⚡ Top Story
Guardian Australia · Sarah Basford Canales and Dan Jervis-Bardy
Anthony Albanese delivers a rare prerecorded address urging Australians to use public transport and conserve fuel as Middle East disruptions threaten months of economic shocks, while promising to shore up international supplies and boost local production.
Albanese's gone to the prerecorded address — the format reserved for wars and pandemics — to ask the nation to catch a bus. Three weeks of strategic fuel reserves, fifty years of warnings, and the big move is a video telling commuters to be brave. Chifley would have announced a refinery. This mob announced a carpool. The rare address isn't about the crisis — it's an admission that when the crisis arrived, the cupboard was bare and the only thing left to ration was optimism.
SMH · Shane Wright, James Hall, Daniella White
The federal government pressured states to cut fuel costs by an additional 8 cents per litre, but Queensland is blocking the plan, leaving the national strategy in limbo.
Eight cents. The Commonwealth's grand fuel relief strategy hinges on whether Queensland can be talked into surrendering eight cents of excise like a toddler being asked to share a biscuit. Canberra announces the plan before securing the votes — the political equivalent of selling the house before checking the title deed. Every state fuel cut since Howard has evaporated at the bowser within months, but we keep running the same play and calling it leadership.
ABC News · Holly Tregenza
Anthony Albanese will address the nation on TV tonight urging Australians to conserve fuel amid the Iran crisis, asking citizens to 'play their part' for industries that most need supply.
'Play your part' — the words of a man handing you a bucket while standing in front of the dam he forgot to build. Fifty years of strategic petroleum negligence and the national plan is a televised request to carpool. Curtin addressed the nation to announce a war footing. Albanese's addressing it to announce a driving tip. Somewhere between rationing and vibes, we landed on vibes.
Guardian Australia · Patrick Commins and Josh Butler
Treasurer Jim Chalmers has unveiled Covid-era business support measures as soaring fuel prices bite, with PM Albanese set to address the nation on the economic fallout from the US-Israel war on Iran.
Chalmers has pulled the Covid toolkit out of the cupboard like a bloke who owns one suit and wears it to every funeral. 'Small business is paying the price for the Middle East conflict' — mate, three decades of treating the Strait of Hormuz as someone else's problem wrote this bill long before anyone started shooting. Now Albanese addresses the nation, which is what you do when you've run out of policy but haven't run out of podiums.
Guardian Australia · Krishani Dhanji
Treasurer Jim Chalmers announces tax relief and support for businesses affected by Australia's fuel supply crisis, while government and opposition MPs uniformly refuse to comment on Trump's latest rebuke to allies.
Tax relief for businesses hit by a fuel crisis is the government equivalent of handing out umbrellas in a flood you could have dammed forty years ago. Chalmers calls it a support package — Bismarck would have called it a confession. Meanwhile every MP in the building has suddenly gone mute on Trump, which takes real coordination from people who normally can't shut up. The money flows out, the commentary dries up, and nobody connects the two silences.
SMH · Paul Sakkal
At least 10 people charged with violent threats against MPs since September, prompting new security measures as politically motivated intimidation escalates across Australia.
Ten charged since September, and the response is more bollards and bodyguards — treating the symptom while the fever rages. You don't get a country threatening its politicians because the country's gone mad. You get it because the politicians stopped being accessible when they were trusted and now want protection when they're not. Thirty years of focus-grouped cowardice hollowed out the compact, and now both sides act stunned that the vacancy's been filled by blokes with death threats instead of questions.
SMH · Paul Sakkal
Labor and the Coalition united behind a push to add roughly 40 MPs to parliament, with critics arguing both parties are motivated by self-interest rather than improved representation.
Both sides of the aisle finally found common ground — turns out the one thing that unites Labor and Liberal is the prospect of more seats for their own. Forty extra MPs in a building that can't pass a housing bill or fix the submarines. Metternich expanded his bureaucracy to manage an empire; we're expanding ours to manage the car park. The only growth industry in Canberra is Canberra.
Michael West Media · AAP
Israel's ambassador to Australia has declined to apologise for peacekeeper deaths and defended his country's actions in Lebanon, while the Albanese government calls for an investigation it has no mechanism to enforce.
Australia 'urges a probe' the way a bystander urges someone to call an ambulance — loudly, publicly, and without reaching for the phone themselves. The ambassador declines to apologise and Canberra responds with the diplomatic equivalent of a strongly-worded fridge magnet. When your foreign policy consists entirely of expressing concern at people who've made clear they don't care, you haven't got a policy — you've got a coping mechanism.
Guardian Australia · Guardian Staff
Israel's ambassador tells the National Press Club he's unaware the investigation into the drone strike killing of Australian aid worker Zomi Frankcom has been shelved with no prosecutions, while former defence chief Mark Binskin was denied access to drone audio during his inquiry.
An ambassador who isn't aware his own government shelved the investigation is either lying or proving the investigation was never serious enough to brief him on. Seven aid workers killed by drone strikes and the inquiry couldn't access the drone audio — that's not an investigation, it's a pantomime performed for an audience too polite to heckle. Binskin's report lands on Albanese's desk, where it joins the growing pile of things this government will describe as 'deeply concerning' before doing absolutely nothing about.
Michael West Media · AAP
Australian shares crept higher on a tech rally, cheerfully ignoring geopolitical instability in what passes for market confidence.
The market edging higher despite geopolitical chaos isn't resilience — it's amnesia with a Bloomberg terminal. Tech stocks rally because the algorithm doesn't read the foreign desk, and the fund managers stopped pretending they do. We don't defy tensions; we price them in, which is the financial sector's way of saying we've decided not to care until the invoice arrives.