to make it a more regular tradition with his own son, Kaiden.

Robert Muir and his family walking around Yorta Yorta country.
A highlight of the trip for Muir’s family was being back in Yorta Yorta country and hearing stories.(Supplied: Donna Pickett)

For Saturday’s game against Hawthorn, St Kilda asked Muir and grandson Nathan to enter the arena shortly before game time to carry out the club’s exchange of cultural gifts.

The crowd’s applause was nice, better still the highlight reel of Muir at his best that played on the stadium’s big screens. St Kilda’s media team had gone above and beyond to create it.

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In a scrappy game, the Saints held on for a two-goal victory. Amid the worst of the fumbling and turnovers, Muir’s main frustration was that he couldn’t go back out into the middle, grab the ball and stride down the wing.

Afterwards, Finnis called it “a particularly heartwarming couple of days”, seeing Muir and his family reconnect with the club.

“At St Kilda we openly talk about the yawa (or journey) that we are on when it comes to reconciliation and developing a culturally safe and supportive environment for all first nation’s people – be they players, staff, supporters and of course former players such as Robbie,” Finnis says.

Robert Muir and Matt Finnis speak to fans at a club training session.
Robert Muir and St Kilda chief executive Matt Finnis talk to some of the Saints fans who were eager to meet Muir at last Friday’s club training session at Moorabbin.(St Kilda Football Club)

“It’s small steps and we continue to learn every day. Having Robbie back at the club last week and seeing the pride his family holds in his achievements inspires us to continue our journey with real purpose.”

The fans, too, flocked to Muir’s side. Both at Moorabbin on Friday and on game day, a procession of them sidled up to shake his hand and say thanks. At the footy, they’re Muir’s people. He stops and chats with every one of them.

Seeing the reception for his Pop, Muir’s Ballarat-based grandson Jackson Kanoa wasn’t surprised. In years gone by, he always felt the disconnect between Muir’s media image and the things he’d hear around town.

“When you meet people who really know him, they never have a bad word to say about him,” Kanoa says.

Robert Muir chats with Rowan Marshall at a St Kilda training session.
Muir caught up with Rowan Marshall at St Kilda’s training session.(St Kilda Football Club)

But more than anything, Muir is a player’s man. His right knee of him is giving him hell these days, but on Friday, he wanted to climb the stairs of the club’s new Danny Frawley Center and belatedly pay his respects to a fellow son of Ballarat.

At the top of the new building, Muir broke away from the group and limped towards a ceiling-high portrait of Frawley’s face made from mosaic tiles.

Lost in the moment, the old Saint reached for the tiles that made up his former teammate’s face. When he stroked Frawley’s cheek, it was with the tenderness reserved for family.

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Australia

Bay Run to Cooks River greenway funding boost

Residents of Sydney’s inner west are one step closer to being able to walk, run and cycle between the Cooks River and Iron Cove after the state government committed an additional $9.8 million towards the long-awaited greenway.

The shared path, which will follow the route of the Inner West Light Rail Line, is one of 55 projects in the greater Sydney region to receive a share of $40 million of funding that will be unveiled by the NSW government on Friday.

Active transport minister Rob Stokes said the grants would give families added opportunities for commuting and recreation, giving them the chance to leave the car at home and “leave more money in hip-pockets”.

The path to the Richard Murden Reserve in Haberfield has already been completed.

The path to the Richard Murden Reserve in Haberfield has already been completed.Credit:Wolter-Peeters

“The evidence is clear that investing in active transport infrastructure makes local communities happier, healthier and more productive,” he said.

The shared path, or greenway, will provide a continuous link between the Cooks River cycle path and the popular Bay Run at Iron Cove, which is close to city bike corridors.

The Inner West Council approved a master plan for the greenway in 2018 and expected it to be in use by the end of 2021, but the $45 million project is now slated for completion by 2024.

Greens councilor Marghanita da Cruz said funding had been one of the major delays to the project. She said building the greenway would help keep up with development in the area, as well as increased demand for recreation after coronavirus lockdowns.

“I don’t know why it’s taken so long because that extra pathway is really important to the community,” she said.

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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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Sports

NRL news 2022: Corey Oates try forward pass video, Roosters vs Broncos score

Nothing seemed to go right for Brisbane Broncos on Thursday evening, but Kevin Walters’ men were perhaps lucky to be awarded their second try against the Sydney Roosters at the SCG.

The Broncos were trailing by 20 points in the 60th minute when five-eighth Ezra Mam floated a pass over the Roosters defensive line towards winger Corey Oates, who dived over for the try.

But replays suggested the pass was forward, with Mam releasing the ball behind the 10m line and Oates catching it approximately eight meters out.

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The referee believed the ball was passed backwards but floated forwards — which is legal. The Sydney crowd didn’t agree though, with a chorus of boos echoing around the stadium when replays were shown on the big screen.

“Man, that’s way forward,” Channel 9 commentator Mathew Thompson said. “Oh he’s going to let it go. He’s let it go!

“It can’t have been thrown back either.”

Melbourne Storm legend Cameron Smith continued: “Seriously? Unless it’s come off a Rooster’s hand … I think that ball has drifted forward about three meters.”

Former New South Wales representative Michael Ennis agreed on Fox League. “The pass from Ezra Mam looked like it was two meters forward out of his hands from him,” he said.

