Categories
Australia

Labor slashes Morrison government’s ‘unrealistic’ productivity forecasts | australian economy

The Albanese government has slashed the forecast of future gains in national productivity, saying the Coalition had relied on unrealistic predictions that hoped “no one would notice”.

The move cuts the estimate for future annual productivity growth by a fifth, from 1.5% to 1.2%. The revised forecast is in line with the average over the past 20 years and could lop billions of dollars off the size of future economic output.

“Australians are up for hearing real talk about where our country is positioned, so we can have an honest and serious conversation about where we need to go next,” the treasurer, Jim Chalmers, said. “This wasn’t the previous government’s approach, but it will be our approach.”

The previous forecast, relied on for wider predictions in the Intergenerational Report and the budgets of the Morrison government, was unrealistic, he said. Productivity measures how much economic output can be generated from a given set of resources.

“They never got near it but budget after budget, they pretended they would and hoped no one would notice,” Chalmers said.

The revisions have already been plugged into the forecasts Chalmers used in this economic statement last week which predicted slower GDP growth and higher inflation before it starts to subside next year.

The Productivity Commission on Wednesday also released the first report of its latest five-year reform series, showing productivity growth is at its slowest in 60 years. At 1.2%, though, the government’s revised target is higher than it has been in more than a decade.

As per the latest Productivity Commission report, here’s how we’re tracking – and why the 1.5% growth rate used in the final Morrison-Frydenberg budget was more than optimistic… pic.twitter.com/ccSu4KU3N8

— Peter Hannam (@p_hannam) August 3, 2022

John Hawkins, a senior lecturer at the University of Canberra and former senior economist at Treasury and the Reserve Bank, said the lower productivity growth estimate is “a welcome step towards more realistic forecasts”.

The 1.5% growth may have been in line with the average over the past 30 years but that period included the “golden age” of economic reform during the Keating era and the early Howard/Costello years, Hawkins said.

“In the past two decades productivity growth has been much lower and there is no reason to expect an imminent surge,” he said. “Even 1.2% would represent a small acceleration.”

The challenge for accelerating productivity growth, though, is that most policies can take a long period to implement and to take effect.

“Improving education, making the tax system more efficient, reforming regulations, restructuring the health system and improving infrastructure are long-term projects,” Hawkins said. “Many of the 1980s reforms were one-off. You can only float the dollar eleven. You can only get rid of tariffs once.”

Making childcare more accessible may be one helpful policy to the extent it makes it easier for more people to join the workforce, increasing national income and tax revenue in the process, he said.

Shaving off 0.3 percentage points from current tax revenue estimates for 2023-24 would create a $25bn-a-year shortfall by 2033-34, with cumulative losses of $120bn for that decade, Hawkins estimated.

The impact of a lower productivity growth rate over time is significant. As noted in the Intergenerational Report, real and nominal GDP will be down almost 10% out to 2060-61 when a 1.2% rather than 1.5% is assumed. pic.twitter.com/VhhOaRXB7p

— Peter Hannam (@p_hannam) August 3, 2022

According to the sensitivity analysis contained in the Intergenerational Report, real and nominal GDP are both projected to be about 9.5% lower by 2060-61 if the 1.2% productivity growth rate is applied, rather than 1.5%.

“Nominal gross national income per person is also projected to be $32,000 lower by the end of the projection period compared with the baseline,” it said, adding that wages would also be 9.25% lower and tax targets reached two years later.

Categories
US

Trump made 42 endorsements in recent primaries. Here’s who won—and who we’re still waiting on.

Still, Trump’s chosen candidate for Arizona secretary of state, Mark Finchem, has maintained a lead. He’s a poster child for election deniers, and he could conceivably win in November should he clinch the nomination.

One win was the most technical yet: Trump announced late Monday that “ERIC has my complete and total endorsement!” It left voters to make up their minds as both Senate “ERIC” candidates rushed to thank Trump. In the end, state attorney general Eric Schmitt came out with the victory, much to the relief of top Republicans nationwide.

The former president also endorsed more down ballot candidates in Michigan than anywhere else, making good on his promise from when he visited the state in April: “This is not just about 2022… This is about making sure Michigan is not rigged and stolen again in 2024.”

Arizona wins so far

AZ04

Rep. Paul Gosar

Won with 64 percent of the vote. I have voted to overturn 2020 election results.

Trump endorsed the incumbent representative the day after Gosar’s chamber passed a resolution to remove the congressman from committee assignments for posting an anime video appearing to attack Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and President Joe Biden.

Gosar has been on the margins within the House this year, even gaining rebuke from House minority leader Kevin McCarthy for speaking at a white nationalist event in March. But Trump said the congressman “he has been a loyal supporter of our America First agenda, and even more importantly, the USA.”

AZ08

Rep. Debbie Lesko

Unopposed. She voted to overturn 2020 election results.

