Moira Deeming speaks to journalists while on her way to a party meeting
Victorian Liberal MP Moira Deeming has accused her party colleagues of trying to 'annihilate' her after she sued John Pesutto for defamation.
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News.com.au
5 minutes ago
- News.com.au
South Australia shaken by jobs challenges and Premier Peter Malinauskas must be at top of his game
South Australia's foundations are being shaken by global and natural forces, with tempestuous times ahead. In a tumultuous past fortnight, bedrocks of the state economy, employing thousands of people, have been plunged into doubt. Santos, the state's biggest company by far, is the target of an almost $30bn takeover bid by an Abu Dhabi raider, casting great uncertainty over the future of its Adelaide head office. The $368bn nuclear-powered submarine project centred on Adelaide is under threat from a 30-day United States review assessing its alignment with President Donald Trump's America First agenda. Despite some heartening rain, the drought continues to ravage the state's farms – SA primary industries generate $17.1bn annually. State debt was forecast to soar to $48.495bn in the state budget unveiled on June 5, after which the influential S & P Global Ratings warned big new spending ahead of next March's state election could trigger a credit rating downgrade. The purse strings will continue to be tested by the Whyalla steelworks and mine, as the budget set aside $384m in state and federal funds for a potential six-month extension of the state-induced administration. The Malinauskas government might have repeatedly ruled out an ownership stake in Whyalla's steelworks but a $2.4bn state/federal rescue package leaves both on the hook until a new owner is found. Public sector unions are restless. The SA Salaried Medical Officers Association on Thursday rejected a 10 per cent pay rise over three years and recommitted to walking off the job on Wednesday. These are extraordinary and foundational challenges, of varying degrees of concern, to the state economy and, most particularly, the potential for today's aspirational young South Australians to find well-paid, challenging jobs. The risk of Santos's head office leaving Adelaide should not be dismissed lightly. A foreign takeover, as my colleague Giuseppe Tauriello observed on Wednesday, would significantly diminish the last corporate heavyweight left standing in South Australia. Santos dwarfs other SA companies for jobs, investment, sponsorship and general corporate clout. It is four times the size of the state's second biggest firm, Argo Investments, and more than eight times the size of third-ranking Codan. Business success matters in a state where the population is overwhelmingly concentrated in the capital, and most jobs are underpinned by state and federal government spending of some form. Santos and partner Beach Energy in January officially opened a nation-leading Moomba carbon storage project, billed as kickstarting a $600bn industry and hailed by Premier Peter Malinauskas as a 'historic day for our state'. Mr Malinauskas responded to the Santos takeover bid by declaring his government's 'priority at all times is to ensure that South Australian jobs remain in South Australia, and to maintain Santos' headquarters in Adelaide'. This will be a test of his government's mettle and resolve, along with its legislative levers that include ministerial approval for a change in controlling interest of a petroleum resources licence holder, like Santos. Opposition Leader Vincent Tarzia, in his Tuesday budget reply speech, predictably painted a bleak picture of a state ravaged by debt, skyrocketing costs, unaffordable homes and a floundering health care system. Nine months out from the next state election, he vowed to deliver a 'debt management plan' to ensure this was at 'a sustainable level'. Mr Tarzia declared the state was 'at a crossroads'. He was right, although the future is always uncertain. Mr Malinauskas has a strong story to tell on economic confidence, a historically low jobless rate and the state's standing in the nation. But he will be justifiably wary of overconfidence ahead of the state election, even if his opponents are at a historically low ebb in their standing. The state is facing some serious challenges and the Premier will need to be at the top of his game.

