Australian news and politics live: Anthony Albanese slams Peter Dutton’s dual citizenship referendum policy

Scroll down for the latest news and updates.
Key Events
EXCLUSIVE: Wong to raise issue of fake flyers with Chinese government
An outspoken Hong Kong exile living in Australia has been targeted by anonymous leaflets allegedly posted to mosques in Adelaide and accusing him of “siding with Israel” against “Islamic terrorism”.
A spokesperson for Foreign Minister Penny Wong said that she has and will again raise the case with the Chinese authorities.
Ted Hui, a lawyer and former Hong Kong legislator, who took refuge in Australia after Beijing crushed the city’s 2019 pro-democracy protests, told The Nightly he had been warned about the leaflets by the authorities late last year.
He was told the flyers, which used photoshopped images of his face and place of work, had been posted anonymously from Macau, the special administrative region of China that neighbours Hong Kong.
The Nightly was unable to independently verify the leaflets were posted to Adelaide mosques from Macau but contacted the Australian Federal Police and ASIO for comment.
The one-page documents are designed using the logo of Mr Hui’s current law firm alongside his face and sections about his “professional knowledge” and a “who am I” section.
They state that he “provides assistance to local Jews” and that “I am a pro-Jewish man and siding with Israel to wage war against those [sic] Islamic terrorism.”
‘Pay on delay’ laws to give airline travellers more compensation rights
Aussie airline passengers could soon be reimbursed if their flight is delayed.
Qantas and Virgin Airline executives have faced Senate hearings over their handling of cancelled flights, with the aim of creating more rights for passengers.
The Airline Passenger Protections Bill or “Pay on Delay” legislation will see airlines bound by a mandatory code of conduct with a minimum standard of treatment for customers, including compensation for significant delays and lost luggage.
Similar legislation has operated in the European Union since 2005.
Super fund cops $10.5m fine for ‘greenwashing’
An Australian super fund has been hit with a $10.5 million penalty for greenwashing.
The Federal Court found Active Super, formerly known as Local Government Superannuation Scheme, misled members and potential members by saying it had eradicated investments in gambling, coal mining and oil tar sands.
The fund also claimed to have eliminated Russian investments following the country’s invasion of Ukraine.
Justice David O’Callaghan found that between February 2021 and June 2023, Active Super actually held investments in these types of assets, including coal miners Whitehaven Coal and Coronado Global Resources.
He rejected Active Super’s argument that consumers would differentiate between direct investments and those held in pooled funds.
Inquest hears killer planned murder of water polo coach amid web of lies
The murder of a much-loved water polo coach in a school bathroom did not involve a “momentary loss of control” but was carefully planned and rehearsed by her ex-boyfriend, a coroner has heard.
Lilie James was beaten to death inside St Andrew’s Cathedral School in Sydney’s city centre just before midnight on October 25, 2023.
The 21-year-old had days earlier ended a brief relationship with her killer, colleague Paul Thijssen, who is suspected of killing himself hours after she died.

An inquest into their deaths on Tuesday revealed the Dutch-born man’s history of stalking Ms James and a prior partner, as well as a web of lies he spun about his time in Australia.
Those lies duped friends, housemates, his employer and, with numerous forged documents, Australian visa authorities.
RBA on US watch ahead of next rate decision
The Reserve Bank of Australia is keeping a close eye on developments out of the US as uncertainty in the global economy complicates its decision over whether to cut the cash rate again.
AAP is reporting that RBA chief economist Sarah Hunter said the bank would remain forward-looking, with its decisions dependent on its forecasts and new data as it unfolds.
But the board must exercise its own judgment beyond the economic modelling provided to it because of risks in the economic outlook, exacerbated by global uncertainty, she told the AFR Banking Summit in Sydney.
Her comments followed a warning from global economic institution the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development that Australia faces much slower growth than previously anticipated following US President Donald Trump’s tariff policies.
The OECD downgraded Australia’s growth outlook for 2026 to 1.8 per cent, from 2.5 per cent.
That’s below the Reserve Bank’s prediction from its February Statement on Monetary Policy that the economy would grow at 2.3 per cent in 2026.
Albo lashes Dutton’s referendum ‘thought bubble’
Asked about Peter Dutton’s plan to send Australians to a referendum to give ministers the ability to deport dual citizens who’ve committed serious crimes, the PM has blasted it as “another thought bubble that has not made it to lunchtime”.
He’s referring to the fact the Opposition Leader called for the referendum on breakfast TV this morning, as shadow attorney-general Michaelia Cash walked it back.
“Peter Dutton wants to talk about anything but cost-of-living... One week before the Budget, Peter Dutton has no plans, just thought bubbles... aimed at dividing people,” Mr Albanese said.
“This is the second referendum he has called for, at the same time as he criticises referendums he has voted for.
“If you want a referendum, Parliament is sitting (next) week, he can float it (then).”
Childcare revelations ‘of deep concern’, PM backs investigation
The PM has been asked about distresing revelations about the childcare sector aired by Four Corners last night, saying they are “of deep concern”.
Mr Albanese said there “needs to be certainly an investigation, and action taken wherever standards are not met”.
“State governments look after the regulation... But certainly I am sure that state governments will have a look at what has been revealed last night,” he said.
He downplayed calls, made by the Greens, for a royal commisson.
“They take years, they cost a lot of money. You do not need a royal commission to know that what was shown on TV last night was wrong”.
PM addressing media in Queensland
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is speaking from Gladstone in central Queensland, where he’s visiting a Rio Tinto facility and talking up Australia’s steel and aluminium industry.
In ase you’ve been living under a rock, Australian manufacturers exporting to the US have been slugged with a 25 per cent tariff after the Trump Administration declined to give any exemptions.
“We are going to make Australian steel and aluminium the best in the world and we are doing that by working with companies like Rio Tinto and BlueScope to make sure they can decarbonise, so they are in a competitive position which means there are goods and products will be in demand right throughout the world,” Mr Albanese said.
Mr Albanese has also given a forward sizzle to next Tuesday’s Budget, saying there will be “a bit more to say about buying Australian”.
Aussie swimming carnivals under threat
The Nightly’s Matt Shrivell reports that shocking statistics on swimming competency have thrown the future of the school swimming carnival into question:
Rising costs of swimming lessons, a lengthy ban on people attending public swimming areas during the COVID period and time-poor parents is contributing to a generation of children and adults who can not swim to a level that would enable them to stay afloat in a dangerous water environment.
Primary and high schools across the nation are experiencing such a drop in water-based sport participation rates that school swimming carnivals are being downgraded or even abandoned.
Littleproud says Albanese Government complacent on US relations
Nationals leader David Littleproud has called the Labor Government “flat-footed” and “asleep at the wheel” on US relations after Australia was unable to secure an exemption to American tariffs on steel and aluminium exports.
“The reality is, we’ve got a government that’s been flat-footed and asleep at the wheel,” he told Sky News on Tuesday.
“They haven’t leveraged, not just the relationship we’ve had for generations, but the fact that we have a compelling case.”
Mr Littleproud said he was concerned President Donald Trump’s expanding tariff agenda could lead to Australia’s beef exports.
“Unless you’re going to show leadership and be able to get in the front door, then unfortunately, we’re going to go out the back door,” he said.
“That’s what’s going to happen to our beef producers. It’s happening to our aluminium steel producers here already.”
The US slapped 25 per cent tariffs on the metals exports from March 12 despite being in a trade surplus with Australia and intense lobbying to be carved out.
Get the latest news from thewest.com.au in your inbox.
Sign up for our emails