Australian news and politics live: Anthony Albanese backs housing tax reforms ahead of Federal Budget
LIVE UPDATES: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says difficult housing reforms are necessary to tackle intergenerational inequality as Labor prepares for a politically risky Federal Budget.
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Key events
Just now - 06:11 AM
Albanese forced to defend looming tax backflip before Budget
20 mins ago - 06:06 AM
Albanese says Coalition chaos handed One Nation victory
55 mins ago - 05:31 AM
Fresh drone attacks rattle fragile Gulf ceasefire
1 hour ago - 05:16 AM
Trump says Iran response ‘totally unacceptable’ amid war negotiations
Madeline Cove is reporting live.
Albanese forced to defend looming tax backflip before Budget
Anthony Albanese was forced to defend Labor’s expected housing tax changes ahead of Tuesday’s Federal Budget, arguing governments must be prepared to make difficult decisions to address worsening generational inequality and declining home ownership.
The Prime Minister signalled Australia would be given a full explanation for the government’s shift on policies including negative gearing and capital gains tax concessions, while insisting the reforms were aimed at helping younger Australians enter the housing market.
“People are under pressure. And the easy path is to say, oh well, we’ll just sit back and watch that occur. The difficult decision, but the right decision, is to do the right thing with the right policies to deliver,” Mr Albanese said.
He added, “People are frustrated with issues like intergenerational equity. People are worried that younger Australians are never going to get a crack at home ownership … any responsible government like ours has to take these issues seriously.”
Mr Albanese also argued housing inequality had become more deeply entrenched since the last election, saying, “The circumstances that are here now when it comes to intergenerational equity, how are they different from what they were before the last election. How they are different is that they continue to be entrenched without reform and that’s the point.”
Mr Albanese also brushed aside suggestions of internal tension over the scale of reform, saying he and Treasurer Jim Chalmers were “in sync” heading into the budget.
Albanese says Coalition chaos handed One Nation victory
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has pointed to months of Coalition infighting and the fallout from Sussan Ley’s leadership removal as key factors behind One Nation’s shock breakthrough victory in the Farrer by-election.
Speaking on Radio National, Mr Albanese said voters had become increasingly disillusioned by instability within the opposition ranks and the treatment of the former Liberal leader, who represented the electorate for a quarter of a century.
“I think also there’s been a great deal of disappointment with the breakup of the coalition, not once but twice. The removal of a leader who had represented of course that seat in Sussan Ley for 25 years, but who was removed without even being given the opportunity to do a single budget-in-reply,” he said.
Mr Albanese added: “The way that that was done having these meetings on the day of the funeral of one of their former colleagues I think left an extraordinary legacy of betrayal for people who had supported Sussan Ley for a long period of time.”
While acknowledging many Australians were frustrated with rising financial pressure and losing faith in the political system, he described the result as “a devastating result I think, for Angus Taylor and the Liberal Party.”
Fresh drone attacks rattle fragile Gulf ceasefire
Fresh drone incidents across the Gulf have renewed fears the fragile Middle East ceasefire could unravel, with multiple countries reporting aerial threats and attacks over the weekend.
The United Arab Emirates said its air defence systems intercepted two drones launched from Iran, while Kuwait confirmed its military responded to “a number of hostile drones in Kuwaiti airspace”.
In Qatar, officials said a cargo ship arriving from Abu Dhabi was struck by a drone near its waters. Iranian media later claimed the vessel had been travelling under a US flag. The escalating tensions were accompanied by a fresh warning from Iranian parliament national security spokesman Ebrahim Rezaei, who declared: “Our restraint is over as of today.”
He added: “Any attack on our vessels will trigger a strong and decisive Iranian response against American ships and bases.”
Iranian state television also reported military chief Ali Abdollahi had met supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei and received “new directives and guidance for the continuation of operations to confront the enemy”.
Trump says Iran response ‘totally unacceptable’ amid war negotiations
Donald Trump has lashed out at Iran’s latest response to a US-backed peace proposal aimed at ending the escalating Middle East conflict, declaring the offer “totally unacceptable” and casting fresh doubt over hopes of a diplomatic breakthrough.
In a fiery post shared to Truth Social on Sunday US time, Mr Trump revealed he had reviewed Tehran’s response and was unimpressed by what had been put forward through mediators in Pakistan.
“I have just read the response from Iran’s so-called ‘Representatives.’ I don’t like it — TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!” he wrote, without detailing which parts of the proposal he opposed.
The rejected response reportedly failed to include guarantees around Iran’s nuclear program — one of Washington’s key demands during negotiations. Iranian officials instead indicated they would support a gradual reopening of the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping if the US agreed to lift restrictions targeting Iranian ships and ports.
The Trump administration had submitted its latest proposal to mediators last week as part of an effort to establish a 14-point framework agreement, including a month-long negotiation period aimed at preventing further escalation in the region.
Complicating the negotiations is the continued absence of Iran’s supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, who has reportedly remained out of public view since being injured in an attack earlier in the war that killed his father. Iranian supreme leaders have historically held final authority over major national security decisions, raising further uncertainty around whether Tehran can finalise any major agreement.
