Pauline Hanson Unbothered by Suspension: “I Stand My Ground for Australians”

Pauline Hanson has made it clear she is not worried about her one-week suspension from the Senate, standing firm on her beliefs despite backlash from all sides of politics. The transcript shows Hanson completely unfazed, refusing to bow to political pressure or attempts to silence her.

Hanson was suspended for seven sitting days after entering Parliament wearing a burqa  a move she says highlights serious concerns about women’s rights and national security. While Labor, Liberal, and Greens senators condemned her and voted for a censure motion, Hanson didn’t flinch.

Her comments reflect a broader sentiment across the country: Australians are tired of politicians who refuse to confront tough issues. Hanson’s defiance — even in the face of suspension shows exactly why One Nation continues to gain support.

The transcript also notes Hanson’s strategic engagement with Nationals MP Barnaby Joyce, fuelling speculation he could defect to One Nation another sign that the major parties may be losing control of their own ranks.

For Pauline Hanson, the suspension is meaningless compared to the responsibility she feels to speak for everyday Australians. She has made it clear that no ban, censure, or criticism will silence her fight for transparency, security, and the rights of all Australians.

One Nation’s message is stronger than ever:
When Parliament tries to silence Pauline Hanson, she speaks even louder  and Australians are listening.

Emerging Stars: Netball NSW Unveils Dynamic 2026 17U State Team

Netball NSW has named its 2026 17U State Team — a standout group of emerging athletes whose skill, diversity and hunger for success set a thrilling platform for next year’s National Netball Championships. Selected from one of the state’s most extensive and competitive trial processes, this team showcases the very best of New South Wales’ next generation. General Manager of Performance and Pathways Mardi Aplin said the pathways system continues to deliver outstanding young talent from every corner of the state.“It’s a really exciting team. The 17U selections are always such a huge trial process that began eight weeks ago in the regional areas of New South Wales and then it finally came through to the final phase on the weekend at Netball Central,” Aplin said.“We’ve got some experience returning from the 2025 NSW team, along with some new athletes who have not been in programs before, so it’s a really exciting group to work with.”The 2026 team is a true reflection of netball’s reach and inclusivity, featuring athletes from across metropolitan, regional and multicultural backgrounds in NSW.Aplin highlighted the team’s strength across the court:“Our shooting end is tall, strong and composed. We’ve got some big targets at the back and some really explosive, exciting goal attacks out in front.”“The mid court is a really exciting and dynamic area. There’s lots of variation within that group, with athletes who can feed beautifully and adapt across multiple positions.”“The defence end has a great mix of experience and emerging strength. The combination of height, reach and on-ball pressure gives us some really strong defensive options.”Aplin said the strength of the 17U program is underpinned by Netball NSW’s statewide pathways.“The pathways within Netball NSW are really strong at the moment. Our associations are doing wonderful things, along with the academy programs and our Emerging Teams. We’ve seen most of these athletes across the last 12 to 18 months, and it’s great to see regional players come through and compete with their metropolitan counterparts.”She added that the makeup of this team captures what netball stands for today — inclusiveness, opportunity and aspiration.“Netball is a sport for all — whether you’re from a regional area, a multicultural background or metropolitan Sydney. It’s about putting in the work and seeing role models who show you what’s possible. This team is exactly that. There are lots of little kids out there who will look at these athletes and think, ‘I want to be like them one day.’”The 17U State Team is coached by Baulkham Hills Shire’s Nardia Trevor, who was reappointed as Head Coach of the 17U team following this year’s silver-medal finish at Nationals.Netball NSW 17U State Team

NAME POSITION ASSOCIATION
Akur Malueth Shooter BLACKTOWN CITY
Cheyanne Vaitusi Mid Court BAULKHAM HILLS SHIRE
Evalina Carneiro Defence SUTHERLAND SHIRE
Eve Power Defence NEWCASTLE
Isabella Christian Mid Court ILLAWARRA DISTRICT
Jessica Hugo Mid Court KU-RING-GAI
Marley Dighton Shooter KU-RING-GAI
Ruby Nero Shooter MANLY WARRINGAH
Sophie Lockyer Defence ILLAWARRA DISTRICT
Sophie Perrett Mid court EASTWOOD RYDE
Tilly Sinclair Defence HASTINGS VALLEY
Xanthia Crookes Shooter NORTHERN SUBURBS

Appeal to locate man missing from Newcastle

Police are appealing for assistance to locate a man missing from the Newcastle area.

