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Australia

Why the Coalition risks a backlash if it breaks the Voice

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In May, the Coalition suffered swings against it in 11 of the 12 seats in Sydney that had voted against marriage equality in 2017. It also went backwards in the three regional Queensland seats that voted no in that plebiscite. The one exception was Fowler, in Sydney’s multicultural west, where Labor’s head office candidate Kristina Keneally lost to local independent Dai Le.

Australia is no longer the fractured country it was when the last referendum was held in 1999 on the republic. Our ethnic face then was Anglo-European. The majority of the population was born here, with both parents born here as well. We were still living in the anti-incumbent shadow of the early 1990s recession, with the regions holding an electoral veto over the cities. Today we are majority migrant with a Eurasian ethnic face. More than half the population is born overseas or has one migrant parent, and the cities have just decided a federal election.

The Coalition party room appears to be divided at the moment between those who want to support the Voice and those who are emboldened by the uncompromising positions of their Indigenous colleagues Jacinta Price and Kerrynne Liddle. The Greens, for their part, are being encouraged into the No camp by their Indigenous colleague Lidia Thorpe. There is an echo here in the unholy alliance between the Tony Abbott-led opposition and the Greens on climate change in 2009.

A paradox of this debate – indeed, it is a recurring feature in relationships between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians – is that support for reconciliation has been strongest where the two peoples are least likely to share the same postcode.

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Consider Melbourne, long-regarded as the most tolerant city in the nation. It returned the highest Yes vote at the failed 1999 referendum, with 17 of its 20 metropolitan electorates wanting a republic, while Victoria delivered the highest Yes vote at the successful 1967 referendum to count Indigenous Australians in the census. Melbourne also happens to be the only Australian capital where the local Indigenous population is outnumbered by the city’s top 10 overseas-born groups.

The latest census showed that while 69 per cent of non-Indigenous Australians lived in the capitals, 63 per cent of Indigenous Australians lived outside them.

The danger for Dutton if he reverts to the politics of obstruction is that he drives up the Yes vote in the cities, where the referendum may be decided, while splitting black and white neighbors in the regions. That is, he recreates another version of the perfect electoral storm which overwhelmed the Morrison government in the capitals on May 21.

Dutton and Albanese each have a gap in their corporate memory which carries lessons for all sides. Dutton entered parliament in 2001, after the republic referendum, while Albanese entered in 1996, in the aftermath of the Mabo native title debate three years earlier.

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The 1999 referendum failed because the monarchists were able to paint the model for a president appointed by two-thirds of the parliament as a “politician’s republic”. It helped that Howard wrote the question that was designed to fail. The Voice is not so easily diminished as an elitist concern because it explicitly empowers the most marginalized community in Australia. It could well unite “old Australians”, who have been here for three generations or longer, and First Australians on the simple idea that outsiders deserve to be heard by the parliament.

Mabo, on the other hand, was viewed by old Australians as a form of outsider queue-jumping which elevated the rights of First Australians above their own. As Paul Keating explained later, there wasn’t a vote in it for him at the 1996 election. But it was the right thing to do.

What may come as a surprise to the present generation of politicians is what happened immediately after the native title legislation was passed by the Senate in December 1993. The Coalition had voted No at every stage in the debate, and the then opposition leader, John Hewson , thought he was on safe ground when he declared the new law was “a day of shame for Australia”. But the opinion polls turned sharply in favor of the Keating government. By mid-March 1994, Labor’s primary vote was 45 per cent to the Coalition’s 42, according to Newspoll, and the Liberal Party was preparing to replace Hewson as leader. The public rewarded Keating for resolving the issue, and punished the naysayer.

Albanese believes a Voice to parliament is the right thing to do. The question for Dutton is whether he is willing to risk his leadership when the nation may not be in the mood for another white male politician who wants to defend the status quo.

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US

Biden tested positive for COVID again Sunday after getting ‘rebound’ case

The White House doctor said President Biden “continues to feel well” but tested positive for coronavirus again on Sunday – a day after he came down with a “rebound” case of COVID-19.

Dr. Kevin O’Connor said the president, 79, will continue to remain in isolation at the White House.

“He will continue to conduct the business of the American people from the Executive Residence,” O’Connor wrote in a letter released by the White House.