Still pending in Arizona

  • Kari Lake (governor)
  • abraham hamadeh (Attorney General)
  • Mark Finchem (Secretary of State)
  • Blake Masters (Senate)
  • David Schweiker (AZ01)
  • Eli Crane (AZ02)
  • wendy rogers (State Senate District 7)
  • Rob Scantlebury (State Senate District 9)
  • David Farnsworth (State Senate District 10)
  • Anthony Kern (State Senate District 27)
  • Janae Shamp (State Senate District 29)

Kansas wins

GOVERNOR

Derek Schmidt

Won with around 81 percent of the vote.

SENATE

Jerry Moran

Won with around 81 percent of the vote.

KS01

Rep. Tracey Mann

Unopposed. She voted to overturn 2020 election results.

missouri wins

MO03

Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer

Won with 70 percent of the vote. I have voted to overturn 2020 election results.

MO06

Rep. Sam Graves

Won with 76 percent of the vote.

MO08

Rep. Jason Smith

Won with 82 percent of the vote. I have voted to overturn 2020 election results.

Michigan wins so far

GOVERNOR

Tudor Dixon

Won with around 40 percent of the vote.

Trump gave a last-minute endorsement to Dixon last week, ahead of an already competitive and chaotic gubernatorial election, in which five contenders were disqualified and one was charged with misdemeanors related to the Jan. 6 riots. By the time Trump got involved, two of the front-runners had been removed from the race and Dixon had already attracted high-profile supporters, including former Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos’ family.

Even so, Trump credited himself with boosting his campaign “like a rocket ship.”

“When I met Tudor Dixon, she was not well known, but I could tell she had something very special,” he said in his endorsement.

ATTORNEY GENERAL

Matthew DePerno

Not chosen by a primary vote — expected to receive the party’s nomination at a convention later in August.

SECRETARY OF STATE

kristina karamo

Not chosen by a primary vote — expected to receive the party’s nomination at a convention later in August.

Karamo, who is part of the same coalition of secretary of state hopefuls as Finchem, gained prominence as a poll challenger in 2020 after claiming Michigan’s election machines were fraudulent. Trump said Karamo was strong on crime, adding, “Good luck, Kristina, and while you’re at it, check out the Fake Election results that took place in the city of Detroit.”

MI02

Rep. Bill Huizenga

Unopposed.

MI03

John Gibbs

Won with around 53 percent of the vote.

Gibbs, Trump’s former director of the Office of Personnel Management, faced a key rival: Rep. Peter Meijer, one of 10 House Republicans who voted in favor of impeachment.

As the congressman’s poll numbers dropped for his vote decision, Gibbs was able to overcome Meijer’s household name status and funding. Unlike Meijer, the “terrible representative of the Republican Party… [Gibbs] will not turn his back on Michigan,” Trump said in his endorsement.

MI04

Rep. John Moolenaar

Won with 65 percent of the vote.

MI07

Rep. Tim Walberg

Won with 67 percent of the vote. I have voted to overturn 2020 election results.

MI09

Lisa McClain

Won with 79 percent of the vote.

MI10

John James

Won with 87 percent of the vote.

STATE HOUSE DISTRICT 36

Steve Carra

Won with 40 percent of the vote.

state senate district 17

Jonathan Lindsay

Won with 61 percent of the vote.

state house district 51

matt maddock

Unopposed.

Still pending in Michigan

  • Mike Detmer (State Senate District 22)
  • Rachelle Smith (State House District 43)
  • Jackie Eubanks (State House District 63)
  • Kevin Rathbun (State House District 71)
  • jon rocha (Write in candidate—State House District 78)
  • angela riga (State House District 79)
  • mike hoadley (State House District 99)

Still pending in Washington

  • joe kent (WA03)
  • loren culp (WA04)

ICYMI: A Maryland win on July 19

GOVERNOR

Daniel Cox

Won with 52 percent of the vote.

Cox is a former state delegate who chartered buses for the Jan. 6 Capitol riot and regularly promoted Trump’s stolen election theories.

His win was a blow to the state GOP’s moderate wing and its ability to influence Maryland voters. But it was especially sweet for Trump, who backed Cox over term-limited Gov. Larry Hogan’s pick, Kelly Schulz. They all have history: Hogan repeatedly criticized Trump while he was in office, while Cox attempted to impeach the Maryland governor in February.

Trump took a hit at both Hogan and Schulz in a statement before the July 19 election, asking voters to “Get rid of Shutdown RINO Larry Hogan who is trying to get another RINO into office, Kelly Schulz.”

Categories
Entertainment

Princess Charlotte’s animated display steals the show at the Commonwealth Games alongside Prince William and Kate Middleton

Princess Charlotte joined her parents Prince William and Kate, Duchess of Cambridge, for their first appearance at the Commonwealth Games.

The family was spotted arriving and sitting in the audience of the swimming and later hockey, cheering on the athletes on Tuesday.

WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Adorable moment Prince Louis sits on Prince Charles’ lap

For more Royal Family related news and videos check out Royal Family >>

They also made an appearance at the gymnastics, watching the ends of the men’s horizontal bar and women’s floor exercise.

Seven-year-old Charlotte was wearing a nautical white and navy striped dress, with a white collar and sandals.

She had her hair in two braids for the occasion.