ABC News
17 minutes ago
- ABC News
Trial finds age assurance can be done, as under-16s social media ban deadline looms
The organisation contracted by the government to assess technologies that could be used to implement the social media ban for under-16s says options exist to verify the age of users privately, robustly and effectively. Australia's world-leading laws to stop children and teenagers accessing some social media platforms are due to come into force in December, after the legislation passed parliament with bipartisan support late last year. A 12-month buffer was built into the legislation to allow time for the e-Safety commissioner to figure out how to implement the ban, with consultations to begin next week, and the Age Assurance Technology Trial to be completed. The Age Check Certification Scheme and software consultancy firm KJR were commissioned by the government last year to lead the testing and released their preliminary report on Friday, which offered a snapshot of "broad patterns and trends". Companies that offer age assurance technology voluntarily put themselves forward for the trial, with interviews and testing then conducted on selected methods. But the two-page preliminary report does not include details of what tests have been undertaken or the results of individual methods and technologies. "The preliminary findings indicate that there are no significant technological barriers preventing the deployment of effective age assurance systems," project director Tony Allen said. "These solutions are technically feasible, can be integrated flexibly into existing services and can support the safety and rights of children online." The government is not treating the trial as a test of whether the social media ban can be implemented, nor a process to identify a single product or method to be imposed on tech companies to meet their obligations under the new laws. The full results are expected to be handed to the communications minister by the end of next month, then made public later this year, but some experts have already raised concerns. Earlier this week, ABC News revealed that face-scanning technology tested on school students as part of the trial this year could only guess their age within an 18-month range in 85 per cent of cases. "I don't think the ban is viable," RMIT professor Lisa Given, who closely analysed the government's policy, told ABC News. The preliminary report also found "concerning evidence" that, in the absence of specific guidance from government, some social media companies were "over-anticipating the eventual needs of regulators" about information that might be required for future investigations. This included some providers that were found to be building tools to allow law enforcement agencies and regulators to retrace steps of verification, "which could lead to increased risk of privacy breaches due to unnecessary and disproportionate collection and retention of data". The age assurance trial was initially conceived to assess the viability of technology to prevent children from accessing pornography online and has considered a range of methods. It found there was no "one-size-fits-all" technology and that platforms would have to determine which one best suited their needs. Under the ban, anyone under the age of 16 will be blocked from using platforms including TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat and Facebook, a move the government and the Coalition argue is necessary to protect children and teenagers' mental health and wellbeing. While the ban only applies to young people, it will likely also require adults to verify their ages with social media providers. Tech giants will face fines of up to $50 million if they fail to take "reasonable steps" to keep children and teens off their platforms. There are no penalties for parents of young people who subvert the ban. Since the ban was announced, questions have been raised over whether existing technology could adequately police social media user ages, with the government yet to reveal how it will work in practice. It does not have to adopt any findings from the trial, which has been running for about eight months, while the laws prevent social media companies from forcing users to hand over their government IDs. Shadow communications minister Melissa McIntosh said the "time is ticking" for the government to implement the ban, which was first lobbied for by the Coalition. "We are six months away from the age limit commencing and social media companies need clarity now around what requirements must be put in place to protect our children," she said. "The government must get this right. No more young lives can be lost or families destroyed because of the toxicity of social media." A spokesperson for Communications Minister Anika Wells, who took over the portfolio from Michelle Rowland after the election, said the final findings of the trial would be provided to the eSafety Commissioner to inform her implementation of the laws. "The government will be guided by advice from the eSafety Commissioner on the implementation of the law," the statement read. "We know that social media age restrictions will not be the be-all and end-all solution for harms experienced by young people online, but it's a step in the right direction to keep our kids safer." An eSafety spokesperson welcomed the early findings and said the trial results would be just one input as they worked out how to implement the social media age restrictions. "We are pleased to see the trial suggests that age assurance technologies, when deployed the right way and likely in conjunction with other techniques and methods, can be private, robust and effective," they said.