“As I have stated previously, the president continues to be very specifically aware to protect any of the Executive Residence, White House, Secret Service and other staff whose duties require (albeit socially distanced) proximity to him,” the physician wrote.

The president announced that he again tested positive for the coronavirus in a Twitter posting on Saturday.

President Biden FaceTimed families that were at the Capitol fighting for burn pits legislation and sent them pizza.
President Biden FaceTimed families that were at the Capitol fighting for burn pits legislation and sent them pizza.
Twitter/ @POTUS
Biden announced July 30, 2022 that he has tested positive for COVID-19 again.
Biden announced July 30, 2022 that he has tested positive for COVID-19 again.
Twitter/ @POTUS

He first tested positive on July 21 when he began quarantining and starting on a regiment of the antiviral drug Paxlovid.

Biden tested negative last Tuesday and summarized his public duties.

O’Connor said in a letter Saturday that the president was among a “small percentage” of Paxlovid recipients who had their symptoms “rebound.”

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Entertainment

Mike Bartlett’s play stuns at the Seymour Center

ALBION
Reginald Theatre, July 29

Until August 13

This is the real deal: the magic that makes us keep returning to the theater. Here’s so much truth, beauty, humanity, comedy, drama and even tragedy that it fills stage and overflows into the hearts of the audience. Here are unabashedly big ideas and bigger characters, molded by a master playwright who relishes their egocentricity, lies and bitterness as much as their humour, compassion and capacity for love.

Rhiann Marquez, Charles Mayer, Joanna Briant and Deborah Jones are part of a cast of unrivaled quality.

Rhiann Marquez, Charles Mayer, Joanna Briant and Deborah Jones are part of a cast of unrivaled quality.Credit:Clare Hawley

Mike Bartlett’s Albion, which premiered in London in 2017, is one of the great plays of our time, and not only is it done full justice by this outstanding co-production between Secret House, New Ghosts and Seymour Centre, its cast of 11 has seldom been matched for quality in this town. Lucy Clements’ direction is more than assured, it is inspired, so three hours fly by with only lapses of projection from the actors and a growing discomfort in one’s posterior to mark the time.

Albion tells of Audrey (brilliantly played by Joanna Briant), a self-made businesswoman who turns her back on her shops to chase a wildly idealized vision of the past in the form of a country manor and its once-revered formal gardens. She clings to this quintessential vision of England – as variously evoked by Blake and Elgar – because it might offer some sliver of justification for the death of her son de ella fighting in the British Army in Afghanistan.

But dreams can only come true when they lie in the future, not when they attempt to recreate an ephemeral past, and so Audrey finds herself thwarted at every turn, even as she negatively impacts the lives of almost all around her.

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The play would not work were Briant not a potent force on the stage, occupying every inch of Audrey’s drive, wilfulness, blindness, optimism, desperation and skewed good intentions as the world spins about her. Audrey could be seen as the very embodiment of conservatism, although that would idly politicize a play in which the waters run infinitely deeper than mere ideologies, and Briant ensures we see all her many facets of her.

She ensures we like some and are fascinated by others, and therefore follow her mad crusade as she shreds the lives of family, friends, neighbors and those she likes to call “staff”: a classist perspective on maids and gardeners she can rationalize as everyone knowing their place and purpose.

Charles Mayer offers a winning performance as Paul, her cushion-like husband, who is so infinitely obliging as to be able to say (without a trace of irony), “My life has had no purpose, and I’ve been unbelievably happy. ” He is also fully alert to the fact that trying to stop Audrey is like “trying to stop the weather”.

Categories
Sports

F1 Hungarian GP 2022 results: Daniel Ricciardo disaster after Lance Stroll collision

Daniel Ricciardo’s nightmare season has only gotten worse, with the Australian finishing 15th in Sunday’s Hungarian Grand Prix at the Hungaroring.

Despite starting in 10th position on the starting grid and spinning on Lap 40, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen won his eighth race of the season to extend his lead in the drivers’ standings ahead of the mid-season.

It was a remarkable day for Verstappen, but the same certainly couldn’t be said for his former teammate Ricciardo.

Watch Every Practice, Qualifying & Race of the 2022 FIA Formula One World Championship™ Live on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

The McLaren driver was on track for a potential points finish before a collision with Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll on Lap 48 ruined his race.