Prince William, Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, and Princess Charlotte. Credit: Chris Jackson/Getty Images
An excited Princess Charlotte. Credit: Mark Cuthbert/UK Press via Getty Images
Prince William and Princess Charlotte. Credit: Mark Cuthbert/UK Press via Getty Images

Meanwhile, Kate was in all white, wearing a pantsuit and belt with her hair in her signature loose curls.

Similar to Prince Louis’ memorable appearance during the Queen’s Jubilee weekend, Charlotte was seen pulling animated faces as she watched the competition.

On the final day of the Jubilee celebrations in June, Louis was seen pulling faces and jumping around while seated in the royal box.

The Cambridges at the ends of the men’s horizontal bar and women’s floor exercise. Credit: to the beautiful/Getty Images
Princess Charlotte watches the swimming. Credit: Chris Jackson/Getty Images
Princess Charlotte celebrates a win. Credit: David Davies – PA Images/PA Images via Getty Images
Prince William, Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, and Princess Charlotte visit Sportsid House. Credit: Chris Jackson/Getty Images

It’s the first appearance by the Cambridge family at the Commonwealth Games since they began on Friday.

Along with watching the sport, the family visited SportsAid House, of which the duchess is a patron.

Also in Birmingham for the Games were Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall.

The future king opened the Games, arriving at the ceremony in a vintage Aston Martin.

Prince Louis plays up at the Platinum Jubilee concert. Credit: Mark Cuthbert/UK Press via Getty Images

Prince Charles opens the Games

Charles went on to read a special message from Queen Elizabeth, which had been placed in the baton that traveled across the Commonwealth over the past nine months in the lead-up to the Games.

The Queen’s youngest son, Prince Edward, and his wife, Sophie, Countess of Wessex, and Princess Anne attended the Games on Friday.

The Commonwealth Games, originally the Empire Games, have been running every four years outside of wartime since 1930.

The Birmingham Games – which have brought together the 56 countries currently in the Commonwealth – run from July 28 to August 8.

Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, and Prince Charles arrive during the Opening Ceremony. Credit: David Ramos/Getty Images

The appearance from Princess Charlotte comes after she and her father Prince William made a sweet video for the English women’s soccer team, the Lionesses.

Along with William, Charlotte wished the Lionesses luck for their final game against Germany in the Women’s Euro 2022 competition on Sunday.

“We both want to wish the Lionesses the best of luck tonight, you’ve done amazingly well in the competition and we’re rooting for you all the way!” The Duke of Cambridge, 40, began the message.

WATCH THE VIDEO BELOW: Princess Charlotte speaks in rare family video

Princess Charlotte speaks in rare family video.

Princess Charlotte speaks in rare family video.

Charlotte, seven, added “Good luck! I hope you win. Bye!”

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge posted the video on social media on Sunday with the caption, “Good luck tonight @Lionesseswe’re all cheering for you!”

The soccer team went on to post the video prior to the game, in which they beat Germany 2-1.

For more engaging royal content, visit 7Life on Facebook.

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Sports

‘Ecstatic’ reaction as para-athlete Col Pearse claims Commonwealth Games gold

From a life-changing accident as a toddler to bravely leaving home to pursue his dream as a teenager, Col Pearse’s journey to Commonwealth Games glory – including training in a farm dam – has been anything but easy.

Hailing from Bamawm Extension, near Echuca, the para-athlete came first in the S10 100-metre butterfly race with a time of 59.61 seconds, defeating fellow Australian Alex Saffy and England’s James Hollis, who came in third.

Pearse’s first Commonwealth gold medal comes after he claimed bronze in the S10 men’s 100m butterfly in his Paralympics debut in Tokyo last year.

The 19-year-old’s mother, Teena Pearse, got up early and nervously waited for almost three hours to watch the race from home.

“I haven’t been asleep since three o’clock,” she said.

“I love watching him swim live… but being at home, [I’m nervous]I don’t know if the time’s changed.”

His excited mother made his three siblings wake up early to watch their brother race.

“I made all the kids get up, I didn’t let his 21-year-old brother go to work.

A smiling young man in a wetsuit and swimming cap sits on the banks of a large dam with makeshift lane ropes.
Pearse converted a dam at his family’s farm into a training pool when Victoria went into lockdown.(ABC News: Tyrone Dalton)

A nail-biting wait

Pearse had his right foot amputated from below the ankle as a two-year-old in 2005 after an accident involving a ride-on lawn mower on his family’s farm at Bamawm Extension.

Ms Pearce said he had been working hard on his turn, but his style was to turn on the speed in the second half of the race.

“He runs his own race for the first 50, then really brings it home for the last 50,” she said.

She said the win was a blur and that a delayed medal ceremony caused a bit of concern.

“The boys raced before the girls, then they did the girls’ medal ceremony, before they did the boys,” she said.

“Usually when medal ceremonies are held up, they’re under dispute … like someone’s been disqualified or something’s not right.

“So we were really anxious [but] he gave us a quick ring and said, ‘It’s all OK — we’re just going to do it after the 800m freestyle.'”

Ms Pearce said she’d be celebrating her son’s gold medal at home.

“We’re having visitors over tonight,” she said.

