Work continues the Child Care Coalition on Question Time, as NSW reports 12 new ones from Covid and Victoria has no new deaths. Follow all the news of the day
Dave Sharma is next on the defense train:
Patricia Karvelas: We know your budget has been the goal of other young people, so it’s obviously very specific. And the treasurer kept telling us that he knew women were more hurt, so they’re more affected, more needs to be done to help them, right?
Sharma:
Well, I theArray. . women, as a percentage of the population, were most affected at the start of the crisis due to some of the sectors in which they are occupied.
We’ve noticed more than 1. 3 million people who have lost their jobs or reduced their hours to zero, 760,000 who have repainted since then, 60% are women. Women have temporarily left the labor market, or have reduced their hours of operation, are returning Array. . None of this is solved and forgotten, I’d say. We want to keep an eye on all this. If you want to do more to help other sectors, be it young people, the elderly, Aboriginal Australian Array . . . we’re going to take that into account. We want to put all of Australia back to paintings, take unemployment to where it was before this crisis, and we want other people to feel incredibly rich again.
If there is one thing this country can handle right now, it is to refund the trade rate to nationals.
Anthony Albanese plans to give his reaction speech in a few hours, what are we waiting for?
A childcare package – there are reports circulating about it this afternoon (and yesterday) – and as Murph previously reported this morning, an announcement of “significant” power.
Stay tuned.
Student organizations are demonstrating plans that oppose proposed adjustments to university funding, which will make the position of a degree in humanities or the arts unsuccessful for many students.
According to Student Fightback’s statement:
“This is the most significant attack on academics in years. We will put it to bed. We will take to the streets of every major city and cause chaos in government until the pay increases are canceled,” said Jack Mansell. education officer at the University of Sydney and organizer of Student Fightback NSW.
“Payment increases are a despicable decision. They will make higher education less available to academics of modest backgrounds and force graduates to borrow even more, as the economy enters recession. “
Beth Jackson, director of education at Victoria’s National Student Union, said: “Morrison’s government is obviously going to force academics to bear the burden of the recession we’re entering.
“The budget has provided trillions of dollars in investment to the personal sector while forcing task seekers to return below the poverty line and increase university education. They rescue them and we are forced to pay the bill.
“We will protest to ask that they be paid for the economic crisis, not academics or the poor. “
National Australian University Student Association representative Grace Hill said: “We are determined to continue the crusade opposed to this attack on higher education and will continue to resist the changes. “
Linda Burney also asked about the Greens’ tension over a treaty, the vote in parliament and Uluru’s statement.
Listen, I have listened to the debate very thoroughly and I will have to say that I find it confusing. There does not deserve to be a festival between the treatise and a voice. And indeed, the party that I represent, as you know, Patricia, believes in all 3 elements of the Uluru declaration, and Anthony Albanese has indicated, on several occasions, that Labor supports the treaty.
But let’s be transparent about anything: a treaty doesn’t take place overnight, it takes years and years to develop, and other people want to be prepared to make treaties. In my opinion, asking for a treaty now is to put the car in first. the horse.
I believe that a voice in parliament, from which the government, enshrined in the Constitution, is moving away is incredibly vital and we will have to respect what the other inhabitants of Uluru have asked for.
Patricia Karvelas: I spoke to the leader of the Greens, Adam Bandt, and asked if there was a replacement in the Greens position. He said it was a popular movement, is it?
I read your transcript with Adam Bandt. I don’t think he answered any of your questions. There is a very strong view in the community, as it has long been, that the treaty is important Lately we are seeing treaty processes in 3 states and territories.
A federal treaty is important. But we will have to get a vote in parliament instead, first enshrined in the constitution, the creation of a Makarrata commission, which would then have a duty to draft agreements and treaties.
Victoria Health has its official update:
If you have symptoms as mild as they do, get tested. We all have a duty to do everything we can to keep this epidemic from getting worse.
Anyone who visited the Chadstone Mall between September 23 and October 1 will be screened, even if they have the slightest symptoms. Testing should be done at the Chadstone Car Park, Point 2 of the Chadstone Car Park. Chadstone, outdoors in Coles and at a walk-in clinic. it is open to staff only in the central services on the ground between MJ Bale and Marimekko. today and tomorrow.
Anyone who has visited the Oddfellows Café in Kilmore between 30 September and 3 October is classified as a possible close contact and will have to show up for a review, even if they have no symptoms. until 7 p. m. and on the Kilmore Soldiers Memorial Hall contextual verification site from 10 a. m. at 5 p. m. , about 230 more people are ingesting in Kilmore as a result of cases similar to Oddfellows coffee.
Victoria has recorded new cases of coronavirus since yesterday, and the total number is now 20247.
The overall total greater than 10 as a reclassified case.
Six of today’s new cases are similar to known epidemics: 3 are similar to the Frankston Family Circle outbreak, one is similar to the Oddfellows Café, one is similar to the Box Hill Hospital outbreak, and the other is similar to a complex case. five other cases are still under investigation.
Of today’s 11 new instances, there are 3 in Frankston, two in Hobsons Bay and instances in Boroondara, Brimbank, Melton, Port Phillip, Mildura and Mitchell.
Mildura’s case is not positive, however, it is considered positive at this stage. A new review is underway. All public fitness movements are performed, adding control of nearby contacts.
