Greens say childcare executive bonuses are further proof the for-profit system is failing our children

Revelations that executives at major for-profit childcare companies, including G8 and Affinity, pocketed bonuses worth hundreds of thousands of dollars despite repeated safety and quality breaches are yet more evidence that the for-profit model is failing families. 

Bosses at Australia’s largest for-profit providers received pay rises and bonuses of up to $500,000 last year even as centres under their watch were cited for multiple safety breaches. 

The Greens have consistently called out the failings of the for-profit childcare system. Currently, only 13% of private providers are rated as “exceeding quality standards”, compared to almost a third of public and not-for-profit centres.

The Greens have secured a Senate Inquiry into the safety and quality of early learning which is examining how the system, including the lawed childcare subsidy, props up private cowboy operators and undermines safe, high-quality care.

Australian Greens spokesperson for early childhood education and care, Senator Steph Hodgins-May: 

“As a parent of young kids myself, families are right to be outraged that executives are pocketing bonuses for hitting short-term KPIs while private providers charge parents through the roof and still deliver lower standards of care.

“These operators treat children like line items on a balance sheet , chasing enrolments and shareholder returns at the expense of safe, high-quality care. And the evidence shows kids are being put at risk.

“Trust in the early learning system is at an all-time low, and these bonuses are further proof the for-profit model prioritises profit over quality care and education.

“Leaving early learning to the market is both flawed and dangerous. That’s why we’ve  secured a vital Senate Inquiry into early learning safety and quality, which is now underway.

“Ultimately, we need a universal, affordable system that treats early learning as a public good, not a private commodity. 

“At the very least, money going into executive bonuses should instead be spent lifting quality and properly paying educators.”

Addressing world challenges at the United Nations General Assembly

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has concluded his first visit to the United Nations (UN) General Assembly. During the 80th session he engaged with world leaders and reaffirmed Australia’s commitment to working with partners to address global challenges.  

The Prime Minister delivered Australia’s National Statement to the General Assembly, outlining Australia’s strong support for the UN and the multilateral system.

At UN Headquarters, the Prime Minister hosted an event attended by world leaders on protecting children in the digital age and showcased Australia’s landmark social media minimum age laws.

The Prime Minister also shared Australia’s 2035 emissions reduction target at the UN Secretary-General’s Special High-Level Event on Climate Action.

Showcasing Australia as an attractive investment location, the Prime Minister met with senior US business leaders to highlight how the Future Made in Australia agenda will capture the opportunities of the global net zero transformation.

The Prime Minister also joined other partners in announcing Australia’s recognition of the State of Palestine, and addressed the Two-State Solution Conference, hosted by France and Saudi Arabia.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

“This visit was focussed on taking forward Australian’s national and economic interests at home.

“I am pleased to have had the opportunity to engage with world leaders on the issues we face as an international community, and advocate for Australia’s interests.

“It was important to highlight global issues at the United Nations that matter to everyday Australians, including the protection of young people online and the global transition to net-zero.

“I was also proud to bring Australia to the world stage and showcase our Future Made in Australia agenda.

“Global challenges require global action, and it’s only together we can solve the problems we face as an international community.”

Police Officer charged with assault of Hannah Thomas at anti-Israel protest

A police officer has now been charged with assault occasioning actual bodily harm of Hannah Thomas, who was punched in the face at a peaceful anti-Israel protest outside weapons-plating corporation SEC Plating in Belmore in June. This has renewed pressure to stand down Assistant Commissioner Brett McFadden after he told the media he had reviewed the body camera footage that showed the assault, and saw “no information at this stage that’s before me that indicates any misconduct on behalf of my officers”.

Greens MP Sue Higginson has today written to the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission, the Police Commissioner and the Police Minister Yasmin Catley calling for McFadden to be stood down as an Assistant Commissioner, and for an immediate investigation into his conduct.

Labor Premier Chris Minns is also facing pressure to repeal his anti-protest laws, which are claimed to be contributing to an escalation in police brutality toward peaceful protesters.

Charges initially laid against Ms Thomas have now been withdrawn and she and four fellow protesters have been awarded over $40,000 in costs. Ms Thomas has also lodged a civil claim against the NSW Police.