“Going to make some gold lollies and things — there’ll be lots of celebrating in this house.”

A man in a bright swimming cap competes in a race.
Col Pearse made his Paralympic debut in Tokyo last year, where he won a bronze medal.(Getty: Alex Pantling)

‘Something so brilliant’

Dot and George Pearse watched their grandson win gold from their Bamawm Extension home.

Dot said she was “absolutely ecstatic” about the victory.

“Not only for myself, but mainly for Col because he’s reached his ambition,” she said.

“He’s done himself proud, he’s done his family proud, he’s done Victoria proud, he’s done Australia proud … and he’s done the Paralympics proud.”

Dot said her grandson had made a lot of sacrifices since losing his foot, including leaving home at a young age to train in Melbourne.

“He left here when he was only 14,” she said.

“He had to leave his school, his friends, his family, his home, his pets, and he had to sacrifice a lot of holidays.”

The grandmother said Pearse had turned an unfortunate accident into a success story through hard work and dedication.

“How I look at it, if he hadn’t had that accident when he was two, he wouldn’t be where he is today,” she said.

“I don’t know where he would be.

“Just think how he has put a wonderful cover on the accident and made something so awful that happened to him into something so brilliant — such marvelous success and happiness for so many people.”

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Categories
Australia

Five states in firing line as 130km/h winds move east

South Australia and Victory are next in line to be hit with the same damaging winds and dangerous seas felt by Western Australia earlier this week.
the most powerful cold front to hit Australia this winter is moving from west to east, bringing with it wind likes of up to 100km/h.
Homes right across the southern part of the country, including southern New South Wales and Tasmania, are under threat as the complex low pressure system moves across the country.
Wet weather is set to continue into spring across parts of Australia.
Wet weather is set to continue into spring across parts of Australia. (Bureau of Meteorology)
A mass power outage at Perth Airport has triggered chaos for passengers.
A mass power outage at Perth Airport has triggered chaos for passengers. (Supplied)
The Western Australian capital was battered by heavy winds and rain this week, with a ceiling coming down on a family overnightand a power outage at Perth Airport leaving hundreds stranded on the tarmac and in terminals.

Power was restored just after midnight, leaving multiple flights delayed or cancelled.

a travel warning has been issued as thick fog covers Brisbane this morning.

‘River City’ wakes to white-out as fog swallows city

Across the city, about 35,000 people lost power yesterday, with 10,000 still unable to turn on the lights this morning.

Heavy rainfall is expected in some regions, with isolated major flooding possible in catchments in southern NSW, northern Tasmania and north-east Victoria.

Storm Perth Western Australia
A cold front is going to hammer multiple states this week. (9News)

Winds exceeded speeds of more than 110km/h in some parts of Victoria, with warnings of gusts reaching 130km/h.

There were also reports of flooding in the south-east, and severe weather warnings in place across a number of areas, including the Central Highlands and Dandenong regions.

NSW has been warned to brace for possible severe thunderstorm activity from today.

Heavy rainfall between 45 and 60 mm are possible across the state’s Snowy Mountains and South West Slopes on Thursday.

A flood watch for inland NSW has been issued with possible flooding from Thursday.

There are a number of strong wind warnings for northern parts of Tasmania, as well as several minor flood warnings for the state.

Damaging wind gusts of 80 to 90 km/h are expected overnight on Wednesday.

The bureau has warned of already wet catchments across the flood watch areas, with rivers likely to be responsive to rainfall.

A minor flood warning is current for the Mersey, Meander, North Esk and Macquarie rivers.

The BoM is warning Victorian residents of localized rainfall of up to 60mm tomorrow morning, with thunderstorm activity is expected to increase during the day.

Categories
US

Trump made 42 endorsements in recent primaries. Here’s who won—and who we’re still waiting on.

Still, Trump’s chosen candidate for Arizona secretary of state, Mark Finchem, has maintained a lead. He’s a poster child for election deniers, and he could conceivably win in November should he clinch the nomination.

One win was the most technical yet: Trump announced late Monday that “ERIC has my complete and total endorsement!” It left voters to make up their minds as both Senate “ERIC” candidates rushed to thank Trump. In the end, state attorney general Eric Schmitt came out with the victory, much to the relief of top Republicans nationwide.

The former president also endorsed more down ballot candidates in Michigan than anywhere else, making good on his promise from when he visited the state in April: “This is not just about 2022… This is about making sure Michigan is not rigged and stolen again in 2024.”

Arizona wins so far

AZ04

Rep. Paul Gosar

Won with 64 percent of the vote. I have voted to overturn 2020 election results.

Trump endorsed the incumbent representative the day after Gosar’s chamber passed a resolution to remove the congressman from committee assignments for posting an anime video appearing to attack Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and President Joe Biden.

Gosar has been on the margins within the House this year, even gaining rebuke from House minority leader Kevin McCarthy for speaking at a white nationalist event in March. But Trump said the congressman “he has been a loyal supporter of our America First agenda, and even more importantly, the USA.”

AZ08

Rep. Debbie Lesko

Unopposed. She voted to overturn 2020 election results.

