Your daily digest of the top headlines and must-reads from Australia and around the world, along with sport, culture, lifestyle, opinion and more
͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌     
The Guardian Today Australia | The Guardian
The Guardian Today Australia
Federal budget
Albanese says Coalition is ‘delulu with no solulu’; Greens call salmon farming amendments a ‘stitch-up’
Federal budget 2025 live updates  
Albanese says Coalition is ‘delulu with no solulu’; Greens call salmon farming amendments a ‘stitch-up’
Follow today’s news live
Budget  
Australia to redirect $100m in foreign aid to Indo-Pacific region after Trump pulls funding
Politics  
Labor to push budget tax cuts through parliament in apparent attempt to wedge Coalition
Generations  
What the budget means for your generation – gen Z, millennial, gen X or boomer
Advertisement
Headlines
Trump signs executive order that will upend US voter registration processes
US  
Trump signs executive order that will upend US voter registration processes
Millions of citizens could become disenfranchised in ‘farthest reaching’ executive action targeting immigration
Adelaide  
Hong Kong activist in Australia targeted with letter offering reward for information about his family
Israel-Gaza war  
Hundreds join protest against Hamas in northern Gaza
Politics  
No stranger to controversy, Basil Zempilas hopes to revive the WA Liberals. Experts say he can’t afford more blunders
UK  
Prince Harry resigns ‘in shock’ from African charity he founded in 2006
 
Have your say
Join our research panel to share your thoughts on The Guardian's advertising and commercial partnerships. You'll also go into the running to win one of three $50 vouchers each month.
Join now
 
Tracking Pixel
The rural network
To win the bush, Australian politics needs to embrace its ‘curves’
To win the bush, Australian politics needs to embrace its ‘curves’
Australian political pundits have a bad habit of stereotyping regional voters so I propose a new demographic category. Meet the curves
Full Story podcast
Full Story  
Budget 2025: Coalition and Labor clash on tax cuts – Full Story podcast
Budget 2025: Coalition and Labor clash on tax cuts – Full Story podcast
Sport
Football  
Socceroos prove hard to beat as quest to reach World Cup goes down to the wire
Socceroos prove hard to beat as quest to reach World Cup goes down to the wire
Athletics  
Cameron Myers: from promising schoolboy to middle distance running contender
Anfield to Bernabéu  
Real Madrid open up old wounds with Alexander-Arnold move
Culture
World news  
Hamdan Ballal: Oscar-winning Palestinian director released from Israeli detention
Hamdan Ballal: Oscar-winning Palestinian director released from Israeli detention
Television  
The Last Anniversary review – Liane Moriarty adaptation with one of Australian TV’s best ensembles
Photography  
‘A monumental moment’: World’s leading photography festival puts Australia in focus
Opinion
Polluting industries like salmon farming need to be properly regulated, not let off the hook
Polluting industries like salmon farming need to be properly regulated, not let off the hook
How a plant’s failure to thrive unexpectedly mirrored the life of my cancer patient
Australia budget 2025: the seven graphs you need to see
Lifestyle
Kitchen tools  
Torturous nut crackers and slippery tongs: six kitchen gadgets that aren’t worth the money
Torturous nut crackers and slippery tongs: six kitchen gadgets that aren’t worth the money
After decades studying Spanish, a chatbot language tutor is helping me lift my game
Technology
Tesla  
Europe sales drop nearly 45% amid row over Musk’s Trump links
Europe sales drop nearly 45% amid row over Musk’s Trump links
Science
UFOs  
Alien hopes crash to earth as glowing spiral over UK traced to SpaceX rocket
Alien hopes crash to earth as glowing spiral over UK traced to SpaceX rocket
Environment
Environment  
Glencore's Hail Creek coalmine methane emissions could be higher than official reports – video
Glencore's Hail Creek coalmine methane emissions could be higher than official reports – video
Greenhouse gas emissions  
Methane emissions from Queensland mine may be gross underestimates, UN research finds
Video
Federal budget 2025: watch treasurer Jim Chalmers' full budget speech – video
Federal budget 2025: watch treasurer Jim Chalmers' full budget speech – video
Get in touch
If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email newsletters@theguardian.com

A message from Lenore Taylor editor of Guardian Australia

I hope you appreciated this newsletter. Before you move on, I wonder if you would consider supporting our work as we prepare for a pivotal, uncertain year ahead.

The course of world history has taken a sharp and disturbing turn in 2024. Liberalism is under threat from populist authoritarianism. Americans have voted to install a president with no respect for democratic norms, nor the facts that once formed the guardrails of public debate.

That decision means an alliance critical to Australia’s national and economic security is now a series of unpredictable transactions, with a partner no longer committed to multilateralism, nor efforts to curb global heating, the greatest threat we face. We just don’t know where this will lead.

In this uncertain time, fair, fact-based journalism is more important than ever – to record and understand events, to scrutinise the powerful, to give context, and to counter rampant misinformation and falsehoods.

As we enter an Australian election year, we are deeply conscious of the responsibility to accurately and impartially report on what is really at stake.

The Guardian is in a unique position to do this. We are not subject to the influence of a billionaire owner, nor do we exist to enrich shareholders. We are here to serve and listen to you, our readers, and we rely on your support to power our work.

Your support keeps us independent, beholden to no outside influence and accessible to everyone – whether they can afford to pay for news, or not.

If you can, please consider supporting us with just $1, or better yet, support us every month with a little more. Thank you.

Lenore Taylor
Editor, Guardian Australia

You are receiving this email because you are a subscriber to The Guardian Today Australia. Guardian News & Media Limited - a member of Guardian Media Group PLC. Registered Office: Kings Place, 90 York Way, London, N1 9GU. Registered in England No. 908396