Sunny Jenkins, aged 30, was last seen at John Hunter Hospital about 1.00pm on Sunday 23 November 2025.

When he could not be located or contacted, officers attached to Lake Macquarie Police District were contacted and commenced inquiries into his whereabouts.

Police hold concerns for his welfare as his disappearance is out of character.

Sunny is described as being of Caucasian appearance, about 185cm tall, of solid build, with brown hair and hazel-coloured eyes.

He is known to frequent the areas of Swansea, Belmont and Garden Suburb.

Reaffirming the safety of Australia’s vaccines

Australia’s Chief Medical Officer, Professor Michael Kidd AO, together with the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA), has issued a joint statement reaffirming the safety and effectiveness of vaccines used in Australia.

Vaccines remain one of the most effective ways to protect individuals and communities from serious illness. The statement confirms that all vaccines approved for use in Australia meet strict safety, quality and efficacy standards set by the TGA.

We encourage all Australians to stay up to date with their vaccinations and to seek advice from their healthcare provider if they have questions about vaccine safety.

Read the full joint statement on the TGA website

ALP withdraws its own Bill following Senate and community pressure

Today, the Albanese Government withdrew the Defence Honours and Awards Appeals Tribunal Bill 2025, after sustained pressure from the community.

This Bill sought to make significant backward changes to Defence Honours cases before the Awards Appeals Tribunal. It would have seen a 20-year time limit for reviewing honours and a separate 6-month appeals period for challenging decisions. The Bill would also remove the rights of extended families and experts to appeal decisions or seek awards to recognise past bravery and service.

The Greens co-authored a motion in the Senate in the last sitting week seeking to remove this Bill from the notice paper, sending a clear message to the Government.

The government’s action today recognises the hard political reality that this Bill had zero support in the Parliament outside the Labor Party.

You can read the Greens’ full dissenting report on this Bill here.

Senator David Shoebridge, Greens Spokesperson on Defence and Veterans Affairs, said: “This is a victory for common sense against a Government that has been determined to ignore the Senate, and the entire veterans community.”

“We have seen routinely over the past year the Albanese Government treat opposing voices with disdain and hostility. This means even when the entire Parliament was pointing out that one of their Bills will hurt veterans, they didn’t want to listen.

“There have been positive and welcome developments concerning the treatment of veterans over recent years, however, this Bill represented a step back.

“We will continue to work with the Government to implement the recommendations of the Royal Commission into Defence and Veterans Suicide, but we will not wave through bad laws.

“In recent history, we have seen rank-and-file Australian soldiers face horrible abuse in the military only to be abandoned by the higher-ups once they leave. This Bill represented a Defence leadership that gets what it wants with no pushback, until today.”

Dire rental affordability should be wake-up call for Labor

Australia’s rental market remains dire according to the latest data from SGS Economics and Planning’s Rental Affordability Index 2025.

In Sydney, full-time workers face severe rental stress and people receiving income support would need to put 131% of their income toward rent making stable housing unattainable without significant assistance.

The data finds that Adelaide is as unaffordable as Sydney, with many outer suburbs becoming inaccessible for average earners. Regional areas across the country have also become less affordable, many hitting the lowest affordability levels recorded by the Index.

The Greens say this is further proof of Australia’s housing crisis hitting renters and call on the government to stop prioritising wealthy property investors over renters.

Greens spokesperson for finance, housing and homelessness Senator Barbara Pocock:

“Australia is in a national housing crisis that is spiralling out of control and renters are paying the price. People on low and moderate incomes, who can’t afford to buy a home, are facing extreme rental stress. Essential workers – teachers, nurses and police – can’t afford to live near where they work.