Still pending in Arizona

  • Kari Lake (governor)
  • abraham hamadeh (Attorney General)
  • Mark Finchem (Secretary of State)
  • Blake Masters (Senate)
  • David Schweiker (AZ01)
  • Eli Crane (AZ02)
  • wendy rogers (State Senate District 7)
  • Rob Scantlebury (State Senate District 9)
  • David Farnsworth (State Senate District 10)
  • Anthony Kern (State Senate District 27)
  • Janae Shamp (State Senate District 29)

Kansas wins

GOVERNOR

Derek Schmidt

Won with around 81 percent of the vote.

SENATE

Jerry Moran

Won with around 81 percent of the vote.

KS01

Rep. Tracey Mann

Unopposed. She voted to overturn 2020 election results.

missouri wins

MO03

Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer

Won with 70 percent of the vote. I have voted to overturn 2020 election results.

MO06

Rep. Sam Graves

Won with 76 percent of the vote.

MO08

Rep. Jason Smith

Won with 82 percent of the vote. I have voted to overturn 2020 election results.

Michigan wins so far

GOVERNOR

Tudor Dixon

Won with around 40 percent of the vote.

Trump gave a last-minute endorsement to Dixon last week, ahead of an already competitive and chaotic gubernatorial election, in which five contenders were disqualified and one was charged with misdemeanors related to the Jan. 6 riots. By the time Trump got involved, two of the front-runners had been removed from the race and Dixon had already attracted high-profile supporters, including former Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos’ family.

Even so, Trump credited himself with boosting his campaign “like a rocket ship.”

“When I met Tudor Dixon, she was not well known, but I could tell she had something very special,” he said in his endorsement.

ATTORNEY GENERAL

Matthew DePerno

Not chosen by a primary vote — expected to receive the party’s nomination at a convention later in August.

SECRETARY OF STATE

kristina karamo

Not chosen by a primary vote — expected to receive the party’s nomination at a convention later in August.

Karamo, who is part of the same coalition of secretary of state hopefuls as Finchem, gained prominence as a poll challenger in 2020 after claiming Michigan’s election machines were fraudulent. Trump said Karamo was strong on crime, adding, “Good luck, Kristina, and while you’re at it, check out the Fake Election results that took place in the city of Detroit.”

MI02

Rep. Bill Huizenga

Unopposed.

MI03

John Gibbs

Won with around 53 percent of the vote.

Gibbs, Trump’s former director of the Office of Personnel Management, faced a key rival: Rep. Peter Meijer, one of 10 House Republicans who voted in favor of impeachment.

As the congressman’s poll numbers dropped for his vote decision, Gibbs was able to overcome Meijer’s household name status and funding. Unlike Meijer, the “terrible representative of the Republican Party… [Gibbs] will not turn his back on Michigan,” Trump said in his endorsement.

MI04

Rep. John Moolenaar

Won with 65 percent of the vote.

MI07

Rep. Tim Walberg

Won with 67 percent of the vote. I have voted to overturn 2020 election results.

MI09

Lisa McClain

Won with 79 percent of the vote.

MI10

John James

Won with 87 percent of the vote.

STATE HOUSE DISTRICT 36

Steve Carra

Won with 40 percent of the vote.

state senate district 17

Jonathan Lindsay

Won with 61 percent of the vote.

state house district 51

matt maddock

Unopposed.

Still pending in Michigan

  • Mike Detmer (State Senate District 22)
  • Rachelle Smith (State House District 43)
  • Jackie Eubanks (State House District 63)
  • Kevin Rathbun (State House District 71)
  • jon rocha (Write in candidate—State House District 78)
  • angela riga (State House District 79)
  • mike hoadley (State House District 99)

Still pending in Washington

  • joe kent (WA03)
  • loren culp (WA04)

ICYMI: A Maryland win on July 19

GOVERNOR

Daniel Cox

Won with 52 percent of the vote.

Cox is a former state delegate who chartered buses for the Jan. 6 Capitol riot and regularly promoted Trump’s stolen election theories.

His win was a blow to the state GOP’s moderate wing and its ability to influence Maryland voters. But it was especially sweet for Trump, who backed Cox over term-limited Gov. Larry Hogan’s pick, Kelly Schulz. They all have history: Hogan repeatedly criticized Trump while he was in office, while Cox attempted to impeach the Maryland governor in February.

Trump took a hit at both Hogan and Schulz in a statement before the July 19 election, asking voters to “Get rid of Shutdown RINO Larry Hogan who is trying to get another RINO into office, Kelly Schulz.”

Categories
Entertainment

How to light a sparkler: Aussie baker sparks a headed debate on TikTok

Have you been lighting sparklers WRONG your whole life? Professional baker sparks heated debate after her startling revelation

  • A video has caused a heated debate online regarding how to light sparklers
  • Baker Tegan ‘Tigga’ Maccormack responded to a comment from a viewer
  • The person claimed sparklers are meant to be lit from the bottom, not the top
  • In the clip Tigga can be seen looking confused and tried the method
  • While some were mind blown others weren’t convinced

A popular baker has caused a stir after claiming she’s discovered the ‘right’ way to light sparklers – sparking a heated debate.

