Statement on Iran

Australia stands with the brave people of Iran in their struggle against oppression.

For decades, the Iranian regime has been a destabilising force, through its ballistic missile and nuclear programs, support for armed proxies, and brutal acts of violence and intimidation.

Iran directed at least two attacks on Australian soil in 2024. These appalling acts targeting Australia’s Jewish community were intended to create fear, divide our society and challenge our sovereignty. In response, Australia took the unprecedented steps of expelling Iran’s Ambassador, suspending operations at our embassy in Tehran, and listing the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a state sponsor of terrorism.

Our Government has sanctioned more than 200 Iranian-linked individuals, including more than 100 linked to the IRGC.

With international partners, including the United States and the G7, we have called for the Iranian regime to uphold the human rights and fundamental freedoms of Iran’s citizens. These calls have gone unheeded. Instead, the regime has instigated a brutal crackdown on its own people leaving thousands of Iranian civilians dead. A regime that relies on the repression and murder of its own people to retain power is without legitimacy.

It has long been recognised that Iran’s nuclear program is a threat to global peace and security. The international community has been clear that the Iranian regime can never be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon. The United Nations Security Council has reimposed sanctions on Iran for failing to comply with the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action and the International Atomic Energy Agency Board has formally declared Iran in non-compliance with its non-proliferation safeguards obligations.

We support the United States acting to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon and to prevent Iran continuing to threaten international peace and security.

Australian officials are closely monitoring this evolving situation. We continue to advise Australians do not travel to Iran and leave Iran as soon as possible, if it is safe to do so. Our ability to provide consular assistance in Iran is extremely limited.

Given our concerns around security in the region, we have also upgraded Australia’s travel advice for Israel and Lebanon to Do Not Travel. Australians should leave now if it is safe to do so.

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade has activated its Crisis Centre to provide consular support to Australians in the region.

Australians requiring urgent consular assistance can contact the Consular Emergency Centre 24/7 on 1300 555 135 in Australia or +61 2 6261 3305 from outside Australia.

PSA backs foster care overhaul restoring accountability to child protection system

The Public Service Association of NSW (PSA) says the Minns Government’s announcement of sweeping foster care reforms, designed to rebuild accountability and transparency across a system supporting more than 13,500 vulnerable children, is a long overdue reset after years of outsourcing failures under the Permanency Support Program.

The union, which represents child protection caseworkers in the Department of Communities and Justice, said the changes recognise what frontline staff have been warning for years: when responsibility is fragmented, children fall through the cracks.

For nearly a decade, caseworkers have operated inside a system where legal responsibility remained with government while service delivery was increasingly outsourced to non-government providers.

A three-year evaluation found the model failed its core objectives, even as funding to providers climbed to around $1 billion annually and the services delivered to children declined.

The PSA said the shift to strengthen oversight, wind down existing contracts and return decision-making authority to government agencies is essential to protecting children and restoring public confidence.

The reforms will also elevate the role of foster carers, expand recruitment, strengthen performance monitoring of providers and invest further in Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisations so Aboriginal children can remain connected to kin, culture and community wherever possible.

The union said frontline workers understand the stakes better than anyone.

For years our union has been campaigning on behalf of our members in regard to the dysfunctional child protection system they were left managing by the former government,” said Troy Wright, PSA Assistant General Secretary.

Crucially last year in the Budget the Government committed funds to increase their salaries to a level that would address the workforce retention crisis, but the reforms announced today are the final missing piece.

The out-of-home care system in New South Wales has been subject to more bad reviews than a Bollywood musical and more report card fails than Bart Simpson.

“It offered poor outcomes and even worse value for the taxpayer.

“Non-Government Organisations were virtually being given open-ended cheques with no responsibilities, and when they couldn’t do the work because it was too difficult, the care of children was thrown back on a resource-starved public sector.

This will ensure the decision-making is placed with the Minister, Government and Department with the legal responsibility for children in care, and that accountability is placed on the service who accept the funding to provide it.”

Elizabeth O’Neill Journalism Award 2025-26

I congratulate Peter Ker and Irene Sarwindaningrum, the recipients of the Elizabeth O’Neill Journalism Award for 2025-26.  

They have each demonstrated a strong commitment to growing their understanding of Indonesia and Australia.