“It certainly went forward.”

Regardless, the Roosters have taken another important step towards securing a top eight berth after beating Brisbane 34-16.

Trent Robinson’s men weren’t at their ruthless best, but a fourth straight win has put their premiership rivals on notice.

The Roosters started the round at risk of dropping to ninth but will finish the weekend either seventh or eighth, keeping their closest pursuers at bay for at least another week.

They have a tough run home over the closing month – meeting North Queensland, Wests Tigers, Melbourne and South Sydney – but who would be foolish enough to declare the Chooks won’t reach the finals for a sixth straight season?

And any team featuring James Tedesco, Joey Manu, Jared Waerea-Hargreaves, Luke Keary, Victor Radley and Joseph Suaalii will be a threat come September.

“We feel like we’ve worked hard enough this year and tried different things (and) it’s time to play better,” Robinson said.

“The last month has been good and we’re improving but we’ve got to keep going.”

Skipper Tedesco added: “We’re still chasing that 80-minute performance but we’re getting better and better.”

The Roosters led this must-win game 18-0 after as many minutes, pouring through the Broncos’ ineffectual defense and eating up the meters with ease.

It took the hosts just five minutes to open the Broncos up, a lovely bat-on pass from Tedesco handing Paul Momirovski an open passage to the line.

Sam Walker engineered the next try three minutes later with a clever chip kick into the in-goal for Nat Butcher to reach out and ground the ball with his fingertips.

When Angus Crichton pushed through some Brisbane’s flimsy right-edge defense to reach out and score, the Roosters were headed for an 18-0 lead and complete control of a one-sided contest.

Then they took the foot from the throat, inviting Brisbane back into the game.

The Broncos scored through Corey Oates to narrow the gap to 14 as the Roosters’ completion rate went through the floor.

Robinson told the Tricolours to park the fancy stuff in the second half – and they did – but they still came up with three tries to snuff out any hope of a Brisbane revival.

Keary was superb, putting the finishing touches on a standout performance with a brilliant individual try 12 minutes from the end.

We were expecting a strong response from the Broncos following their shock loss to Wests Tigers, but they fired a few decent shots in another worrying performance.

Their attack was pedestrian and clunky for most of the night and there wasn’t much in the way of whack in defense.

The visitors were chasing the game from the outset and did well to avoid a blowout, although they never really looked like mounting any sort of concerted comeback.

“At 18-0 we got a bit of momentum back and (then) a couple of things didn’t go to plan,” Brisbane skipper Adam Reynolds said.

“It’s obviously disappointing, but it’s a learning curve. We’re still a young team that’s figuring it out.”

Brisbane could finish the round as low as seventh if Parramatta and Souths win their respective matches.

With Adam Lucius, NCA NewsWire

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Australia

Scandals call into question Guy’s political judgment

Back in 2017, the Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission (IBAC) decided against investigating Guy’s lobster dinner determining the catch-up didn’t fall within its jurisdiction.

But Guy went on to suffer a humiliating defeat at the 2018 poll which the Victorian Liberal Party’s own review linked to the enormous damage caused by that infamous meal at a Beaumaris restaurant. It found the scandal was “used repeatedly and effectively to undermine him”.

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“In the environment of 2018 it was not necessary to fully articulate let alone authenticate the case, it was enough to allege and thus badge it strongly in voters’ minds,″⁣ the review found.

With 16 weeks until the election, that should sound alarm bells for the Coalition.

There is a risk that the latest untidy affair will cause voters to add it to the mountain of baggage Guy already carries. From controversial planning decisions, to rolling Michael O’Brien. It’s likely to all add up.

Labour, which has amassed an impressive portfolio of scandals since coming to office, is unlikely to benefit electorally from the opposition’s woes. Instead, political strategists believe the saga will fuel a wider perception that the major parties are both up to no good and push voters to search for another option.

If the federal election is to be any guide, such a scenario will have a bigger impact on the Liberal Party which is so far at greater risk from independent candidates who purport to be holier than you and will campaign on a pledge to clean up politics.

Guy and many of his supporters are trying to deflect from the drama by focusing on the source of the leak, and any possible reasons for it.

As a political strategy, such a diversion may boost internal morality, but there is a risk that Liberal MPs let the myth set in that this scandal has been unfairly imposed on Guy and not a mess of his own making.

Guy may be frustrated that his integrity has been called into question over a contract which he insists was never executed. Particularly when his political rivals of him have been caught using public money to pay for election campaign staff, rampant nepotism, attempts to interfere with government grants and dogged by expenses scandals.

But protesting that the leak or any subsequent probes are unfair is a political red herring and masks the abysmal judgment that led to these scandals.

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Five years later even Guy’s biggest fans question his decision to go to the Lobster Cave with an alleged mobster, particularly when he wanted to run a law and order campaign.

As one former Liberal MP said yesterday: “I never thought it was a problem that he went to the dinner, it was the fact that when he got there and realized what was happening, he failed to leave.”

The latest scandal again raises questions about Guy’s integrity and judgment.

If, as Guy insists, the deal didn’t go ahead, why did he accept the resignation of his chief of staff? And if, as an email seen by The Age indicates, Guy was aware of the proposed contract why did it take him 10 months to act?

At best, Guy is a victim of his own carelessness. But in both cases he let ambition or ignorance cloud his political judgment of him.