“Across Australia, we’re seeing a rental market that is unaffordable. With vacancy rates at record lows, the rental market is so tight that landlords can hike prices leaving renters with nowhere else to go. That’s exactly why the Government needs to introduce rent caps – to stop profiteering and give people a fighting chance.

“The problem is that successive governments have created a housing system where rich property investors get billions in tax discounts to buy multiple properties, while millions of others can’t even find an affordable rental, let alone buy a house of their own. It’s no wonder 89 per cent of Australians agree we’re in a housing crisis.

“The Government’s $181 billion tax breaks for wealthy investors – via the capital gains tax discount and negative gearing – are locking out first home buyers and forcing rents to skyrocket.

“Without tackling the root causes of the housing crisis, Labor’s policies, such as their 5% deposit scheme, are pushing property prices up further – locking even more people out of affordable rentals and home ownership. That includes essential workers, such as nurses and teachers, who are already struggling to afford homes near their workplaces.

“This government needs to start treating housing as a human right instead of a game of monopoly. Rather than giving billions of tax breaks to wealthy property investors, the Government should be investing directly into building good quality homes and renting them to people who need them at prices they can actually afford.”

Shameful racial profiling in Victoria Police worsened by Allan Labor Government’s endless expansion of police powers

The Victorian Greens say that the rates of racial profiling revealed in a new report are shameful and lay bare systemic racism and discrimination. 

The Victorian Greens say that despite a ban on racial profiling since 2015, the latest search data shows it remains widespread – and the Allan Labor Government should be ashamed. 

Instead of urgently establishing the independent police oversight we need, the Allan Labor Government continues  to expand unchecked powers for police – which the Greens warn will only cause these already shocking rates to rise. 

New research from the Centre Against Racial Profiling, based on data obtained under FOI from Victoria Police, reveals that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people were 15 times more likely to be searched than white people in 2024, despite being less likely to be found with prohibited items. They were also 10 times more likely to have force or the threat of force used against them, and 13 times more likely to have tasers drawn on them. 

African, Middle Eastern and Pacific Islander communities were also disproportionately targeted, with African community members eight times more likely to be searched, seven times more likely to be subjected to force, and 24 times more likely to be pursued by police vehicles. 

Victorian Greens spokesperson for Anti-Racism and Multiculturalism: 

“These rates are shocking, but not surprising to any of these targeted communities including my own Pacific Island communities who live this reality every day.

“We know that Aboriginal, African, Middle Eastern and Pacific Islander communities have borne discriminatory policing practices for a long time. Without work like this report, we’d have no idea of the scale of the problem and the widespread harms inflicted on these communities. 

“Racial profiling doesn’t just discriminate, it creates a racially stratified community. It is shameful that Labor continues to expand unchecked police powers that will make this worse, when we should be tackling systemic racism in policing, investing in community-led safety, and finally establishing an independent police ombudsman.”

“Rent controls work” Greens renew push as new data reveals dire rental crisis

The Victorian Greens say that rent controls are needed to address the rental affordability crisis as new national data released today shows that the rental crisis is growing in Victoria, while the only place across the country where rental affordability is improving is the ACT – which is the only jurisdiction with rent controls. 

The Victorian Greens say this is yet more proof that rent controls work, and that Victoria should join the ACT and multiple countries across Europe, the US and Asia that are already using rent controls to urgently address the “dire” state of the rental market. 

The Rental Affordability Index shows regional Victoria has become even less affordable over the past year, while Melbourne remains at record-low levels of affordability. Thousands of Victorian renters are being pushed to breaking point by relentless rent hikes.

Meanwhile, the ACT – whose Greens-Labor Government introduced rent-increase caps in 2019 – recorded a 4 per cent improvement in affordability, the strongest in the country. Victoria currently has no limits on rent increases, allowing landlords to push rents up year on year as much as they like. 