Melbourne baker Tegan ‘Tigga’ Maccormack, who co-founded the business Cake For Days, posted a now-viral TikTok video responding to a comment from a viewer claiming sparklers are meant to be lit from the bottom, not the top.

In the video, Tigga can be seen with a confused look on her face and was left ‘mind blown’ after trying the recommended way.

The 34-year-old and thousands of others online were left ‘mind blown’ by the little-known method, but others weren’t convinced.

Scroll down for video

Melbourne baker Tegan 'Tigga' Maccormack (pictured) posted a now-viral TikTok video responding to a comment from a viewer claiming sparklers are meant to be lit from the bottom, not the top

The 34-year-old and thousands of others online were left 'mind blown' by the little-known method, but others weren't convinced

Melbourne baker Tegan ‘Tigga’ Maccormack (pictured) posted a now-viral TikTok video responding to a comment from a viewer claiming sparklers are meant to be lit from the bottom, not the top

chicken

How do you light sparklers?

  • From the top 177 votes
  • From the bottom 15 votes
  • either way 26 votes

The comment read: ‘You’re meant to light them form the bottom so the sparkles go up.’

Using a baking blowtorch, Tigga ignites the sparkler form the bottom and the light finishes at the top.

In the comments on person was left in disbelief and wrote: ‘Whaaaaaa???’

‘How have I not known this!!!!,’ another wrote, and a third added: ‘So much less dangerous too.’

In the video, Tigga can be seen with a confused look on her face and was left 'mind blown' after trying the recommended way

In the comments on person was left in disbelief and wrote: 'Whaaaaaa???', but others failed to believe this method is 'better' than lighting the sparkler from the top

In the video, Tigga can be seen with a confused look on her face and was left ‘mind blown’ after trying the recommended way. In the comments on person ella was left in disbelief and wrote: ‘Whaaaaaa ???’, but others failed to believe this method is ‘better’ than lighting the sparkler from the top

But some failed to believe this method is ‘better’ than lighting the sparkler from the top.

‘Why is this mind blowing? If you light it in the middle it sparks both ways,’ one person wrote.

‘I’ve never met a single person that lights it from the bottom,’ another admitted.

A third person said: ‘Always light your sparkler at the tip, keeping the open flame the furthest away from the bare wire handle as possible.’

After less than 24 hours the video went viral exceeding a staggering 4.1million views.

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Categories
Sports

Suns forward Izak Rankine tipped to join Crows

SEN SA host Kym Dillon firmly believes Gold Coast forward Izak Rankine will be an Adelaide Crows player in 2023.

It follows a Channel 7 Adelaide report that claims the Crows “would move heaven and earth” to get Rankine in a deal that “would center around Adelaide’s first-round pick”.

The South Australian comes out of contract at the end of the season and is yet to re-sign with the Suns.

Gold Coast coach Stuart Dew recently told reporters he was confident Rankine will re-commit to the Suns.

Dillon understands the Crows are prepared to pay significant money to lure Rankine to West Lakes.

Dillon and Michelangelo Rucci, co-hosts of SEN SA’s The Run Homediscussed Rankine’s future beyond 2022.

Subscribe to the SEN YouTube channel for the latest videos!

Dillon: “I’m 95 per cent sure this is going to happen.

“The deal is not done until it’s done – but Izak Rankine will be at the Crows next year.”

Rucci: “At what cost? Because I’m hearing big numbers.”

Dillon: “What I’m understanding is they’ll be prepared to pay it.”

Rucci: “$800,000 a year?”

Dillon: “That’s what I strongly believe is going to happen. They’re not into Josh Dunkley.

“After a number of phone calls yesterday and talking to different people, I firmly believe Izak Rankine will be at Adelaide.”

Rankine, the No.3 pick in the 2018 draft, is having a career-best year having kicked 27 goals in 16 games.





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Categories
Australia

Perrottet under pressure as probe claims first scalp

“The sentiment of it was John Barilaro would have had some attributes, positive attributes, that are relevant to the role,” Ms Brown said of a conversation in which Mr Ayres told her that the former MP would be applying for the position. “It carried some weight,” she said.

The senior public servant said Mr Ayres had not exercised “undue” influence over the role, but conceded there was never any question that Mr Barilaro – who had the job application texted to him by Mr Ayres – would not make the shortlist.

“It was never your view that John Barilaro was not getting on the shortlist?” opposition upper house leader Penny Sharpe asked.

“That’s fair,” Ms Brown responded.

Abrupt departure

The events of Wednesday morning and Mr Ayres’ abrupt departure came as Mr Perrottet sought to put an end to the jobs-for-mates crisis that has dogged his government for two months and tarnished its election hopes.

It also came just two days after the premier sacked Small Business Minister Eleni Petinos over claims she bullied and belittled staff.

Mr Perrottet had initially insisted on waiting for former public service boss Graeme Head to complete a review into the hiring process before he made any decisions. But his hand from him was forced on Monday night as questions over Mr Ayres’ involvement and frustration among his cabinet colleagues threatened to destabilize the leadership.