Ricciardo and Stroll were battling for position before the 33-year-old’s tires locked up and he understeered into Stroll as they went around the outside of Turn 2.

The Canadian spun around and Ricciardo was handed a five-second penalty for causing a collision.

Nothing went right for Ricciardo after the incident, slowly slipping down the order on the slower, hard tyres.

He was overtaken by Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel and AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda before eventually finishing 15th, behind Haas’ Mick Schumacher.

Earlier in the Grand Prix, Ricciardo was celebrating a stunning double overtake that elevated him into the points.

The Australian, who started ninth on the grid, was down in 12th following an early pit stop, but managed to swoop past both Alpine drivers in a matter of seconds on Lap 24.

While Esteban Ocon and Fernando Alonso were skirmishing on Turn 2, Ricciardo went wide and slipped down the inside on the next corner.

It was arguably his best moment of the season to date.

“Let’s f***ing go,” the Perth driver yelled on the team radio.

There were few scary moments throughout Sunday’s race — AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda went for a spin on Lap 35, while Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas retired on the penultimate lap, forcing a late virtual safety car.

Rain also started falling on the track with a couple of minutes remaining, meaning Verstappen had to tip-toe his way towards the finish line.

But the reigning world champion kept his composure and got the job done, winning his eighth race of the season and 28th of his career.

“I was at first hoping that I could get close to a podium, but very tricky conditions out there but we had a really good strategy,” Verstappen said.

“We were really reactive and always pitting at the right time, I thought we had some good out laps, and at the end – even with the 360 ​​– we won the race.

“It was a crazy race and I’m of course very happy that we won it.”

The F1 season will resume at the Belgian Grand Prix on Sunday, August 28.

Read related topics:Daniel Ricciardo

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Categories
Australia

Woman charged with murdering eight-year-old boy in Rockhampton, Central Queensland

A woman has been charged with the murder of an eight-year-old boy, who was found unresponsive in his Rockhampton home early this morning.

Police officers discovered the child when they went to the home in Frenchville for a welfare check about 2:20am.

They said the “sudden death” was suspicious and a 36-year-old woman was arrested about 11am.

Capricornia Police District Detective Acting Inspector Luke Peachey said the child and woman were known to each other, but would not detail if they were related.

“Obviously, it is a very tragic day for those family members of that little boy and also, obviously, the police who attended,” he said.

“Whenever we attend a scene where anyone’s deceased, it’s never great but, obviously, it hits a little bit harder when it’s an eight-year-old boy.”

Headshot Capricornia Police District Detective Acting Inspector Luke Peachey
Capricornia Police District Detective Acting Inspector Luke Peachey says the woman and the boy were known to each other.(ABC News: Rachel McGhee)

Forensic officers were at the scene on Saturday and Inspector Peachey hoped they would have a clear idea in the coming days of what happened.

He would not detail what, if any, injuries the boy had or who was home at the time.

The property was part of a complex.

“We’re speaking to a number of witnesses,” he said.

“[Saturday] will be about mapping out how this tragic event has occurred.

“We are still contacting some family members to make sure they know, so I won’t be releasing any more [details].”

Police at the scene of alleged murder in Rockhampton
Police described the incident as a “sudden death.”(ABC News: Rachel McGhee)

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Categories
US

‘Wrong’ for Senate GOP to Work With Dems on Biden-Backed Bills

  • Jordan says GOP senators shouldn’t be working with Democrats to pass bipartisan Biden-backed bills.
  • “I wish they wouldn’t,” the Ohio lawmaker said of his Republican counterparts in the upper chamber.
  • Kevin McCarthy has taken a stand against much of the Biden agenda, to the delight of Jordan.

When President Joe Biden entered the Oval Office last year, he expressed a commitment to working across the aisle with Republicans to craft legislation — something he practiced in his 36-year career in the Senate.

From last year’s $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure package to a recent $52 billion chips-funding bill, the administration has notched some major successes in attracting support from Democrats and Republicans and breaking part of the filibuster logjam that has become an all-too-common form of blocking legislation in recent years.