Today’s data is consistent with the Department’s latest rental data that also shows the rental crisis deepening across Victoria with Melbourne’s median rent increase by $25 in the last reported quarter to $585 per week and regional Victoria’s median rent rising $10 to $460 per week and inner Melbourne recording the largest quarterly jump of 9.8%. 

As well as recent research from the Consumer Policy Research Centre (CPRC) and Tenants Victoria finding that 4 in 5 renters had a rent increase in the past 2 years of an average of 17% – meaning the average renter is paying nearly $100 more every week. 

Victorian Greens spokesperson for Renters’ Rights, Gabrielle de Vietri: 

“It’s no surprise that the ACT is the only place in the country where rental affordability is improving when it’s the only place with rent controls. If the Allan Labor Government were serious about supporting renters, they should be taking notes. 

“Renters in every corner of the state are being smashed by soaring rents while the Allan Labor Government refuses to put any limit whatsoever on rent hikes. 

“Rent controls are a proven tool for stabilising rents and giving people certainty, and right now we’re in a dire affordability crisis in Victoria – they work, there’s no reason Labor can’t do this here.”

World-leading NSW Pattern Book puts new mid-rise homes on the fast track

The Minns Labor Government is today launching 9 new architect-designed mid-rise apartment building patterns as the next phase of the world leading NSW Housing Pattern Book, which is helping to accelerate the delivery of new homes across the state.

This follows over a decade of inaction to address the lack of housing in NSW under the former Government, which has resulted in Sydney losing twice as many young people as it’s gaining according to a recent NSW Productivity Commission report.  

The mid-rise apartment designs unveiled today range from 3 to 6 storeys and are in addition to the 8 low-rise home patterns released in July offering a broad suite of new housing options for growing communities. The 9 patterns include 4 designs for small lots, 3 designs for large lots and 2 designs for corner lots.

Designed by leading architectural firms from Australia and New Zealand, the new mid-rise patterns support housing needs at every stage of life.

The patterns will help enable the Minns Labor Government’s Low and Mid-rise Housing Policy that is set to deliver 112,000 homes across New South Wales over the next five years, responding to growing demand for terraces, town houses and mid-rise apartment buildings in well-located areas.  

The patterns are light-filled and cross-ventilated, maximise solar access and have been designed to Australian Building Codes Board Liveable Housing Design Standard.

They have been designed to enable ease of construction, while also offering architect designs that are modern, adaptable, cost effective and energy-efficient.

The mid-rise patterns currently require a DA to be submitted to local councils, however the Government has reduced assessment requirements by providing guidance to councils that will allow them to halve the average DA assessment times for these patterns.

New planning laws just passed by the Parliament will enable an even faster and simpler planning pathway in the new year, with the mid-rise pattern book to be prioritised for access to the Government’s newly created targeted assessment pathway.

The patterns will be available at a subsidised introductory price of $1500 for small lot and corner lot designs and $2500 for large lot designs for the first 6 months, which is only one per cent of the typical costs for architect designs.  

This is all part of the Minns Government’s plan to build a better and fairer NSW with more homes and services, so young people, families and downsizers have somewhere to live in the communities they choose.

For more information or to purchase a pattern visit www.planning.nsw.gov.au/government-architect-nsw/housing-design/nsw-housing-pattern-book

Premier of NSW Chris Minns said:

“The new housing patterns are more than designs for beautiful homes. They are a practical way we are delivering more homes for young people and families across New South Wales.  

“We are leading the world with the use of pattern books to drive the delivery of new high-quality and affordable homes faster by cutting approval delays and making quality designs more accessible.

“These changes are another way we’re working deliver more housing, faster with homes now being approved 15% faster than under the former Government and more homes under construction in NSW than anywhere else in the country.”

Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Paul Scully said:

“Mid-rise housing is built into our state’s story – from Art Deco apartments to the red brick walk ups that are a much-loved part of many communities.  

“These new patterns will write a new chapter for mid-rise homes in NSW, that not only have character but are affordable and sustainable.

“By streamlining approvals and offering ready-to-build designs, we’re removing barriers and helping more people access quality housing sooner.”