Daily Telegraph
33 minutes ago
- Daily Telegraph
Meet our NSW farming blue bloods
Don't miss out on the headlines from NSW. Followed categories will be added to My News. They are our salt of the earth, like so many before them - multi-generational farmers continuing the family tradition of working on the land. It's in their blood, but it takes true grit to keep their livelihoods afloat and agriculture a strong cornerstone of the national economy, with challenges around every corner. The Saturday Telegraph sat down with five farming families across NSW to hear their challenges and concerns, the pride they take in acting as custodians of the land, and why, man or woman, there's nothing else they'd rather do to make a living, with the soils of this state in their very DNA. TONGUE FAMILY Their connection to the Tamworth region stretches back almost 150 years. Kevin Tongue, 76, and the family patriarch, is New England pastoral royalty. Proud of his ancestry – his great grandfather came to the district in the late 1800s – he also shows no signs of slowing down. 'No intention of retiring mate, not while I can still do things here,' Kevin says from a sprawling property where with adult sons Paul and Ben, they run beef, prime lambs and pigs, grow barley, lucerne and canola, and operate a grain haulage business via a half dozen semi-trailers housed on the farm. The Tongue family marking lambs in the late 1950s on their property outside Tamworth. Picture: Supplied 'All I want to do is benefit the boys and our family, and the agricultural community around us, because there will be a time when I won't be able to do that. 'That's the aim of the exercise mate. To keep improving the country, so we can increase the production of food and fibre for generations to come. I want to leave this farming country we own and work in better condition than when we got it.' Tongue backs words with actions. He speaks regularly to National Party Senator Barnaby Joyce, who was born in Tamworth, and to the local State MP Kevin Anderson, to keep farmers' issues on their radars. 'That's important to me,' he said. 'We've got to advocate to all parts of government for the benefit of agriculture. It's a huge money making venture for the country and the state. Look at what we produce and export and what comes back to State and Federal governments. Three generations of the Tongue family on their NSW property. Picture: Rohan Kelly 'We've got to keep pushing too, because during the last federal election there was not a word come out from the Labor government about agriculture. That really concerns me. 'We've got these city centric representatives down there in Canberra and Sydney who don't really know too much about agriculture, and that's frightening.' His hot topic at present is energy. 'We've got a challenge at the moment with this renewable energy push,' Mr Tongue added. 'Putting these solar factories and wind farms on prime agricultural land, they're taking away from us that ability to produce food. And it's not going to be the ants' pants to our energy needs. I've spoken with environment Ministers and they don't seem to get it. 'But you get the sense the bureaucrats are running the show and telling them what to do. The Ministers virtually have no bloody control.' Tongue and wife Janelle, their two sons and seven grandchildren, live in three houses spread across five adjoining properties the family have aggregated some 25km out of Tamworth. Ken, George and Nelson Tongue with the wool clip leaving their farm more than half a century ago. Picture: Supplied They own another property 4km 'up the road'. A total landholding of almost 2000 hectares. A third son, 44-year-old Alan, left the farm when he was 17 to pursue a rugby league career in Canberra, and still lives in the nation's capital. Alan played 220 games for the Raiders and was Dally M Lock and Captain of the Year in 2008. Two years earlier he had on display the work ethic that characterises his dad – Alan set an NRL record of 1087 tackles in a season. MURRAY FAMILY Martin Murray just wants a 'fair go' for young farmers. For those on the land to have access to the same life-shaping opportunities currently reserved for their city cousins. 'Stamp duty exemptions,' says the Chair of the NSW Young Farmer Council. 'With most people, their first farm is also their first home. But you only escape stamp duty if you're inheriting the family property. If you're buying an outside farm, it doesn't apply. 