Mr Ker is a journalist at the Australian Financial Review with over 24 years’ experience in print journalism. He reports on natural resources, finance, energy and mining and hosts the AFR’s decarbonisation podcast TechZero. With the award, Mr Ker intends to explore Australia and Indonesia’s energy transition relationship.

Ms Sarwindaningrum is a journalist at Kompas Daily Newspaper and winner of Indonesia’s prestigious Adinegoro Award for investigative reporting. Ms Sarwindaningrum’s reporting has examined the Australia-Indonesia relationship across areas such as tourism and geopolitics. With her award, she intends to cover issues affecting both countries, including digital security, AI governance and public health.

The Award will support Mr Ker and Ms Sarwindaningrum undertake a two-week program in Indonesia and Australia respectively to build a stronger understanding and appreciation of the range of issues facing contemporary Indonesia and Australia.

The Award commemorates the distinguished career of Elizabeth O’Neill OAM, who died while serving her country in Indonesia on 7 March 2007. It continues the legacy of Ms O’Neill, who was passionate about fostering mutual understanding of Australia and Indonesia through informed media coverage.

The Award is open to high-achieving journalists from print, radio, television and online media organisations across Australia and Indonesia. 

The Great Australian Dream is dead thanks to Labor

New data today from Domain’s First Home Buyer Report shows affordable homes are out of reach for average first-home buyers in all Australian cities.

The report finds that in the past five years, the cost of entry-level houses has increased by 68%, with units having risen by 30%, while wages have only increased by 21%.

The Greens say Labor’s policies are to blame – the 5% deposit scheme and tax breaks for wealthy property investors, such as the CGT discount – are fuelling investor demand, pushing house prices through the roof.

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

“The Great Australian dream of owning a home is dead thanks to Labor.

“Under Labor, house prices only go one way — up, and first-home buyers don’t stand a chance of getting into the market.

“Labor is the government of house price increases. Its 5% deposit scheme and tax breaks for property hoarders are fuelling investor demand.

“Labor has killed any chance of home ownership for younger people, unless they’re lucky enough to win the generational lottery.

“Labor has turned the housing crisis into a game of Monopoly — and first-home buyers are losing out.

“Without tackling the root causes of the housing crisis – which are the tax breaks for wealthy property hoarders and the lack of social and affordable housing – house prices will continue to spike, and banks will continue to rake in the profits.”

The time is right for housing tax reform

With negative gearing back on the political table following the Greens campaign to end investor lending, momentum for tax reform is growing.

The Greens have long campaigned for winding back the most inequitable tax concessions, particularly negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount, to minimise investor demand.

The Greens call on the government to seize this moment with the budget just around the corner to deliver ambitious tax reform to tackle Australia’s deepening housing crisis.

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

“The Greens campaign to end unfair handouts for wealthy property investors has forced negative gearing reform back onto the table.

“Unfair tax discounts just make housing more expensive and give billions to super-wealthy property investors. Ending these tax concessions will help more people have a roof over their head.

“Massive tax breaks for wealthy property investors are cooking our housing system. Negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount let cashed-up investors outbid everyday Australians — and young people and first-home buyers are the ones paying the price.

“Australia’s housing system is rigged for the wealthy; it’s a system designed to drive up the cost of housing, generating enormous wealth for the 1%.

“During the Greens-led inquiry into CGT discounts expert after expert said wealthy property investors shouldn’t get these massive handouts.

“This next budget is a huge opportunity for the government to deliver bold, ambitious tax reform that puts renters and home buyers first.”

Labor’s life sentences for children show they have their priorities all wrong

The Victorian Greens have slammed Labor for putting children as young as fourteen at risk of life in prison, calling it a prime example of how the Government has lost its way and set its priorities backwards.

The new laws allow children as young as fourteen to receive life sentences. The Greens warn they will do nothing to make communities safer and will, in fact, increase reoffending.

All the evidence shows early contact with the criminal justice system and longer, harsher sentences worsen long-term outcomes. Like Labor’s bail laws, these changes will disproportionately harm First Nations communities.

The Greens say that Labor trying to liken their approach to cities around the world that have successfully reduced crime is misleading and false. 

Cities around the world that have successfully reduced violence have not relied on tougher sentencing. They adopted whole-of-system public health approaches – investing in early intervention, youth services, housing, healthcare and community support to address the drivers of crime before harm occurs.

Meanwhile in Victoria, crime prevention funding has been cut in recent years, public housing stock has been demolished, and frontline homelessness, mental health and drug and alcohol services are overwhelmed.