Investigations are underway on an outbreak at Box Hill Hospital, which includes two members and one patient. The contact search procedure is in progress and all appropriate public aptitude movements are performed, adding cleanup, testing, and quarantine.
Since yesterday no new deaths from Covid-19 have been reported and to date, another 809 people have died from coronavirus in Victoria.
The average number of cases diagnosed in the last 14 days (September 24 to October 7) for the city of Melbourne is 9. 7 and Regional Victory is 0. 4. The average cellular case is calculated by averaging the number of new cases in the last 14 days.
The total number of instances of a stranger in the last 14 days (September 22 to October 5) is 14 for the city of Melbourne and 0 for the Victoria region. The 14-day era for acquisition knowledge ends 48 hours before the 14-day era used to calculate the average of new instances due to the time required to fully investigate a case and assign its acquisition method.
In Victoria right now:
Linda Burney was also at the afternoon briefing, where she spoke about the government’s statement that this new budget is a ”women’s budget” (although there are not many measures that are exclusively for women, or even a reaction to childcare costs). , make it for any parent, but we know that most of the care still falls on women)
I find it almost laughable. I sense that the Prime Minister’s Office has explained that this is a budget for women and Minister Ruston made one on the radio this morning, which is, of course, a budget for women because women drive on the roads.
I mean. . . I don’t quite perceive it, but the fact is simple, Patricia, that 61% of women over forty-five are actually the ultimate vital organization in unemployment figures. There are about 754,000 women who are in JobSeeker. Si, of course we young people, the fact is that there is a huge hole in the budget for other people over the age of 35 in JobSeeker and there is a gigantic proportion, as I just said, of the other people who take place to be women.
A little bit of Alan Tudge:
You will need to meet one of two requirements: to prove that you have a functional point of English; you may need to prove it by the fact that you attended an English school, or demonstrate it by passing an English exam; or proves that you have at least had the smart chance of being informed about the English language while you are here in Australia before applying for a visa.
It does not prohibit, that is, does not prohibit any spouse from entering the country. You may fall in love with a stranger who doesn’t speak English.
They can enter, but they will regularly have to be here for two, 3 years before they can apply for this permanent apartment visa. That’s when we ask other people to really check to be informed of the English language when making those loose lenses in English.
Alan Tudge says it’s a “reasonable” attempt to stay informed in English: 500 hours.
We talked about it in the blog on Tuesday night: the government’s resolve to turn the English component of the components’ visa needs.
This is a significant replacement and one of the reasons we inform you at budget night.
He’s getting a little attention, and other people rightly criticize him for discriminating against other people in countries that don’t speak English.
You’ll have a lot of ease coming from England than from Iran, for example.
Alan Tudge has taken a business position on the need for English, continually stating that it is “the national language”.
Here he tries to justify it to Patricia Karvelas:
Well, if you look at the data, PK, only 13% of non-English speakers in Australia have jobs, compared to 64% of those who speak smart English, it’s also austere.
When your parents came to Australia, I probably don’t know, maybe in the ’60s or ’50s, I don’t know, yet there were a lot of jobs you could do without English. Today almost, even non-easy jobs require something fundamental. English due to occupational protection and fitness requirements, so the world has changed. And, of course, if you need to participate fully in our democracy, the English language also becomes very important.
The Senate is now presenting its motions of condolences to Susan Ryan, which the House did on Tuesday.
Federal Agriculture Minister David Littleproud supported Narrabri’s fuel allocation despite objections from farmers and the community.
Today, on one occasion at the National Rural Press Club, Littleproud asked if he supported Santos’ proposed coal vein fuel project, which was recently approved through the New South Wales Independent Planning Commission.
“Yes, I have them, safe conditions, ” he answered.
Last month, the National Farmers Federation suggested morrison’s government exercise caution in its “gas recovery,” saying farmers will have to use the land and that groundwater protection deserves to be paramount, as Katharine Murphy reported.
NSW Farmers, the state’s leading agricultural organization, explicitly opposes Narrabri’s assignment and says its members “believe the allocation poses an unacceptable threat to water resources, soil and air quality, local food and fibre production, and rural communities in western New South Wales. “”Supporting allocation, Littleproud also wants smart regulatory oversight across states and coverage of farmers’ land rights.
Speaking in a post-budget debate organized through the National Rural Press Club that still takes place at the National Press Club in Canberra. The other panelist, Labor, Agricultural and Resource Critic Joel Fitzgibbon, said he also supported the Narrabri project.
University adjustments will have an increasingly vital effect on this sector.
This week’s last consultation time is over. Possibly I would have detected a subject of opposition, not what in the budget, but what not.
Including what’s in place for women, who were more affected than men in this pandemic, and older workers.
The government says it doesn’t see the budget from a gender perspective, that’s going to have to be fun.
The only other people who don’t see sex (or color, or disadvantage, while we do) are other people who have never had to worry about it.
Good afternoon.
A big thank you to Christopher Knaus, just for having run the blog incredibly well on a crazy day (as always), but also for intervening so you can have a few hours off (it’s been a long year).
You have Amy Remeikis with you for the rest of the day. As always, you can succeed with me here and here if you have any questions.
Let’s see until the end of this day.
That’s where I leave them for now. Amy Remeikis will accompany you in the afternoon and evening. Keep an eye out for the response from the Labour budget.
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