'We're only asking for the same concessions as first home buyers receive. Our farms are more than our businesses. Inverell farmer Martin Murray with his wife Rachel, their son John, 5, and daughter Evie, 2. Picture: Supplied 'They're also our places of residence. Farms are more than an asset, they can be linked to people's identities. We should be helping people to buy them.' Mr Murray, who has just sold his 340-hectare mixed cropping farm at Inverell to focus on cattle, is married to Rachel. The couple have a son John, 5, and daughter Evie, 2. A fourth generational farmer, he is keen to see more young families enter the world of agriculture, but says it won't happen unless incentives make it more affordable. 'Couples buying these farms will have kids going to local schools, they'll be supporting the community from small businesses to footy clubs and everything in between,' Mr Murray said. 'Making their first farm more attainable will certainly help make that happen.' Mr Murray grew up in a farming family with its roots running deep in the rich soil of Griffith in the NSW Riverina. A property near Inverell in NSW. His great grandfather purchased land initially as part of a soldier settlement scheme. Post World War II, his grandfather bought a neighbouring property. 'My father and his brother got a place of their own in the late 1980s,' Mr Murray added. 'Dad has bought and sold farms since and we bought here in 2020.' After five years, with properties on his borders being snapped up by corporate interests and killing prospects of expansion, Mr Murray is changing tack. He is swapping crops for live beasts. 'We've always had a few cattle on the side of the cropping operations and my wife ran a cattle stud before she met me. I brought her over to the dark side of diesel and machinery,' he laughed. 'For me there was always this immense satisfaction in watching a crop grow. It's hard to describe and articulate. Just knowing you've managed it, managed the systems, and been able to make it happen. 'Then you're out at night sitting in your tractor, seeing all the headlights flickering in the distance and knowing everyone's out there doing the same thing as you are. It's hard to put into words. 'I don't know what I'd do if I wasn't farming.' SHOKER FAMILY The agricultural sector is a victim of its own evolution, according to a farmer based in banana heartland at Coffs Harbour. Paul Shoker, whose family's farming history goes back to the Punjab region of India, says: 'Technology and equipment advancements mean we've got less people growing more food – the problem is that gives us far fewer votes. 'So when it comes to governments, they take us for granted. When you need policy changes or assistance, we're just not their priority. 'Evidence of that is the slow support for the farmers affected by the recent floods on the NSW north coast.' Coffs Harbour banana grower Paul Shoker. Picture: Nathan Edwards Based 2km west of the Big Banana, Shoker works 25 hectares of bananas and avocadoes. Back in the 1970s, he says, there were 1000 banana growers between the Clarence and Macleay Rivers in northern NSW. 'Nowadays there are probably 15 to 18,' he said. 'And in the 1980s, around 50 per cent of Australian bananas came out of NSW. These days NSW produces about 3 per cent of the market, with 95 per cent from Queensland. 'Basically they had access to cheaper land, had lesser regulatory burdens and they don't have the winters we have. It really helped grow their industry up north.' But Shoker is determined to keep embracing tradition. 'We've had three to four major floods since Covid and over the years a lot of older producers might have said 'that will do us' and be forced off the land,' he said. 'I'm 37, that's not an option, but regardless of the challenges I just want to grow bananas and feed people. The attraction for me is that we can make a real difference to people's lives. The Big Banana in Coffs Harbour. Picture: Getty Images 'There's something really rewarding in knowing that something you're growing is a healthy product, that we look after the environment, and we're leaving behind a good legacy.' Shoker's parents bought an 8 hectare section of the farm in 1991, with the family expanding the landholding with a 2008 purchase after Paul graduated from university. A business degree, with majors in accounting and finance, lead the father of four children under the age of six to approach farming from an efficiency perspective. 'We saw the need to diversify,' he added. 'So we harvest all year round with avocadoes making up for the lesser demand and production of bananas over winter. 'The unique thing about bananas is that they're a wholly domestic market. All the bananas grown in Australia are also consumed here. It's pretty special.' CHESWORTH FAMILY When a millennial drought threatened their business, opportunity emerged from adversity on the Chesworth dairy farm near Dubbo. Industry tradition had rarely been challenged. Dawn and dusk milking, twice a day, cups on, cows were happy, job done. But in 2007 as grazing grasses continued to wilt and hand feeding was needed to keep the herd nourished, Erika and Steven Chesworth brainstormed ways to reverse declining profits. 