Peak bodies including VCOSS, Homelessness Victoria and the Victorian Alcohol and Drug Association have warned that services cannot meet rising demand, with homelessness services turning people away and long waitlists for treatment.

Victorian Greens justice spokesperson, Katherine Copsey:

“Labor’s doubling down on failed policies that won’t make the community any safer. All the evidence shows longer, harsher sentences worsen long-term outcomes. And just like Labor’s bail laws, these changes will disproportionately harm First Nations communities.

“Labor isn’t taking lessons from the evidence overseas, they’re taking lessons from the Liberals. Literally copy-pasting this policy from the Liberals in Queensland. 

“Labor is doing the opposite of what has worked overseas by cutting prevention, frontline healthcare services, and public housing, all to pay for costly punitive policies that don’t work.

“Real safety starts with stable housing, access to healthcare and mental health support and it means acting now to prevent harm before it happens. We need Labor to stop playing politics with community safety and do what actually works.” 

Looking out for our Wildlife

Member for Ballina Tamara Smith MP has this week distributed an electorate-wide postcard encouraging residents to slow down and look out for wildlife across the Northern Rivers.

“Our region is home to remarkable wildlife found nowhere else in the world. Yet increasing habitat loss, extreme weather and ongoing development mean many native species are under growing pressure,” Ms Smith said.

“Protecting wildlife isn’t just the job of governments or rescue groups. It’s something we can all contribute to, simply by being alert and taking care on our roads.”

The postcard also highlights Ms Smith’s Wildlife Rescue Directory, launched late last year. The directory brings together contact details for local wildlife rescue organisations across the electorate, helping residents quickly identify the right group to contact when an animal is injured or in distress.

“Our community cares deeply about the native animals that share this region with us. That care is reflected in the extraordinary network of volunteer wildlife rescuers and carers working tirelessly across the Northern Rivers,” Ms Smith said.

“We are incredibly fortunate to have such a strong and dedicated rescue network locally.”

Ms Smith said injured and deceased wildlife on local roads remains an all-too-common sight.

“Too often, people simply don’t know who to call. In an emergency, minutes matter, and it can be overwhelming trying to find the right contact,” she said.

“The Wildlife Rescue Directory removes that uncertainty. It’s a practical tool that can be saved to your phone, so help is there when it’s needed most.”

“A small moment of awareness on the road can save a life. Looking out for wildlife is something each of us can do, and together those small actions make a real difference.”

Staying Safe in our Community

Member for Ballina Tamara Smith MP has this week distributed a Community Safety information postcard to targeted suburbs across the electorate following reports of rural property crime in parts of the region.

“In recent months, my office has heard from local residents and farmers who have experienced incidents such as property damage and theft,” Ms Smith said.

“While we are fortunate to live in a safe community, even isolated incidents can have a significant impact, particularly in rural areas where properties are more remote and neighbours may be a distance away.”

Late last year, Ms Smith attended a meeting with the Richmond Police District alongside rural residents and farmers to discuss concerns and practical prevention strategies.

“I heard directly from community members about the financial and emotional toll these incidents can take,” she said.

“My message is simple. I want to ensure residents know where to report suspicious activity, how to stay connected with local police, and what practical steps can help protect their properties.”

Ms Smith said strong communication between residents, police and government is central to community safety.

“Prompt reporting, clear information and community awareness all play an important role in prevention and response,” she said.

“Everyone deserves to feel safe in their home and workplace. This is about making sure people know they are supported and have the information they need.”

Tough new Mobile Service NSW Centres hit the road to support regional communities

Regional and remote communities across NSW will benefit from a new fleet of tough Service NSW Mobile Service Centres, bringing in essential government services.

Four tough new four-wheel-drives will replace the existing Mobile Service Centres, which have reached their end of life after covering more than one million kilometres and serving more than 70,000 people.

The new fleet will have ‘branch in a box’ technology – a customer service terminal which can be removed from the vehicle and continue to operate independently.

The four-wheel drive capability also means the Mobile Service Centres can be quickly deployed to communities impacted by natural disasters, where staff play a critical role in the delivery of financial support grants and recovery efforts.

Communities will be able to access more than 1,300 NSW Government transactions including vehicle and driver services, Seniors Card applications, Working with Children Checks and cost-of-living support.