Government Architect NSW Abbie Galvin said:

“Mid-rise apartments strike a balance between compact living and community connection. These designs enhance neighbourhood character while meeting the needs of diverse households.

“We have curated designs that are beautiful, functional, and easy to build – helping more people move into homes that suit their lives, sooner.

“Architecture plays a vital role in shaping places people want to live. These designs offer a clear pathway to delivering quality homes that contribute positively to the urban fabric.” 

Minns Government invests $20 million to grow state’s aquaculture industry

The Minns Labor Government has today launched the $20 million Aquaculture Industry Development Program to strengthen and expand the NSW seafood industry’s economic contribution to NSW.

The program is designed to boost productivity and increase sustainability across farming operations for oysters, mussels, kelp, and algae, plus freshwater and marine fish hatcheries and bioproducts.

By investing in sustainability and productivity, the Minns Government is helping future-proof the industry, attract investment, and ensure regional communities continue to benefit from a strong, resilient seafood sector.

This grant program enables further action for implementing the Minns Government’s Aquaculture Vision Statement released last year.

The vision was developed by the NSW Government with close input from industry and experts to deliver a strategic pathway to achieve the goal of doubling the state’s aquacultural farmgate production to $300 million by 2030.

Under the program, the aquaculture and commercial fishing industries will have access to two targeted funding streams, offering grants from $500,000 to $2 million, for the following:

  • Stream One – Projects focused on infrastructure upgrades to support growth and productivity, such as equipment upgrades, supply chain improvements and new product development.
  • Stream Two – Projects that reduce carbon emissions and promote reuse and regeneration of materials, such as converting equipment to lower emissions or creating bioproducts and utilising waste streams such as processing of oyster shells.

The Aquaculture Industry Development Program is part of the NSW Government’s broader commitment to support local manufacturing, food security, net zero goals, and economic development in regional communities.

This $20 million investment will help the sector address opportunities and challenges facing the industry such as:

  • incoming mandatory Country-of-Origin Labelling requirements for seafood served in hospitality venues from 2026
  • managing environmental and biosecurity risks in fisheries and hatcheries
  • supply chain challenges of getting produce to state, national and international markets.

Aboriginal businesses and organisations, including Aboriginal Community-Controlled Organisations, are strongly encouraged to apply.

The NSW Government’s Aquaculture Vision Statement supports industry growth through enhancing productivity, streamlining legislation, and supporting innovative research.

The Aquaculture Industry Development Program is part of the NSW Government’s Regional Development Trust that is delivering strategic investments to drive economic development and better outcomes for our regional communities.

Business and organisations are encouraged to apply and submit projects by the end of Sunday 18 January 2026. Program details can be found at:  nsw.gov.au/aidp

Minister for Agriculture and Regional NSW, Tara Moriarty said:

“This program will deliver real economic benefits and jobs to regional and coastal communities by helping seafood businesses grow and become more efficient.

“This is a great opportunity for regional aquaculture and commercial fishing businesses to tap into the growing national and global appetite for high-quality protein.

“It means the industry can innovate and look at growing the exciting new developments in seaweed, algae and freshwater and marine bioproducts.

“Ultimately it’s about boosting jobs, strengthening our seafood and emerging bioproducts sectors, and making sure we can keep enjoying the great seafood New South Wales is known for.”

President NSW Farmers, Xavier Martin said:

“The NSW aquaculture industry has set a target to double its farmgate production value to $300 million by 2030, and this initiative will help achieve this through industry innovation, climate change adaptation and the diversification of products.

“As the sector recovers, this program will help ensure industry can manage the risks and take advantage of opportunities in the coming years and decades, through the sustainable development of our natural resources and support for innovation.”

OceanWatch CEO, Lowri Pryce said:

“The Aquaculture Industry Development Program will benefit development and innovation across the seafood sector, including supply chain innovation, carbon net zero and seafood traceability initiatives.

“We know these grants will be well-received by commercial fishers in NSW who are looking for new opportunities to develop and innovate, to ensure a sustainable future for their industry.”