However, the wave of consensus doesn’t sit too well with Rep. Jim Jordan, the conservative Ohio Republican and longtime ally of former President Donald Trump who could play a major role in Congress next year if Republicans win back control of the House.

Jordan recently told Politico that Senate Republicans who join their Democratic counterparts in supporting legislation backed by Biden are “wrong.”

“I wish they wouldn’t,” the lawmaker said of his GOP counterparts in the upper chamber.

While Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky — known for employing sharply partisan maneuvering from Supreme Court nominations to GOP-led tax plans — has been a surprising supporter of some of the Biden-endorsed legislation, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California has led his caucus against most of the administration’s agenda items.

Jordan praised McCarthy for taking such a position, telling Politico that the GOP leader was “on the side of the American people.”

The Ohio Republican then contended that voters disliked the bipartisan legislation coming out of Congress.

“Look at all the pushback,” he added.

McCarthy opposed both the bipartisan infrastructure bill and the CHIPS Act of 2022 legislation.

However, some Senate Republicans are leary of taking McCarthy’s approach as it relates to passing legislation, frustrated that he could be dismissing good bills and allowing Democrats to portray the party as intransigent.

GOP Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, who represents West Virginia alongside her Democratic counterpart, Sen. Joe Manchin, expressed such reservations.

“I wish [McCarthy] would take a deeper policy look at some of these issues that we’ve come together on, understanding they may want to make changes,” she told Politico. “Just unilaterally being against? I’d rather get things done, put it that way.”

Categories
Technology

AMD Self-Leaks Its Initial Lineup Of Ryzen 7000 Zen 4 CPUs

Quick-thinking users have spotted a strange list on AMD’s resource page (since removed) that shed light on the names of its 7000 series CPUs. As first noticed by Videocardz on Wednesday, AMD’s list contained SKUs for its upcoming 7000 series processors, including the Ryzen 9 7950X, Ryzen 9 7900x, Ryzen 7 7700X, and Ryzen 5 7600X. Despite the bounty of 7s there, the sharpest among you will notice they are missing a Ryzen 7 7800X or any sort of Ryzen 3 7000 series CPU. That’s a bit of a shame for budget and mid-range gamers. The 7800X had also previously been hinted at by consistent leaker Greymon over on Twitter.

So there’s not much else to go on here except for the names of these CPUs as well as apparent timing for release, right? Well, based on what’s AMD’s previously demoed, the leaked names do hint that the Ryzen 9 7950X could top out at 16 cores and 32-thread connections, while the next lowest in the series could do 12 cores, then 8, then 6. last we heard about these CPUs, the word on the street was they would contain up to 16 cores, helping them sprint above 5GHz speeds. During an AMD presentation, a 16-core Zen 4 chip clocked in at 5.5GHz while playing Ghostwire: Tokyo. Of course, that was a controlled environment, but it gives us a basis to guess about core distribution across the Zen 4 line.

As many “7s” as there are in these names, there’s also a lot of 5s going around, with PCIe Gen 5 controllers and DDR5 memory support being key features for the Raphael line. The new CPU generation will also need an AM5 motherboard socket, which will require a 1718-pin LGA motherboard.

Those motherboards include the B650, X670, and X670 Extreme chipsets. The latter two will contain the hardware needed for the PCIe Gen 5 graphics tech.

We still don’t know many specifics about pricing, and with the state of the current chip production market, it would be foolish to start making guesses. There have been rumors of a mid-September release, according to Tom’s Hardware, though of course mileage may vary significantly for unannounced release dates.

Regardless, AMD is clearly setting up its top-end CPUs to compete against the likes of Intel and its upcoming Core i9-13900 CPU. That processor’s rumored to rock 24 cores (32 threads) that are apparently split between one third performance and two thirds efficiency cores. It’s also rumored to support up to DDR5-5600 memory and support a max clock speed of 3.7Ghz, better than a comparable Ryzen 9 5900X.

Categories
Entertainment

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s unprecedented pressure after 12 hellish days

The very best thing about being Harry and Meghan, Duke and Duchess of Sussex, right now, as far as I can tell, is that no one is going to make them go to Birmingham. On Friday, the Commonwealth Games opened in the Midlands city and in the coming days, various members of the royal family will be sent forth to do their flag-waving best.

