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    The pilot of a helicopter that crashed into a waterfront hotel in Cairns was killed and two people were injured in the crash, Nine News has reported. Users on social media posted videos of a fire on the hotel’s roof.

    Pilot dead after ‘unauthorised’ helicopter crashes into hotel’s roof

    A pilot has died in a fiery helicopter crash on the roof of a hotel in far north Queensland; Vincent Tarzia is the new Liberal leader in South Australia. Follow updates live.

    • 29 mins ago
    • Gus McCubbing
    Chief scientist Cathy Foley said she was surprised by the level of consensus around what the community was looking for from science.

    Aussie innovators pushed to focus on five ‘missions’

    New priorities, outlined by Science Minister Ed Husic, include the net zero transition, supporting healthy communities and “elevating” Indigenous knowledge systems.

    • Updated
    • Tom Burton

    Fines and jail terms for attempts to disrupt CFMEU clean-out

    The union faces three years under administration and big penalties for anyone who tries to interfere. The Opposition says the laws are too weak.

    • Phillip Coorey

    Australia needs to arm up by late 2026: Hastie

    If he becomes defence minister after the next election, Andrew Hastie will move to rapidly acquire new weapons amid warnings of possible conflict with China in 2027.

    • Andrew Tillett

    Why this barrister quit and now runs the Grattan Institute

    A decade ago, Aruna Sathanapally was on track to be a judge, or at least a senior counsel at the NSW Bar.

    • Ronald Mizen

    How Alec’s life turned from hopeless to full of hope

    Pervasive feelings of isolation and sadness are drowning the hopes of young adults, but one program has been shown to turn that around.

    • Julie Hare

    Opinion & Analysis

    What we don’t know about AUKUS

    American government agencies keep revealing information about AUKUS that our own government will not.

    Laura Tingle

    Columnist

    Laura Tingle

    Short-term politics won’t leave sustainable childcare legacy

    Five years ago, Labor promised to subsidise childcare wages and was howled down. Now, it hardly moves the dial.

    Phillip Coorey

    Political editor

    Phillip Coorey

    Albanese should call out the Greens on antisemitism

    The PM is correct that “words matter”. So he should stop talking in code about the elevated terror threat.

    John Roskam

    Columnist

    John Roskam

    Hybrid working mishmash for 1.7m government workers across Australia

    The NSW government’s push for public servants to work from their offices has left a jumble of work arrangements for the nation’s largest employers.

    Tom Burton

    Government editor

    Tom Burton
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    More From Today

    Federal Police plan Parliament House walk-off amid pay dispute

    The planned “extremely disruptive” industrial action is part of a pay dispute in which AFP personnel claim they are being lumped in with “desk job public servants”.

    • Ronald Mizen

    Yesterday

    The CFMEU allegedly threatened to shut the site down if Hutchinson did not kick off the subcontractor.

    Labor warned CFMEU clean-up must go further

    Legislation to put the militant construction union into administration will be introduced to Parliament this week but industry groups warned the looming takeover needed to go further.

    • Andrew Tillett and Ronald Mizen
    A rise in refugee applications is being blamed on students wanting to stay in the country.

    Crackdown on overseas students triggers rise in refugee applications

    A big spike in applications for refugee status is being explained by the federal government’s attempts to cut the number of overseas students in the country.

    • Julie Hare

    David Rowe cartoons for August 2024

    David Rowe is a multiple Walkley award-winning cartoonist. He draws a daily political cartoon and one for the Chanticleer column.

    • David Rowe
    ASIO boss Mike Burgess

    Support for Hamas may not bar Gazans from Australia: ASIO boss

    The federal Opposition says social cohesion could be at risk if Labor offers Hamas supporters a safe haven.

    • Andrew Tillett
    Advertisement
    Alana Anderson says migration changes are having a devastating impact on colleges like hers.

    Private colleges ‘collateral damage’ of migration changes

    Alana Anderson’s business might have won exporter of the year for the NT but nothing is going to save her from the government’s migration agenda.

    • Julie Hare
    Labor’s Kate Thwaites recently got a promotion, and a bother.

    New ageing minister held ageing stocks

    Anthony Albanese’s addition to the Ministerial Code of Conduct has caused problems for a raft of his ministers.

    • Myriam Robin
    ASIO boss Mike Burgess.

    ‘At least three’ nations interfering in Australia: ASIO

    Mike Burgess says Iran is among several countries involved in foreign interference in Australia; Penny Wong calls for a ceasefire in Gaza after an Israeli strike on a school. Follow updates here.

    • Staff writers

    This Month

    Amy Pitchford and Derek Christopher

    The union boss and the building executive

    Multiplex executive Amy Pitchford is in a relationship with a CFMEU official being investigated by police, while also advising the Victorian government on industry issues.

    • Nick McKenzie, David Marin-Guzman and Ben Schneiders
    Bruce Lehrmann, left, with John Macgowan in 2022.

    Lehrmann, Macgowan torpedo NACC ‘conspiracy theory’ over submarine leaks

    Ex-political staffer Bruce Lehrmann and his one-time media minder have had their homes raided by the anti-corruption watchdog.

    • Andrew Tillett
    A Virginia class submarine berths in WA: more big questions over basing.

    What we don’t know about AUKUS

    American government agencies keep revealing information about AUKUS that our own government will not.

    • Laura Tingle
    A digital mock-up of a Virginia Class nuclear-powered submarine.

    Marles denies sinister meaning in AUKUS ‘political commitments’

    The new AUKUS treaty does not lock Australia into accepting nuclear waste from the US and UK, or commit to joining a war over Taiwan.

    • Andrew Tillett
    Anthony Albanese’s announcement  of a 15 per cent wage rise for childcare workers came before the current wage hearing before the Fair Work Commission was finalised.

    Short-term politics won’t leave sustainable childcare legacy

    Five years ago, Labor promised to subsidise childcare wages and was howled down. Now, it hardly moves the dial.

    • Phillip Coorey
    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese interacts with a child at the Bardon Early Learning Centre.

    PM hints at universal childcare by middle of next term

    Childcare fees could continue to be capped in return for long-term government wage subsidies.

    • Phillip Coorey
    ‘Deja vu’: Pat Anderson, co-chair of the Uluru Dialogue.

    Voice architect fears Indigenous policy ‘deja vu’ trap

    Uluru Dialogue co-chairwoman Pat Anderson warned Labor not to throw its promise of a Makarrata commission “out with the referendum bathwater”.

    • Tom McIlroy
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    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and ASIO director-general Mike Burgess.

    Albanese should call out the Greens on antisemitism

    The PM is correct that “words matter”. So he should stop talking in code about the elevated terror threat.

    • John Roskam
    NSW Premier Chris Minns wants public servants to work “principally” from the office.

    Hybrid working mishmash for 1.7m government workers across Australia

    The NSW government’s push for public servants to work from their offices has left a jumble of work arrangements for the nation’s largest employers.

    • Tom Burton

    Bonus cut for Joyce | Qantas’ explosive review | Our best Games ever

    Read everything that’s happened in the news so far today.

    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and RBA governor Michele Bullock.

    Labor working ‘arm-in-arm’ with RBA on inflation, Albanese insists

    The prime minister has pushed back on claims that federal government spending is making it harder for the Reserve Bank to tame inflation.

    • Tom McIlroy
     Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says subsiding childcare wages has an indirect productivity benefit.

    Labor’s $3.6b pre-election pay boost for childcare workers

    The government will fund a 15 per cent, $3.6 billion pay rise for child care workers over the next two years on the proviso their employers agree to limit fee increases until after the election.

    • Phillip Coorey