The Mobile Service Centres will continue their existing nine-week circuits, visiting more than 148 regional and remote communities across NSW. In the first month locations include Sussex Inlet, Berry, Moss Vale, Bermagui and Jindabyne.

This includes the “Kangaroo Bus”, which visits more than 40 Aboriginal communities and includes Aboriginal Outreach officers from Revenue NSW, NSW Births, Deaths and Marriages and a business specialist from the Business Bureau to help provide tailored support.

For upcoming Mobile Service Centre visits, please visit: service.nsw.gov.au/mobile-service-centres

Minister for Customer Service and Digital Government, Jihad Dib said:

“Mobile Service Centres play a critical role in making sure people in regional and remote communities can access essential services without having to travel out of their local area.

“This tough new fleet of vehicles with ‘branch in a box’ technology will help ensure greater flexibility of service in more remote areas.

“Rain, hail or shine the Mobile Service Centres will be out on the road ensuring everyone in the state has access to the services they need.”

Study hard: students urged to know their rental rights before signing a lease

As thousands of students across NSW have commenced the academic year this week at university, TAFE and other vocational education, NSW Fair Trading is reminding renters to keep their rental rights in mind before they sign on the dotted line.

With more than 431,000 students enrolled across NSW universities, and a further 218,465 enrolled in TAFE, many young people will be moving out of home for the first time. This monumental life change makes it crucial for students and other first-time renters to understand their protections and obligations before signing a lease. 

Students entering into leases should understand their rights and responsibilities in NSW, including:

  • Always have a written lease agreement: A written agreement outlines key terms, such as rent amounts, how often you pay rent, bond requirements, and other responsibilities. The landlord must give you a copy of the signed lease agreement – that includes their full contact details and, if there is agent, the contact details of the agent.
  • Know how a rental bond works: A bond cannot be more than four weeks’ rent and is fully refundable at the end of the tenancy, provided there is no unpaid rent or damage. Landlords and agents must lodge all bonds with NSW Fair Trading.
  • Understand landlord responsibilities: Landlords have several legal responsibilities they must meet under a tenancy agreement, including providing and maintaining the property in a safe, liveable condition and completing necessary repairs.
  • Know your rights when it comes to evictions: Landlords and agents must have valid grounds to evict a renter and must follow the correct legal process. No-grounds evictions are now banned in NSW.
  • Where to seek support: If students are unsure about their rights or responsibilities, they can contact NSW Fair Trading for information and guidance on rental matters, including bonds, rent, and repairs. NSW Fair Trading can also assist renters and their landlord or agent in resolving disputes about their tenancy agreement.
  • Where to seek legal assistance: To find your nearest Tenants Advice and Advocacy Service, visit www.tenants.org.au or call 1800 251 101.

Students should also be aware of the landmark rental reforms introduced by the Minns Labor Government, which have created new protections for renters.

These changes include:

  • Limiting rental increases to once a year.
  • Giving renters security by banning no-grounds evictions.
  • Saving renters money by mandating fee-free ways to pay their rent.
  • Banning solicited rent bidding so renters can’t be coerced into offering higher rent to secure a place to live.
  • Funding the NSW Rental Taskforce to protect renters by enforcing the new laws.
  • Delivering the free Rent Check website so people can be sure what they’re asking to pay in rent is fair.

For more information on your rights as a renter, please visit the NSW Fair Trading website.

For more information on sharing a rental property, please visit the NSW Fair Trading website.

Minister for Better Regulation and Fair Trading Anoulack Chanthivong said:

“Students deserve stability and certainty when securing a home, and the Minns Labor Government’s landmark rental reforms help ensure they get exactly that.

“This Government has banned no-grounds evictions, funded crucial tools and delivered tangible policies to help renters save money – and we want everyone to know about it.

“Renters deserve to enjoy the full extent of these changes, especially if they’re entering into their first lease.   

“That’s why we’re making it easier to understand your rights, manage costs, and feel secure in your living arrangements.”

NSW Rental Commissioner Trina Jones said:

“Renting as a student has long been a rite of passage for young people, but understanding rental rights and obligations early helps prevent disputes and ensures a safe, fair living arrangement.

“Starting tertiary study is an exciting milestone, and for many students it’s the first time living out of home. We want young renters to feel confident, informed, and protected when securing accommodation.

“We encourage all students to take the time to read their rental agreements, ask questions, and never sign anything they don’t fully understand. Students are encouraged to contact NSW Fair Trading to report breaches of rental laws.”