Never mind that much of Europe is busy slathering on the SPF 50 or that the Queen has begun her usual summer hols or that the beaches of Mustique are calling. To be a working member of the British monarchy this week requires that all available HRHs front up while looking jolly pleased to have to wear a Team GB polo shirt and watch badminton.

Having absconded more than two and a half years ago for sunnier climes and fatter bank accounts, this sort of tedious duty is no longer part of the Sussexes’ lives.

Small mercies, huh?

However, aside from the fact that the couple won’t have to contend with so much polyester and so many hours of archery anytime soon, things are not exactly looking that rosy over Montecito way, with the couple having taken hit after hit over the last 12 days or so.

Rewind to July 18 and Harry and Meghan were jetting into New York where they had an appointment at the UN, with the duke having been asked to give the address to mark Nelson Mandela Day. In the couple strode to the famed building’s foyer, a masterful demonstration of what has become a hallmark of their post-royal careers – purposefully marching into the important buildings for supposedly important meetings and events after which … nothing much would seem to happen.

Anyway, they were back! Back at doing their quasi-royal darnedest! Harry had a speech, Meghan had a Jackie O-esque black dress – what could possibly go wrong?

Well, for one thing, not that many people turned up. As the Duke of Sussex gave his address to him, talking about climate change (conveniently forgetting that the family uses private jets on the reg), disinformation and abortion rights (all the good stars on these fronts) the vast majority of the seats were visibly empty.

For whatever reason, the bulk of the great and good of the international body would seem to have decided to be elsewhere and not watch the sixth in line to the throne have a crack at international statesmanship. (Maybe the UN cafeteria was serving waffles?)

If Harry looked grim when the couple was caught by the paparazzi leaving Italian restaurant Locanda Verde, he had every reason to look sour. That week saw the publication of biographer Tom Bower’s Revenge: Meghan, Harry and the War Between the Windsors.

Bower’s book is a largely unrelenting, highly unflattering take on the Sussexes, casting them as fueled by ego and some misguided notion that Meghan was going to be Diana mark two, aside from the fact that, in the biographer’s telling, she seemed to have no interest in the monarchy, no willingness to learn its fusty ropes and little enthusiasm for the boring parts of HRH-dom.

As the week progressed, Bower did the press rounds, offering a series of caustic takes including that he thought “they pose a real threat to the royal family” and labeling the duchess “a very scheming” person.

What is surprising has been the reaction from Montecito, with the Sussexes having so far not commented. While in the past, the duo have filed multiple court cases against various media outlets and sent out legal letters during the storm over their daughter Lilibet’s name, however in this instance they have remained staunchly silent.

Then came the development playing out in a court in Florida when lawyers for the duchess got into the “subjective” nature of truth. Earlier this year, the former actress was sued by her estranged half-sister Samantha Markle for allegedly telling “false and malicious lies” during her bombshell Oprah Winfrey interview last year.

This week, the Duchess of Sussex’s lawyers moved to dismiss the case, with legal papers filed by their side arguing that Meghan’s description of growing up “as an only child” during the interview was “obviously not meant to be a statement of objective fact” and was “a textbook example of a subjective statement about how a person feels about her childhood.”

While it’s an argument that has more than a tinge of Philosophy 101 (what is truth?) this strategy then raises an obvious question: If Meghan’s characterization about her upbringing was “subjective” then were any of the other devastating claims she made during the two -hour tell-all “subjective” too?

One bright spot on the horizon for the duo during all this was Harry’s successful appeal to the High Court for a judicial review over the Home Office’s decision to no longer automatically grant him full-time bodyguards when he is in the UK.

Except, even this was not exactly a slam dunk; just because the review was granted does not mean it will automatically be successful.

Then there is the cost of the whole legal imbroglio. the Sun has reported that the UK government has spent $156,000 on the case from September last year to May 2020. If Harry’s costs are similar then that would mean he has also spent well into the six figures to argue the case over his security arrangements which only pertain to the handful of days per year he has spent, on average, in the UK since quitting.

That bill could only go up if he ultimately loses the case, with the Home Office having previously said it will look to recover costs if they win.

While August is a traditionally quiet month on the Planet Royal, the rest of the year is shaping up to be a barnstormer of a doozy.

