Australia news live: Payman to visit ‘every single town’ in WA after quitting Labor; Dutton headed to US | Australia news

Payman to tour WA to speak to constituents ‘without … restrictions of party rules’

Independent senator Fatima Payman has been speaking with ABC News Breakfast following her decision to quit the Labor party last week.

Payman said it had been a “hectic past few weeks” but she has now travelled home to Perth, receiving a big reception at the airport and spending time with family.

Asked about her future in parliament as a now-independent senator, Payman said she plans to “try going to every single town” and visiting as many West Australians as she can to “find out what’s important to them … without any boundaries or restrictions of party rules and confinements”.

Payman also said she hadn’t thought about forming any coalitions “at this stage.”

Fatima Payman announced she had quit the Labor party last week. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AP
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Kylea Tink says office ‘inundated’ with concerned calls about proposed redistribution

A petition to save the North Sydney electorate from the chopping block at the next election has garnered nearly 1500 signatures, after being launched a few days ago.

As Amy Remeikis reported last month, the Australian Electoral Commission North Sydney – one of the country’s oldest electorates – be abolished in a boundary shake-up that could have far-reaching consequences for the major parties.

Independent North Sydney MP Kylea Tink said her office has been “inundated” with calls and emails from “hundreds of passionate North Sydney residents” concerned about the proposed boundary redistribution.

While the major parties have been silent after the AEC’s draft plans were announced, and seem quietly happy to see North Sydney abolished, many in the community are not.

It’s clear that people are worried about losing our voice, our unique sense of identity and social cohesion, while many have said they are concerned about being disconnected from sports facilities, schools, businesses, and community groups.

The growing North Sydney community, as well the 28,000 businesses that call the area home, have unique perspectives and needs that differ from the surrounding electorates we are proposed to be absorbed into.

Kylea Tink MP, the Independent federal member for North Sydney. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP
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Three Queensland children found at service station after being reported missing

Three children who had gone missing at the weekend were located safe this morning.

An amber alert was issued this morning after a three-year-old girl, five-year-old boy and six-year-old boy went missing from the Gold Coast yesterday afternoon.

Police believe the children were with a man known to them earlier in the day when they left a Paradise Point address around 4.30pm in a blue Hyundai i30.

Queensland police were advised that the children were found at a service station in Mount Warren Park around 7am this morning, and the blue Hyundai was located nearby a short time later.

A 27-year-old man is in police custody on other unrelated charges and is scheduled to appear in court today. Police said the man arrested is the children’s father. Investigations are ongoing.

Police are continuing to appeal for anyone who may have seen the blue Hyundai i30 travelling between the Gold Coast and Logan areas between 4.30pm and 10pm last night.

At a press conference early this morning, police alleged the children were inside the vehicle overnight by themselves, before walking to a nearby 7-Eleven where an employee contacted police.

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NT police commissioner yet to make a decision on new curfew, union says

Nathan Finn, president of the Northern Territory Police Association, spoke with ABC News Breakfast earlier amid discussions around a second youth curfew in Alice Springs.

We had more on this earlier in the blog here, in case you missed it.

Finn said at this stage the association was not anticipating a curfew to be announced, but that the police commissioner was yet to make a decision.

I have spoken to the commissioner this morning, he’s relaid his concerns of obviously what’s occurred in the Alice Springs in the last 72 hours. He’s in consultation with his command team to make that determination whether the curfew is required.

Finn said there are a number of considerations around whether to call a curfew, including “whether we’ve got enough resources to actually police this curfew”.

It’s sad we’re talking about this only three months prior to the previous one made in Alice Springs … It’s a tough decision to make but a decision that needs to be made by the commissioner and local command team in respect to obviously placing that curfew in. We need those resources, though, to make sure we can police the curfew if that’s the decision that’s made.

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Melbourne airport CEO wants to see rail link moved up to 2030

Asked about the construction timeline for the rail link, Lori Argus said the airport would work with the state government to “have this built as quickly as possible”.

Recent state announcements were delayed till 2033. I’d love to see that pulled forward now. If we can pick up the pen quickly and get it built quickly, I’d love to see it in place – if not at the same time, just after our runway – by 2030. But we recognise that that might not be realistic, we need to let the state work that through. But we will not be difficult, we will work with them to build to have this built as quickly as possible.