A draft of Mr Head’s review challenged claims by Mr Ayres that he maintained his distance from Investment NSW’s deliberations over hiring for the US trade post.

“Information that has come to light in the review clearly demonstrates that the process was not at arm’s length,” Mr Perrottet said. “While I’ve not received the full report, I have seen an excerpt of the draft report that pertains to Mr Ayres and made the appropriate decision.”

Mr Ayres rejected all claims of wrongdoing in a statement on Wednesday.

“In my view, no such breach has occurred,” he said. “I have always applied the highest levels of integrity in my conduct as a Minister.”

The Department of Premier and Cabinet will now conduct a review – the third sparked by Mr Barilaro’s appointment – ​​into whether Mr Ayres breached the ministerial code of conduct during his interactions with Investment NSW on the senior trade and investment commissioner role.

Mr Barilaro withdrew from the position in late June amid intense criticism of jobs-for-mates, saying it had become “untenable” to take the role that had become a “distraction” for the government.

Revealing documents

While Mr Ayres claims the department adhered to all usual protocols during recruitment, tranches of secret documents revealed a candidate report for Mr Barilaro was tweaked and his scores were upgraded. Another email showed Mr Ayres added a name to a “short” shortlist.

Members of the selection panel have told The Australian Financial Review they “felt used” by the process.

Meanwhile, the premier insists on a first round of recruitment for the role failed to deliver a “suitable candidate”, despite documents showing he was briefed when a former senior public servant, Jenny West, was handed the role in August last year. A month later, the offer was rescinded by Ms Brown, who allegedly told Ms West the job was a “present” for someone else.

Privately, Liberals are optimistic that Mr Ayres’ departure is enough to put an end to the debacle. But some cabinet colleagues are concerned there are more documents yet to come which could implicate the premier.

Others believe the long-running issue has irretrievably dashed the Coalition’s election hopes and put offside members who the party is relying on to form the backbone of its re-election efforts.

Mr Perrottet has not said what section of the ministerial code of conduct the alleged breach by Mr Ayres relates to, only that he regarded the level of interaction Mr Ayres had with the department over the hiring process.

He said Mr Ayres denied doing anything wrong or breaching any ministerial guidelines and intended to stay on as MP for Penrith.

“Mr Ayres denies any wrongdoing at all … he denies any wrongdoing. But the questions that have arisen that come through the report, make it very clear, in my view, and in Mr Ayres’ view, that there is a potential breach of the ministerial code of conduct.

“He denies any wrongdoing. I understand the point in respect of [his claims he kept an] arm’s length part of the process. He has a different view in relation to his engagement with the process.

In a fiery press conference, the premier defended his decision to stand by the senior MP while the debacle has dragged on for two months and derailed major announcements including Mr Perrottet’s first budget as premier and a high-profile trade mission across the region.

Mr Ayres’ portfolios would be reassigned and the election of a new deputy leader would take place at the next party room.

Categories
US

Arizona GOP primary tests power of Trump’s election lies

PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona Republicans were deciding Tuesday between a well-known former news anchor and a development attorney in the race for governor of a crucial battleground state.

Former President Donald Trump backed Kari Lake, who walked away from her nearly three-decade career in television news and embraced his lies about the 2020 election. She faced Karrin Taylor Robson, who was backed by prominent Republicans around the country looking to push their party to move on from Trump.

The race was too early to call, with Lake and Robson separated by a slim margin.

As the midterm primary season enters its final stretch this month, the Arizona races are poised to provide important clues about the GOP’s direction. Victories by Trump-backed candidates could provide the former president with allies who hold sway over the administration of elections as he considers another bid for the White House in 2024. Defeats, however, might suggest openness in the party to a different path forward.

The former president endorsed and campaigned for a slate of contenders who support his falsehoods, including Lake, who says she would have refused to certify President Joe Biden’s narrow Arizona victory. Robson said the GOP should focus on the future despite an election she called “unfair.”

In the race to oversee elections as Arizona secretary of state, Trump also backed a state lawmaker who was at the US Capitol on Jan. 6 and claims the former president was cheated out of victory.

“I think the majority of the people, and a lot of people that are supporters of Trump, they want to move on,” said former Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, who is backing Robson. “I mean, that was two years ago. Let’s go. Let’s move.”

The election is playing out on one of the biggest midterm primary nights of the year — one that had some warning signs for Republicans.

In Kansas, voters rejected a state constitutional amendment that would have allowed the Legislature to restrict or ban abortion. They were the first voters to weigh in on abortion rights since the US Supreme Court revoked the constitutional right to terminate a pregnancy.

The rejection in a conservative state is a sign of potential energy for Democrats, who hope the anger at the court’s abortion ruling will overcome inflation concerns and President Joe Biden’s flagging popularity.

Tudor Dixona conservative commentator, won the GOP primary for Michigan governor, emerging atop a field of little-known conservatives days after Trump endorsed her. She will face Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in November.

Republican Rep. Peter Meijer lost to a Trump-backed challenger and a pair of Washington lawmakers were fighting to hang onto their seats after voting to impeach Trump following the Jan. 6 insurrection.