NSW Greens MP, Justice Spokesperson and solicitor Sue Higginson said:

“It’s a just and welcomed step to see charges finally laid against the police officer who brutally assaulted Hannah Thomas while she was attending a peaceful protest. But there is more to the police brutality and misconduct on that day, there are now serious questions over the police misconduct following the incident and we must confront the source of this injustice, the impunity given to police by Labor Premier Chris Minns through the anti-protest laws and rhetoric he espouses,”

“It would now appear that Assistant Commissioner Brett McFadden blatantly tried to cover up the violent assault on Hannah Thomas. Commissioner McFadden reviewed body camera footage that shows Ms Thomas being assaulted, and then told the media he saw no evidence of police misconduct. He excused police violence towards an innocent woman, he argued against further oversight, and under his leadership police issued statements criticizing the very protesters they had assaulted,”

“Assistant Commissioner McFadden needs to stand down immediately. I have written urgently to Police Minister Yasmin Catley, the Police Commissioner and to the Law Enforcement Conduct Commission calling for him to be stood down and for an investigation into his misconduct,”

“Police should not have been given the power or the impunity to issue move-on directions to peaceful protesters who were committing no crime. We saw that police referenced Chris Minns’ new draconian anti-protest laws in their fact sheet, referring to a place of worship in Belmore to justify the violent arrest of Hannah Thomas and her fellow protesters,”

“The Premier now also needs to apologise for laying the blame at Ms Thomas’ feet and implying she was responsible for her own assault, without even viewing the body camera footage himself,”

“It is really concerning that Hannah Thomas was not made aware that these charges had been laid, the first she heard was in media reports. There’s a complete disregard towards victims of police brutality from NSW Police and it’s got to change,”

“This demonization of peaceful protest is reckless political behaviour and it leads to innocent people of good conscience getting hurt. Innocent people have the right to peacefully call for an end to Israel’s genocide in Gaza, and they have the right to do so without being victims of heinous police brutality at the hands of an emboldened NSW Police force”.

Greens push for separated bike lanes, safety review following cyclist death

Victorian Greens Leader and local Melbourne MP Ellen Sandell has said separated bike lanes must be installed on Macaulay Road as a matter of urgency, and the dangerous intersection urgently reviewed, following the tragic death of a cyclist yesterday in Kensington, where Ms Sandell also lives.

A young cyclist reportedly tragically died in a crash with a truck near the intersection of Macaulay Road and Rankins Road on Monday afternoon, close to Kensington train station. This follows several other cyclists who have died or been seriously injured following collisions with trucks in the last few years in the electorate of Melbourne, including Angus Collins in West Melbourne.

However, despite the Council approving funding for separated bike lanes along Macaulay Road every year since 2021, the bike lanes have been constantly delayed due to the Victorian Government Department of Transport not approving them.

The Greens have also called on the City of Melbourne to urgently review the safety of the Rankins Rd/Macaulay Rd intersection where the death occurred.

As part of this review the Council should also explore whether the current traffic management plans have been sufficient amid all the construction happening in Kensington, and increase in trucks using local roads.

The Greens say that, while the circumstances are not yet fully known, it would be heartbreaking if yesterday’s death could potentially have been avoided if safer transport infrastructure like separated bike lanes had been installed.

To prevent future cyclist injuries, collisions, and deaths on Victorian roads, the state must make improving bike and pedestrian infrastructure a matter of priority.

Leader of the Victorian Greens, Ellen Sandell MP:

“My thoughts are with the man who was tragically killed on his bike yesterday, and his loved ones.

“Every year in Australia nine cyclists are killed on our roads, yet Governments often make safety for cyclists an afterthought. Pedestrians and bike riders should be able to use our roads without fear of being killed.

“Yesterday’s tragic death needs to be a wake-up call for the State Labor Government. Too often, Labor makes safe bike lanes an afterthought, when they must be a priority, so no more bike riders die after being hit by cars and trucks.”

Prime Minister does not have faith in his own plan to bring down power prices

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has no faith in his own promise to bring down power prices.

When asked today when bills will actually fall and by how much, he refused to answer.

Instead of standing by his plan, he dodged, deflected and smeared.

That is not the confidence of a leader who believes in his policy, it is the behaviour of a disappointing Prime Minister who knows his word cannot be trusted.

What Australians do know is power prices have not come down by $275 as promised by Anthony Albanese, instead they’re up $1,300.

Incredibly today Energy Minister Chris Bowen claimed that the Climate Change Authority’s advice, that there would be a 20 per cent reduction in household energy prices within the decade, or $1,000 annually “was not a political commitment.”

He did this because he knows the Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) gave evidence to a senate inquiry last year that it could make no guarantees on lower prices with more renewables.

This is advice the Government is basing its entire emissions policy on yet Minister after Minister have refused to back its claim on power prices.

The truth is Anthony Albanese and Chris Bowen have lied to Australians before and now they have no confidence in their new fantasy.

If they had confidence in their plan they would tell Australians how much it was going to cost and put a dollar figure on what it will do to power bills.

As the Prime Minister jets off overseas once again Australians will be left with the bill and left disappointed in the years ahead.