'We started milking three times a day,' said Erika. 'Cows are like women. The more you take, the more they make. Erika and Steven Chesworth on their dairy farm in Rawsonville, near Dubbo. Picture: Clancy Paine 'So we were actually able to increase production by about 18 per cent in that first year. 'The cost input was a little more electricity to run the dairy and a few more kilograms of grain a day. But not only did we save our business we were able to turn things around really quickly. 'You get more out of your investment milking your cows more often. Back in the day mum and dad milked just morning and night. It's just what the industry did. 'But we needed to try something fast and it worked.' According to Erika, it makes for more contented cows. Given the couple are both sixth generation dairy farmers, her opinion is based on experience. 'We know more about them now in terms of feeding, nutrition, and we know it actually improves their health when they're getting milked more regularly,' she said. The Chesworths have 1000 milking cows on 970 hectares after moving to Dubbo from the Hunter Valley more than 20 years ago. Steven Chesworth, Erika Chesworth, Campbell Chesworth, Emma Elliot and Grace Duncan at Little Big Dairy. Picture: Clancy Paine They produce 11 million litres of milk a year, with half of it processed for their own line Little Big Dairy – created in 2012 – and the rest distributed to a major Australian dairy retailer. 'We control the Little Big Dairy product from start to finish, from milking through to processing and into the bottle,' said Erika. 'It is single source milk and each of our cows are tagged, so we can trace their health and their production, it's a really intimate process. 'One of the lovely things about the dairy industry is that we have lots of contact with the animals. 'Our large herd of Holsteins were born and raised on our farm. Each of them has a name. We know them all by sight.' Steven and Erika can trace their family trees back to the 19th Century, to farm holdings in the UK. 'We're pretty tragic – because it's all dairy heritage,' Erika says. 'But Steven and I feel privileged to be able to help feed the nation. We take that really seriously.' It's also a tradition set to continue. Two of the Chesworths adult children, Emma and Campbell, work in the business while a third, Duncan, has bought his own dairy farm in Victoria. BRIGHENTI-BARNARD FAMILY Jo Brighenti-Barnard is a warrior for the citrus industry. As NSW Farmers' Horticulture Committee chair, she frequently agitates on behalf of growers, waging battle with governments and major supermarkets. Earlier this year as inflation numbers started to drop, Brighenti-Barnard demanded to know why fruit and vegetable prices had been going the other way. 'Data shows that consumers are still paying through the nose to put food on the table while most farmers aren't receiving any greater returns for what they're growing,' she told media. 'Without price transparency, the major supermarkets are still likely to … extract huge profits from farmers and families alike.' The defiance is driven by her love for the land and the fruit her family has been growing just outside Griffith in the Murrumbidgee Irrigation Area, since her great-grandfather planted the first trees in 1913. Together with her parents, husband Philip, and brother Bart, Ms Brighenti-Barnard works a 450 hectares landholding that delivers an annual citrus production – primarily naval and juicing oranges – of around 5000 tonnes. Eighty per cent is exported to South-East Asia and the USA. 'I've grown up on the farms we're still running and there's a real feeling of pride in doing what we do,' the mother of three says. 'I laugh and tell friends that most of us can't keep pot plants alive, but I'll give credit to my brother, he manages to keep all these trees alive and in good health through heatwaves and floods. 'It's in your DNA, there's a real intuition you develop. It comes from experiencing it season after season, building on that every year as you put a little more of the pieces together. 'I do love it…especially this time of year where all the fruit is fully coloured and on the trees. 'You go out there and just see this sea of bright orange and gold amongst this forest of green … and you see the bins full of fruit … it gives you a real sense of achievement.' But off the farm there is also work to do as the committee chair warrior persona returns. 'Availability of irrigation water has been reduced, productivity levels are going backwards because our prices have been squeezed as costs rise, and levels of debt are an issue,' Ms Brighenti-Barnard added. 'We need governments to listen.' Do you have a story for The Daily Telegraph? Message 0481 056 618 or email tips@