Sky News host Peta Credlin says the Voice to Parliament debate has become 'ugly” and it is Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s fault. Ms Credlin said the Prime Minister “should never have put forward something as contentious” as the Voice referendum. “On a subject as sensitive as this, just because a select group of the Aboriginal elites demanded it,” she said. “Just as the PM should have known that his job was to lead the whole nation – not just his own, green-left tribe. “He should have also realised that successful constitutional change has to belong to all of us – not just the Indigenous elites that met six years ago at Uluru.”
Sky News host Peta Credlin says the Voice to Parliament debate has become"ugly” and it is Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s fault.
Ms Credlin said the Prime Minister “should never have put forward something as contentious” as the Voice referendum. “On a subject as sensitive as this, just because a select group of the Aboriginal elites demanded it,” she said. “Just as the PM should have known that his job was to lead the whole nation – not just his own, green-left tribe.
“He should have also realised that successful constitutional change has to belong to all of us – not just the Indigenous elites that met six years ago at Uluru.”
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The Albanese government’s housing agenda is ‘broad and ambitious’Treasurer Jim Chalmers says the Albanese government’s housing agenda is “broad and ambitious”. Mr Chalmers’ remarks come after Labor struck a deal with the Greens on the Housing Australia Future Fund to pass the bill through the Senate. The minor party has held out on providing their support to the government’s housing policy until their demands of stronger rental restrictions and an increase in annual housing spending were met, which led to a months-long stalemate within parliament. “So, the first part is to build more housing and get more supply so that we can address this longstanding challenge in our economy,” Mr Chalmers said during Question Time on Tuesday. “Our job, and we embrace this enthusiastically, is to work for Australia to continue to build new homes in our economy, in our communities, and we’ll keep doing that despite the negative and nasty and angry politics played by those opposite.”
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‘Minister of propaganda’: Sussexes’ biographer going for Prince William’s ‘throat’Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's biographer Omid Scobie has set his sights on Prince William for his upcoming book 'Endgame' in a post to social media, last week. 'It does seem like Omid Scobie is going for Prince William's throat. And if I had to put if I was a betting man, I'd put my money on Prince William,' Royal commentator Kinsey Schofield told Sky News Australia. Royal commentator Lady Colin Campbell told GB News Mr Scobie is the 'minister of propaganda'. 'I think he’s just pathetic and I don’t think that Prince William needs to worry. Everybody knows that Omid is the minister of propaganda.'
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Mundine responds to Langton’s ‘racist and stupid’ label on No campaignersIndigenous activist and 'No' campaigner Warren Mundine says the Yes campaign for the Voice to Parliament referendum is out of touch with ordinary Australians. Responding to Professor Marcia Langton's remarks, accusing the ‘No’ campaign of using arguments founded in of “base racism” or “sheer stupidity”, Mr Mundine highlighted the campaign's association with corporates and sporting bodies. He believes this association gives off an elitist perspective, making them appear as if they 'look down their nose' at average Australians. Mr Mundine noted that they make everyday people feel as if they are perceived as 'horrible' or 'racist.' 'I wasn't surprised by her comments today; it's typical of what she's been saying ... all through this campaign,' Mr Mundine told Sky News host Peta Credlin.
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