Greens (WA) urge stronger action on rental crisis as Housing Minister Carey says job is done

The Greens (WA) condemn Housing Minister John Carey’s claim that WA’s rental crisis fuelled by a growth in short-term accommodation is the responsibility of local councils, and urge the Cook Labor Government to do more to address its devastating impact on the long-term rental market.

In an ABC News article published this morning, Minister Carey said the state government “had done all it could” on the rental crisis, placing the responsibility for solutions instead onto local councils.

In Australia, housing laws and policies are overwhelmingly the responsibility of state and territory governments.

The Greens (WA) are calling on the Cook Labor Government to introduce bold regulatory reforms in order to push more investment homes into the long-term rental market and ease the squeeze on renters.

This should include greater incentives to push short-term accommodation back into the long-term market, and greater financial penalties and restrictions on short-term accommodation. 

Tim Clifford MLC, Greens WA spokesperson for Housing and Homelessness:

“Minister Carey has hit a new low by throwing local councils under the bus for a rental crisis his government is responsible not only for fixing, but for creating in the first place.

“It absolutely beggars belief that the Minister thinks this is what the state government doing its job looks like.

“Minister Carey says he wants to see fewer short-term rentals and yet he seems totally unwilling to do anything meaningful about it. Has he forgotten that he’s the Housing Minister, for God’s sake?

“Renters need immediate relief while we work on long-term solutions, like building the new houses the government continues to point to as a panacea. 

“That means looking at stronger regulations, rental reforms like banning no-fault evictions, vacant property taxes, and limiting short-stay rentals to 90 days a year.

“Last week the ACT Parliament passed Greens-led legislation enshrining housing as a human right. 

“The Greens will take every opportunity to achieve the same bold reforms we need here in WA – because if what Minister Carey says is anything to go by, WA Labor has done its job already.”

Dr Brad Pettitt MLC, Greens WA spokesperson for Housing (Planning):

“It’s deeply troubling to hear Minister Carey say the state government has done all it can to address what is clearly a spiralling rental crisis.

“All they have done is create a list with rental numbers that we already knew.

“This government must do more to discourage the move towards short-term accommodation in what is the worst housing crisis in living memory.

“We need stronger incentives for bringing short-term rental properties back to the long-term market, but carrots alone are not enough. 

“We also need sticks in the form of new regulations and penalties for those who choose to stay in the short-term market and make a substantial profit. 

“That could look like limiting the number of nights a dwelling can be rented for short stays, or imposing a targeted tax on residential properties left to sit vacant.

“There’s no doubt there is a place for short-stays, but the status quo is unsustainable, unfair to renters, and leaving families homeless.”

Australia recognises the State of Palestine

Effective today, Sunday the 21st of September 2025, the Commonwealth of Australia formally recognises the independent and sovereign State of Palestine.

In doing so, Australia recognises the legitimate and long held aspirations of the people of Palestine to a state of their own.

Australia’s recognition of Palestine today, alongside Canada and the United Kingdom, is part of a co-ordinated international effort to build new momentum for a two-state solution, starting with a ceasefire in Gaza and the release of the hostages taken in the atrocities of October 7, 2023.

Today’s act of recognition reflects Australia’s longstanding commitment to a two-state solution, which has always been the only path to enduring peace and security for the Israeli and the Palestinian peoples.

The international community has set out clear requirements for the Palestinian Authority.

The President of the Palestinian Authority has restated its recognition of Israel’s right to exist, and given direct undertakings to Australia, including commitments to hold democratic elections and enact significant reform to finance, governance and education.

The terrorist organisation Hamas must have no role in Palestine.

Further steps, including the establishment of diplomatic relations and opening of embassies, will be considered as the Palestinian Authority makes progress on its commitments to reform.

Already, crucial work is underway across the international community to develop a credible peace plan that enables the reconstruction of Gaza, builds the capacity of the state of Palestine and guarantees the security of Israel.

The leadership of the countries of the Arab League and the United States is vital to this task.

Australia will continue to work with our international partners to help build on today’s act of recognition and to bring the Middle East closer to the lasting peace and security that is the hope, and the right, of all humanity.

Australia launches global declaration to protect aid workers

After a year-long diplomatic effort to drive global action to protect humanitarian workers in conflict zones, Australia has today launched the Declaration for the Protection of Humanitarian Personnel joined by more than 100 countries.

At a ceremony at the United Nations in New York, we honoured Australian aid worker Zomi Frankcom and the 674 humanitarian personnel killed since the start of 2024.

The more than 100 countries – representing more than half of the United Nations – include Brazil, Colombia, Indonesia, Japan, Jordan, Sierra Leone, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, who partnered with Australia to develop the Declaration.

