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| | | | 09/06/2025 Trump sends armed troops into LA; how data brokers get your number; Alcaraz wins epic French Open final |
| | | | Good morning. There are fears over rising authoritarianism in the US after Donald Trump deployed armed national guard troops on the streets of Los Angeles against protests over immigration raids. Meanwhile, Victorian Labor MP Emma Vulin tells us why being diagnosed with motor neurone disease isn’t going to derail her drive to see the state’s voluntary assisted dying laws changed. Carlos Alcaraz has emerged triumphant against Jannik Sinner after a men’s French Open final clash for the ages at Roland-Garros. Plus: the King’s birthday honours list has been revealed, and there’s an ex-PM on it. |
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Australia | |
| ‘I’m not done’ | Diagnosed with motor neurone disease, Victorian MP Emma Vulin still has a lot to achieve. She tells Benita Kolovos about how she wants to help usher in changes to the state’s voluntary assisted dying laws. | Analysis | A year and a half out from its opening, Western Sydney International is looking more and more like an airport. As it nears takeoff, Elias Visontay asks: will the airlines and people come? | King’s birthday honours | Longtime ABC radio host Phillip Adams joins Scott Morrison, movie-makers Baz Luhrmann and Catherine Martin, and former Women’s Weekly editor Deborah Hutton among award recipients. | Tech geopolitics | The US cutting academic research and targeting international students is a “great gift” to China in the global artificial intelligence race, says Australian former OpenAI board member Helen Toner. | WFH ban | The Coalition won’t revisit Peter Dutton’s controversial policy to ban working from home – dumped during the election campaign – because “happy workers tend to be more productive”. |
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Full Story | |
| Missing in the Amazon: the disappearance – episode 1 Three years ago, British journalist Dom Phillips and Brazilian Indigenous defender Bruno Pereira vanished while on a reporting trip near Brazil’s remote Javari valley. The Guardian’s Latin America correspondent, Tom Phillips, investigates what happened to them in the first episode of a new six-part investigative podcast series. | | |
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In-depth | |
| Millions of Australian voters have endured a flood of political spam emails and text messages. Political parties have no obligation to reveal how they find your data, and there is no way to opt out. Josh Taylor looks at the shadowy world of data brokers – and one woman’s mission to sift through the labyrinthine web of companies buying and selling information on the public. |
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Not the news | |
| An international club where dull people meet online to share the tedium of everyday lives is immensely popular. The Dull Men’s Club is a place to celebrate the mundane, the quotidian. It is a gentle antidote to pouting influencers and the often toxic internet; a bastion of civility; a polite clarion call to reclaim the ordinary. And, as Susan Chenery discovers, for one Australian man it’s also a place of poignant connection. |
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What’s happening today | King’s birthday | It is a public holiday in NSW, Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia, Northern Territory and ACT. | Tony awards | Six Australians are nominated in the 2025 Tony awards being held in New York today, including the actor Sarah Snook. |
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Brain teaser | And finally, here are the Guardian’s crosswords to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. | |
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| | A message from Lenore Taylor, editor of Guardian Australia I hope you appreciated this article. Before you move on, I wanted to ask whether you could support the Guardian’s journalism as we face the unprecedented challenges of covering the second Trump administration. As the world struggles to process the speed with which Donald Trump is smashing things, here in Australia we regularly wake to more shocking news. Underneath it is always the undermining of ideas and institutions we have long deemed precious and important – like the norms and rules of democracy, global organisations, post-second world war alliances, the concept that countries should cooperate for a common global good or the very notion of human decency. This is a moment the media must rise to, with factual, clear-eyed news and analysis. It’s our job to help readers understand the scale and worldwide ramifications of what is occurring as best we can. The global news-gathering and editorial reach of the Guardian is seeking to do just that. Here in Australia, our mission is to go beyond the cheap, political rhetoric and to be lucid and unflinching in our analysis of what it all means. If Trump can so breezily upend the trans-Atlantic alliance, what does that mean for Aukus? If the US is abandoning the idea of soft power, where does that leave the strategic balance in the Pacific? If the world descends back into protectionism, how should a free trading nation like Australia respond? These are big questions – and the Guardian is in a unique position to take this challenge on. We have no billionaire owner pulling the strings, nor do we exist to enrich shareholders. We are funded by our readers and owned by the Scott Trust, whose sole financial obligation is to preserve our journalistic mission in perpetuity. Our allegiance is to the public, not to profit, so whatever happens in the coming months and years, you can rely on us to never bow down to power, nor back down from reporting the truth. If you can, please consider supporting us with just $1, or better yet, support us every month with a little more. Thank you. | Support us |
Lenore Taylor Editor, Guardian Australia |
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