Harry is looking down the barrel of some of the most monumental months of his life since the sonic boom of Megxit, with news his memoir will be published before Christmas and with Page Six having reported that Netflix wants the couple’s “at home” docu series (shush you in the back there yelling “reality show”!) to hit screens this year too.

This book and show will very likely prove to be huge commercial successes for the couple, much needed professional wins after having released exactly no content up until this point for the streaming giant, since 2020 – but at what cost?

If either or both of these projects are focused on little more than the Sussexes launching a fresh volley of complaints about their treatment by the royal family, interspersed with some vignettes of them doing some caring, then they could be playing with fire.

If this scenario came to pass, they would run the risk of looking dangerously like little more than perpetual whingers who are clinging to the self-appointed victim status inside their $20 million mansion at a time when war, fire, floods and monkeypox are blighting the world.

Then there is what toll these two releases could take for his tattered relationship with House of Windsor, a bond that is reportedly hanging by a thread.

as the Sun’s former royal editor Duncan Lacrombe recently told the Daily Beast: “Once the book is out, William will have to make a decision about what he is going to do about Harry, but he is not going to do a thing until he knows what is on.” every page of that book. The reality is that if, as a senior member of the royal family, you have written a tell-all book, you have broken rule No. 1 of the royal family.”

If Harry’s book and/or their Netflix series sees them paint big fresh targets on the monarchy’s backs then will Queen & co. sit idly by and suffer through a fresh hellish round of monarchical character assassinations?

Thus far the Sussexes’ repeated media provocations have been met with a certain imperiousness and contrived dismissiveness from London but should the duke and duchess continue to bait the royal family but we might soon discover that The Firm has some very sharp teeth.

For example, the duo do still, of course, use their gifted Sussex titles from the Queen, day in and day out. While only parliament could officially revoke those titles, that is not to say the weight of the Crown and Harry’s father and brother could not be brought to bear pressure on them to no longer use them.

Would Prince Harry and Meghan Mountbatten-Windsor (or Prince Harry and Princess Henry of Wales) as they could only then call themselves be quite so marketable for Hollywood?

There is so much on the line for them in the coming month – their image, reputations, careers and potentially even a large chunk of money. But, there is always a sliver lining: At least no one is going to be making them sit through a table tennis match any time soon.

Daniela Elser is a royal expert and a writer with more than 15 years’ experience working with a number of Australia’s leading media titles.

Read related topics:prince harry

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Categories
Sports

Atletico Madrid vs. Manchester United – Football Match Report – July 30, 2022

Erik ten Hag suffered his first defeat as Manchester United manager as Atletico Madrid recorded a 1-0 win in their preseason friendly in Oslo.

Joao Felix scored the only goal of the game three minutes from time after a feisty encounter which saw Fred sent off in stoppage time.

– Dawson: Ten Hag can take positives from preseason tour

Marcus Rashford and Harry Maguire both had chances for United, who suffered their first set-back of the summer following three wins and a draw on their tour of Thailand and Australia.

Ten Hag gave a hint about his starting XI for the Premier League opener against Brighton next week by picking a strong side against Atletico which included Maguire, Rashford, Bruno Fernandes and Anthony Martial.

Jadon Sancho would have also started after making the trip to Oslo but missed out after falling ill overnight.

New signings Lisandro Martinez and Christian Eriksen were both named on the bench for the first time after completing their moves to Old Trafford.

Eriksen impressed after coming on as a second-half substitute but the Denmark midfielder could not find a way to break down a stubborn Atletico defense which held firm despite plenty of pressure from Ten Hag’s side.

Rashford and Maguire both had good chances to score but it was Joao Felix who was clinical with his opportunity late on when he fired low past De Gea.

Fred, booked in the first half, was then sent off for picking up a second yellow card following a challenge on Alvaro Morata.

Ten Hag has one more chance to run the rule over his players ahead of the new season with a friendly against Rayo Vallecano at Old Trafford on Sunday.

He is set to give squad players a chance to bolster their fitness against the Spanish side while Cristiano Ronaldo has also indicated he will play some part.

Ronaldo returned to Carrington last week after missing the tour to deal with a family issue.

The 37-year-old is keen to leave the club this summer although so far United have been signed in their stance that he is not available for transfer.