Asked if there were any conditions for building the above-ground station, Argus said there was the challenge of “constructing in a 24-7 environment” that needs to be considered, plus getting terminal access right and working out how to transfer the land over to the state.

Argus said the airport had written to the premier, Jacinta Allan, this morning and “we’re really confident that will happen.”

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‘Any rail is better than no rail’, Melbourne airport CEO says

Lori Argus said the suggestion any delay on the rail link has been about “raking in more money” through underground parking was “staggering”.

The reality is our car parks are full today, pretty much full. And we do have a lot more people on the roads, and so our problem is going to be full regardless of the rail or not. Because doubling our passenger growth in the next 20 years means that it would be mayhem if we didn’t have other transport solutions.

The Melbourne airport CEO also disagreed with one local mayor, who reportedly labelled negotiations with the airport as “obstructionist”.

Argus:

Again, we were working constructively with the state when the project was paused. We didn’t ask for the project to be paused and we didn’t ask for the project to go into the federal review.

Argus said plans for an underground station were in the airport’s plans for “at least 30 years” so “this shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone that we had long-term plans for future proofing, which we think makes sense.”

We’re now at a point where we think, well, any rail is better than no rail, and so a compromise is necessary and we’re willing to do that.

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Melbourne airport CEO says it’s time to ‘just get on with it’ regarding rail link

The CEO of Melbourne airport, Lori Argus, says that “now’s the time to compromise” and “accept” the above-ground rail link.

As we reported earlier, Melbourne airport has made a major backdown and said it would support an above-ground station – rather than the costlier underground one it was insisting on – in a move that could see works finally begin.

Speaking with ABC RN earlier, Argus said “another one or two years without the certainty of support for underground means that it’s just going to take too long.”

We were in a process with the state government with their above-ground station last year when it was paused. It then went into the federal review, and then the minister requested an independent review. So a number of reviews for all the different parties, that’s just taking a little bit of time. But the reality is when that report came out some weeks ago, and said there was more review required for underground to be considered, we just thought we need to just get on with it.

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Coalition advances on Labor in NSW and Queensland: poll

The Coalition has notched up higher voter support than Labor for the first time in the critical campaign battleground state of NSW, according to new Newspoll analysis.

As AAP reports, the April to June analysis published in The Australian newspaper today showed the Coalition ahead 51–49 on a two-party basis in Australia’s largest state by population.

The Liberal National party has also improved its lead in Queensland with 54% support to Labor’s 46% on a two-party basis.

Support for Labor remains strong in South Australia and Victoria. Overall, Labor is ahead of the Coalition 51% to 49%. In the primary vote stakes, Labor is losing support among younger voters to the Greens, the analysis shows.

Federal MPs are on a winter break and the analysis shows Anthony Albanese has 48% approval compared to Peter Dutton’s 36%. Dutton is leading Albanese as preferred prime minister in his home state of Queensland for the first time, the analysis shows.

The next federal election is due to be held in 2025. The analysis was based on Newspoll surveys with almost 5,000 voters across Australia between April and June.

Anthony Albanese speaks to Peter Dutton during Question Time. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP
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Josh Butler

Josh Butler

Peter Dutton to travel to the United States for the next week

The opposition leader, Peter Dutton, will be in the United States for the next week, attending the Australian American Leadership Dialogue conference and then taking some personal leave.

The defence minister, Richard Marles, will attend the same conference, then head on to the Nato summit as Australia’s representative.

Dutton’s office announced this morning he would be at the AALD in Washington DC from 8–12 July, where he will speak in various forums. He will then take three days’ personal leave after that event, the statement said.

“The Liberal Party is covering the cost of the flights,” Dutton’s office said.

In these precarious times where new threats challenge civilisation on multiple fronts, the [Australia-US] Alliance matters more than ever.

Sussan Ley will be acting opposition leader for that period.

Peter Dutton during the Queensland LNP’s annual convention on Saturday. Photograph: Russell Freeman/AAP

During Marles’ trip to the US, his office said he would “undertake a number of engagements with representatives of the US Congress and senior officials in Washington to discuss our Alliance and advancing cooperation under the AUKUS partnership”.

The partnership between Australian and NATO reinforces our shared commitment to the rules-based international order.

