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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Martin Farrer

Morning Mail: poll shows cost-of-living struggle, anger over Cop28 draft deal, Australian women win Globe nods

Anthony Albanese at a press conference
The final Guardian Essential poll of the year shows Anthony Albanese has a lot to do on cost-of-living pressures. Photograph: Brent Lewin/AAP

Morning, everyone. Anthony Albanese probably didn’t need reminding that cost-of-living pressures are the No 1 concern for Australians right now – but our Guardian Essential poll shows that 57% of households are financially struggling or in serious difficulty. We’re unpacking all the poll findings, plus looking in depth at how migration and the government’s housing market policies might affect things.

The final scheduled day of the Cop28 summit in Dubai (which probably won’t be the last day) is in turmoil after the “phase-out” of fossil fuels was excluded from the summit’s draft agreement. And three Australian women are on the nominations list for next year’s Golden Globes.

Australia

Sex discrimination commissioner Dr Anna Cody
Sex discrimination commissioner Dr Anna Cody. Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP
  • Cody code | Employers will be held legally responsible for failing to take steps to prevent sexual harassment at work under a change that the sex discrimination commissioner, Anna Cody, hopes shifts the burden of progress in workplaces.

  • Exclusive | The final Guardian Essential poll of the year points to a gloomy economic outlook for 2024 with only 24% of respondents thinking next year will be better than this, a figure that compares unfavourably with 40% at the same point last year.

  • Premier pitch | Shannon Fentiman is pitching herself as the antidote to the old regime in her attempt to be next Queensland premier as she runs against Annastacia Palaszczuk’s anointed successor Steven Miles. Plus: why Palaszczuk changed her mind about leaving.

  • Mental health | A growing number of Victorians are using hospital “bed brokers” to find much-needed inpatient care.

  • Bird boon | Widespread floods and environmental flows have been a boon for waterbirds with annual surveys in eastern Australia recording more than half a million birds – but the impact of long-term drying is showing.

World

Saudi Aramco signage at an oil facility
An oil facility in Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia. Photograph: Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
  • Cop out? | Oil-exporting countries will be called upon to reduce their production drastically in the coming decades if a draft agreement published at the Cop28 UN summit overnight is accepted. But the text dodges the calls for a “phase-out” of fossil fuels, with the Australian climate change minister, Chris Bowen, naming Saudi Arabia as the main block to a commitment on oil and gas.

  • Israel denial | Israel has rejected suggestions it is trying to force Palestinians out of Gaza as Arab leaders and aid officials warn its ground offensive could leave civilians with few other options. Harvard professors have backed their president over controversial remarks about antisemitism.

  • Navalny fears | Supporters of Alexei Navalny, the jailed Russian opposition leader, fear for his welfare after he has not been heard of for nearly a week and his lawyers failed to contact him.

  • Rwanda demand | A group of British rightwing Conservative MPs have called the government’s Rwanda immigration bill “partial and incomplete”, and urged Downing Street to amend it before a crunch vote that could seriously damage Rishi Sunak’s authority.

  • Golden choice | Greta Gerwig’s satire Barbie has been nominated for nine awards at the Golden Globes in January, with Oppenheimer just behind on eight. Australians Margot Robbie, Elizabeth Debicki and Sarah Snook are all in the running for awards.

Full Story

George Santos surrounded by a media pack
New York Republican George Santos. Photograph: Mostafa Bassim/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

Is George Santos the ‘last of the great liars’?

The rise and fall of the Republican congressman and serial liar George Santos poses worrying questions about the US political system in a post-truth era. Michael Safi asks why voters were not more outraged and how he was allowed to continue his career after being exposed.

In-depth

Increasing immigration is widely expected to push up house prices in the years to come as we struggle to build enough homes for newcomers. But our data reporter Josh Nicholas has found that the link between the two issues is not completely clear. Infrastructure Australia warns today that the $230bn infrastructure pipeline, the energy transition and plans to build 1.2m new homes are under threat from a shortfall of 229,000 workers. And, in an effort to put the government on the front foot on housing affordability, Jim Chalmers is going to triple the fees foreigners have to pay when buying established homes and double the penalties for leaving a property vacant. Will it make any difference?

Not the news

A composite portrait of a smiling older man
Older and wiser? Photograph: Tim Robberts/Getty Images

Describing himself as someone fortunate to be on the cusp of a seventh decade, Paul Daley considers what it means to have reached (approximately) the three-quarter time point of life. He feels “the icy spectre of mortality” less than 20 years ago when he was still in a hurry to achieve professional recognition, thinks about friendships more but “suffers dickheads way less”.

The world of sport

The Broncos play the Panthers in the NRL grand final
The Broncos play the Panthers in the NRL grand final. Photograph: James Gourley/AAP
  • Rugby league | Australia can maintain its “gladiatorial” quality and reduce head injuries without a reduction in the tackle height, according to senior NRL coaches, even as English rugby league outlaws contact above the armpit.

  • Socceroos | The Socceroos captain and first-choice goalkeeper, Mat Ryan, appears to be in a race against time to lead Australia’s campaign at January’s Asian Cup after suffering a fractured cheekbone in training for his club team AZ Alkmaar.

  • Cricket | Jofra Archer has continued his recovery from injury by playing for his old school in Barbados – but without telling his England bosses.

Media roundup

Universities are fighting government plans to tax foreign students as part of an attempt to curb immigration, according to the Sydney Morning Herald. There’ll be no holiday for Victorian government staffers locked in talks with key workers threatening to strike, the Herald Sun reports. The Australian considers how two families built the Chemist Warehouse chain, which is now entering a $8.8bn merger. The Courier-Mail profiles Gary Bullock, the Queensland Labor powerbroker who persuaded Annastacia Palaszczuk to quit.

What’s happening today

  • Economy | The RBA governor, Michele Bullock, will make a speech.

  • Indigenous affairs | An appeal by the Aboriginal Areas Protection Authority over crown immunity will be heard at the high court.

  • Tasmania | Parliament will be recalled to consider an inquiry into Justice Gregory Geason.

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Brain teaser

And finally, here are the Guardian’s crosswords to keep you entertained throughout the day – with plenty more on the Guardian’s Puzzles app for iOS and Android. Until tomorrow.

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