The Portugal striker has a year left on his contract, plus the option of another season, and has been linked with moves to Atletico Madrid, Chelsea, and Bayern Munich.

Categories
Australia

Katherine Deves believes confrontation by protesters in Sydney was ‘knock-on effect’ from Federal Election campaign

Katherine Deves has slammed activists for their “disgusting conduct” after they confronted the former Liberal candidate during a night out at a Sydney pub.

Scott Morrison’s famous captain’s pick for the New South Wales seat of Warringah claimed she was verbally assaulted by a group of young men and women and then chased out of The Grand Hotel during a pub crawl with Young Liberals on Friday night.

A two-minute video shared to social media appeared to show a group chanting loudly inside the Hamilton St pub before the person filming is knocked to the ground.

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Ms Deves, who was not seen in the clip, told Sky News Australia she was invited by the Young Liberals – a centre-right youth movement of the Liberal Party – for a night out before they were allegedly confronted by the group.

“I showed up at the venue. They changed the location at the last minute for safety reasons,” she told The Outsiders program on Sunday.

“I only just walked in the door. I saw a lot of familiar faces.

“I was really excited to see these young people and catch up with what was going on with their lives as they assisted me in my campaign.

“And someone said, ‘the socialists are here’. I’m here thinking to myself, ‘what does that mean?'”

“All of a sudden, we realized the room had been invaded by a group of young men and women who started protesting and using arguably defamatory slurs against me, shouting at the top of their voices, shoving people.”

Ms Deves then claimed a “trans woman friend of mine” who assisted in her campaign in May was shoved and another person filming was pushed down the stairs.

She was able to leave the venue quickly with a campaign director and his friend but told how she was followed outside where other protesters had gathered.

“… But there are even more protesters on the street who proceeded to scream slurs and defamatory accusations at me and then chase me into a cab,” the 44-year-old said.

“The poor cab driver was saying ‘what’s going on here’ and we were just like ‘mate, just drive, just drive’ and we managed to get out of there.”

The mother-of-three believes the confrontation is the result of a “knock-on effect” from the Federal Election campaign where she made national headlines.

Ms Deves came under scrutiny when historic social media comments surfaced where she described transgender children as “surgically mutilated and sterilized” as well as her strong stance against trans athletes from competing in women’s sport.

An apology about the trans children comments was issued before it was walked back and she doubled down on the remarks just under two weeks before polling.

“This is sort of a knock-on effect from what happened in the election where many things I had said were completely decontextualised, they were sensationalised by certain elements of the media and cast the arguments I was trying to make, in a very bad light ,” she said.

“I think these young people were reacting to that.”

She flagged it was an “attack on freedom of speech and freedom of belief.”

Ms Deves insisted she would have welcomed a conversation with the activists but their actions were “disgusting conduct” that could have left people hurt.

“And if those young people had shown up and actually wanted to have a conversation with me, I would have happily discussed with them, and everyone would be entitled to agree to disagree,” the ex-Liberal candidate added.

“But to conduct with themselves in such a way, where they were clearly there to intimidate, harass and silent (me), I thought it was disgusting conduct.”

Ms Deves then suggested the activists behaved that way was “because they don’t like the fact of what I’m saying is actually right” and pointed to the recent closure of a gender identity clinic for children in the United Kingdom.

The National Health Service (NHS) will shut down the Tavistock center after complaints were raised by whistleblowers, patients and families in recent years.

Doctors had also reported concerns that some patients were being referred to a gender transitioning pathway too early.

“The fact that the people who are my detractors, they don’t want to have a conversation, they never wanted to have the conversation because what they’re trying to say doesn’t stand up to scrutiny,” she argued to The Outsiders hosts.

“I mean, some of the issues for which I was vilified, I’ve now been vindicated on, whether it’s the sports issue and also with respect to children being medicalised.”

“The Tavistock clinic in the UK, that was closed down on Friday, they have been discredited, they have been disgraced, they have absolutely been shut down.

“Those medicalised pathways I was trying to raise awareness of are now not being offered to children in the UK because there are so many concerns.”

“I think my detractors really want to shut me up because they don’t like the fact of what I’m saying is actually right and the arguments have merit because it completely undermines their political agenda.”

NSW Police told SkyNews.com.au it had not received any reports related to the incident.

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