And in Missouri, Attorney General Eric Schmitt won the Republican nomination for senator and will face Democrat Trudy Busch Valentine, an heiress of the Anheuser-Busch beer fortune. And two Republican House members from Washington state who voted to impeach Trump are facing primary challengers.

But the contests are especially salient in Arizona, a longtime Republican stronghold that has become more favorable to Democrats. in recent years because of explosive growth in and around Phoenix. The primary and the fall election will provide insight into whether Biden’s success here in 2020 was a onetime event or the onset of a long-term shift away from the GOP.

With such high stakes, Arizona has been central to efforts by Trump and his allies to cast doubt on Biden’s victory with false claims of fraud.

Federal and state election officials and Trump’s own attorney general have said there is no credible evidence the election was tainted. The former president’s allegations of fraud were also roundly rejected by courts, including by judges Trump appointed. A hand recount led by Trump supporters in Arizona’s largest county found no proof of a stolen election and concluded Biden’s margin of victory was larger than the official count.

Though Trump is still the most popular figure inside the GOP, his efforts to influence primary elections this year have yielded mixed results. His preferred candidates of him in states such as Ohio and Pennsylvania prevailed in their primaries.

But in Georgia, another state that is central to Trump’s election lies, his handpicked candidate for governor was defeated by more than 50 percentage points. Georgia’s Republican secretary of state was also renominated over a Trump-backed primary rival.

“You have entrusted me with your most sacred possession in a constitutional republic — your vote,” Robson told supporters as she awaited election results.

The former president is hoping he’ll have more success in Arizona, where the incumbent governor, Doug Ducey, can’t run for reelection. That could give Trump a better opportunity than in Georgia to influence the winner.

Lake is well known in much of the state after anchoring the evening news in Phoenix for more than two decades. She ran as a fierce critic of the mainstream media, which she says is unfair to Republicans, and other enemies of Trump’s Make America Great Again movement, including the late Sen. John McCain’s family.

A vocal supporter of Trump’s election lies, Lake said her campaign was “already detecting some stealing going on” in her own race, but she repeatedly refused to provide any evidence for the claim.

Robson, whose housing developer husband is one of the state’s richest men, is mostly self-financing her campaign. The GOP establishment, growing increasingly comfortable creating distance from Trump, rallied around her over the past month with a series of endorsements from Ducey, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and former Vice President Mike Pence.

The groundswell of establishment support for Robson drew national scrutiny to the race for what it says about the GOP base ahead of the crucial presidential primary in two years.

“Everyone wants to try to make this some kind of proxy for 2024,” said Christie, who ran for president in 2016. “Believe me, I’ve been through enough of these to know that 2024 will be decided by the people who step up to the plate … and how they perform or don’t perform at that time.”

Robson is running a largely old-school Republican campaign focused on cutting taxes and regulations, securing the border and advancing school choice. She has also emphasized Lake’s prior support for Democrats, including a $350 contribution to the last Democratic president.

“I can’t vote for someone who supported Barack Obama,” said Travis Fillmore, 36, a firearms instructor from Tempe who planned to vote for Robson. He said he remains a Trump backer and believes the 2020 election was stolen from him, but Lake’s support for Obama was disqualifying.

On the Democratic side, Secretary of State Katie Hobbs defeated Marco Lopez, a former mayor of Nogales and border enforcement official during Obama’s administration.

As Arizona’s top elections official, Hobbs endeared herself to Democrats with an impassioned defense of the integrity of the 2020 election, a stance that has drawn death threats. However, she’s been weighed down by a discrimination case won by a Black policy adviser from Hobbs’ time in the Legislature.

Trump-backed Blake Masters won the Arizona GOP Senate race. He is a 35-year-old first-time candidate who has spent most of his career working for billionaire Peter Thiel, who is bankrolling his campaign. Masters emphasized cultural grievances that encourage the right, including critical race theory and allegations of big tech censorship.

Until Trump’s endorsementthe race had no clear front-runner among Masters, businessman Jim Lamon and Attorney General Mark Brnovich, all of whom jockeyed for his support.

Lamon said Trump made a mistake in endorsing Masters and dug into his own fortune to highlight Masters’ ties to technology firms and his writings as a college student supporting open borders. Lamon signed a falsely stating that Trump had won certificate Arizona in 2020 and that he was one of the state’s “duly elected and qualified” electors.

Trump soured on Brnovich and may have torpedoed his campaign when the attorney general’s election fraud investigation failed to produce criminal charges against election officials.

Masters will take on incumbent Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly in the fall.

The Republican race for Arizona secretary of state was won by Mark Finchem, a Trump-backed candidate who was at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. His competition included Shawnna Bolick, a state lawmaker who has pushed for legislation allowing the Legislature to overturn the will of the voters and decide which candidate gets the state’s 11 electoral votes for president. The GOP establishment rallied around advertising executive Beau Lane, who says there were no widespread problems with the 2020 election.

Republican state House Speaker Rusty Bowerswho gave testimony to the House Jan. 6 committee on Trump’s pressure campaign following the 2020 election, was defeated by a Trump-backed challenger in his bid to move up to the state Senate.

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