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Daniel Hurst

Daniel Hurst

Pacific leaders gather in Brisbane over banking woes

Pacific leaders, ministers and central bank governors will gather in Brisbane today to discuss the withdrawal of banking services from many Pacific island countries.

The two-day forum is part of a joint effort by Australia and the US to help the Pacific with its financial services at a time of growing competition for influence in the region. Western officials fear that any void in banking services in the region will be filled by China.

Officials say the Pacific has “borne the brunt of a global trend of financial institutions reducing or withdrawing banking services, with the fastest withdrawal of correspondent banking relationships anywhere in the world”.

More than 300 people will discuss how to reverse that trend when they participate in the two-day Pacific Banking Forum in Brisbane.

The US is sending its Treasury under-secretary, Brian Nelson, to participate. Nauru is sending its president, David Adeang, and the Cook Islands will be represented by its prime minister, Mark Brown, while numerous others are sending finance ministers and central bank governors.

The treasurer, Jim Chalmers, said Australia had “a strong connection with our brothers and sisters in the Pacific” and wanted to “help them prosper into the future”.

Chalmers said helping to prevent the loss of banking services in the Pacific was “vital to the safety, security and economic development of our region”.

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Gaza death toll ‘impacting each and every person with a conscience’, Payman says

Wrapping up the interview, Fatima Payman was asked what she is hearing from her community about the human toll of what has been occurring in Gaza over the past ten months. She said:

It’s no longer just the Muslim community or the pro-Palestinian community that’s hurting. It’s been impacting each and every person with a conscience and a heart out there.

The amount of overwhelming sentiments that I have received in terms of the heartache, the pain, the loss of hope, not knowing, you know – seeing the devastation, the destruction.

I know it’s quite early to be talking about this, but seeing limbs of young children being blown off and, you know, amputations taking place without any anaesthetics, these are live-streamed. The genocide that’s taking place in Gaza and impacting Palestinians is being live-streamed and it’s impacting so many Australians who are a people of a fair go, who are a people that want to see freedom, want to see Palestinians have the right to self-determination and statehood.

So it’s been a very heartbreaking last 10 months and hopefully I will continue to use my voice in spaces and platforms that I get granted to raise concerns because these are universal principles of justice, equality and freedom that we all should share and advocate for.

Independent senator Fatima Payman. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP
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Payman says media backgrounding on her sets ‘precedent that is not constructive to modern Australia’

Fatima Payman was also asked to weigh in on the backgrounding that’s been happening over the last few days from her now ex-colleagues in the media.

She said it was “bizarre that this may set a precedent that is not really constructive to our modern-day Australia that we’re living in”.

But in saying that, I’m not going to dwell on what people have been doing. It’s quite flattering that people still want to talk about me and give, you know, information that I’d given to them in confidence, but I’m really focused on what’s to come, you know, what is going to serve the best interests of Western Australians in my capacity as their independent senator.

Payman said there are friendships she has formed over the past two years as a Labor senator that she hopes to maintain. As for whether the government can rely on her vote on crucial issues going forward, Payman said “it will depend on the bills that are brought forward”.

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Fatima Payman was asked to give a message to voters who supported her because she was with the Labor party:

I know that throughout this whole process, a lot of Western Australians have been reaching out to me wanting to share their experience, but also their thoughts and sentiments on the ground that the Australian Labor party that they elected were not serving their best interests.

They voted for a change in government, they wanted to see values of justice, equality and freedom upheld, and they’re just not seeing that. So for me, it’s important to prove myself, which I will, and in that I will be consulting with people on the ground to hear [what] their concerns are and how I can best represent them.

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Payman to tour WA to speak to constituents ‘without … restrictions of party rules’

Independent senator Fatima Payman has been speaking with ABC News Breakfast following her decision to quit the Labor party last week.

Payman said it had been a “hectic past few weeks” but she has now travelled home to Perth, receiving a big reception at the airport and spending time with family.

Asked about her future in parliament as a now-independent senator, Payman said she plans to “try going to every single town” and visiting as many West Australians as she can to “find out what’s important to them … without any boundaries or restrictions of party rules and confinements”.

Payman also said she hadn’t thought about forming any coalitions “at this stage.”

Fatima Payman announced she had quit the Labor party last week. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AP
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