Together, we are pledging to new, concrete measures to keep humanitarian personnel safe and enable them to do their lifesaving work in conflict and disaster zones.

This global pact delivers real protection for humanitarians risking their lives to protect others, at a time when they are facing unprecedented threats to their lives and safety.

These measures include a commitment to facilitate access and protect humanitarian personnel, ensure faster and more efficient visas and work permits, new joint training for military personnel and aid workers to protect innocent lives.

The Albanese Government will also provide $15 million in support for practical measures that better protect humanitarian personnel through the UN Department of Safety and Security, UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs and the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement.

Australia will provide funding to Legal Action Worldwide and the Red Family Fund to support aid workers and their families and to Humanitarian Outcomes to maintain the Aid Worker Security Database.

Australia is proud to lead this global effort to protect those who risk everything to help others.

We know that to protect civilians, we must also protect aid workers who deliver the food, water and medicine civilians need to survive.

This Declaration is a powerful recommitment to the rules that safeguard humanity and ensure aid reaches those who need it most.

Humanitarian workers save lives. This work should never cost them their own.

Together with our international partners we are reinvigorating commitment at the highest political level to protect aid workers in conflict zones.

The Declaration honours those that help others in their darkest hours and pays tribute to their legacy.

Recognition of Palestine long overdue, but it will not end the genocide in Gaza

Today at the UN General Assembly, Australia finally joined the vast majority of the world in recognising a Palestinian state. 

This step is a victory for the hundreds of thousands of Australians who have been pressuring the Government, but it will not end the genocide in Gaza. The Albanese Government must now sanction Israel for its criminal actions the same way it has sanctioned Russia for its criminal invasion of Ukraine. 

The UN and a consensus of genocide scholars have all made it clear that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. Far from doing everything in its power to prevent the genocide, the Albanese Government has continued to engage in a two-way arms trade with Israel and failed to sanction the extremist Netanyahu Security Cabinet. 

Senator David Shoebridge, Greens spokesperson on Foreign Affairs, said

“Statehood and the right to self-determination are fundamental rights of all people. Recognising this right of Palestinians is long overdue. 

“In making this decision, Australia has gone from an international outlier with the United States and a handful of its client states, to the international mainstream.  Recognising Palestine is complying with basic international principles, but it is not enough in the face of a genocide.

“It is no longer, and has never been, a choice between recognition and sanctions. There is an urgent legal and moral obligation now on the Albanese Government to do everything possible to end the genocide in Gaza. 

“Today’s actions will not end the genocide, it will not stop the starvation or the occupation, material action is needed. 

“It’s a brutal fact of this appalling genocide that Israeli F-35 fighter jets are being used in Gaza, and they can only operate with Australian-made parts.

“Whatever today’s votes, Australia is still purchasing billions in Israeli-made weapons, which have been tested on Palestinians in Gaza. This two-way arms trade must end and comprehensive sanctions need to be put on the Israeli Government.

“The Albanese Government should be using this time at the United Nations to work with other countries to build a global sanctions regime and work together to ensure there is a lasting and just peace.”

Pensioners will get smashed and lose care while Minister Rae hides

Older Australians will pay up to $50/hour for basic care at home under Labor’s aged care changes coming on November 1 according to reporting from the ABC based on Department of Health data.

Older Australians will be forced to forgo the care they need due to cost.

Minister for Aged Care Sam Rae and Minister for Health and Ageing Mark Butler reportedly declined to be interviewed in the ABC’s story and would not answer direct questions. The government has previously admitted 30% of full pensioners and 75% of part pensioners would pay more under Labor’s changes.

Labor have been desperate to hide the true impacts of their aged care policies. It took a Senate inquiry and weeks of pressure just to get straight answers on the true nature of the aged care waitlist, with over 200,000 older Australians waiting for care. 

Those revelations eventually lead to the Government’s first defeat in the Senate as a successful push from the Greens, crossbench and opposition led to the urgent release of 20,000 home care packages.

Greens spokesperson for Older People, Senator Penny Allman-Payne:

“Under Labor’s Aged Care Act the worse your health, the more you’ll pay.”

“Labor have been keeping older people in the dark about these changes since they passed last year, but it’s becoming clearer by the day that these changes aren’t about improving care, only about propping up private providers profits.”

“The Greens tried to remove co-payments when the bill came through parliament last year and we were the only ones to oppose the new laws.”

“The Aged Care Minister Sam Rae needs to stop hiding, come clean about how much he expects older people will pay under the new system and how many people are going to miss out on care.”

“Older Australians should be able to access the care they need, not just the care they can afford.”

“Labor’s bleeding pensioners dry while giving tax-dodging corporations a pass.”