Australia politics live: PM pulls out of Khawaja meeting on gambling ads; Qantas profit soars to $1.6bn after tax | Australian politics

PM pulls out of Khawaja meeting on gambling ads

The prime minister has pulled out of a meeting with Australian cricketer Usman Khawaja at parliament today.

The two were supposed to meet to discuss gambling ads, and the war in Gaza, before a roundtable discussion on gambling with public health experts and doctors.

Khawaja tells journalists in Parliament House that he’s disappointed and hopes the cancellation is just a “scheduling conflict”.

I texted the Prime Minister a couple of days ago. I said, look, if you give me a 15 minute phone call… I don’t have an agenda. I just want to talk to you, mano e mano, because my heart’s in the right place. So hopefully he’ll accept that invitation, at some point, I will talk to him.

Khawaja says he respects the prime minister, that Anthony Albanese has shown courage by recognising Palestinian statehood, and says that this is the start of the prime minister’s legacy.

I actually wanted to go up and shake his hand and say, I want to congratulate you. For the first time in my life someone is recognising Palestine.

You look at the great presidents of us in the past. They fought for the people. Will they fight for civil rights, or they fight for slavery, whatever it might be their road, the great ones, the road was never easy. They had to do something. They had to make some hard choices. So for the prime minister, he has an opportunity right now to cement his legacy.

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Government to ditch 500 more nuisance tariffs

The government will abolish 500 more nuisance tariffs, following last week’s economic roundtable discussion.

What is a nuisance tariff, you ask?

Great question, the Productivity Commission defines them as tariffs that “raise little revenue for the government, have negligible benefits for Australian producers, but impose compliance costs on businesses”.

The treasurer, Jim Chalmers has announced he’s got a list of 500 nuisance tariffs to ditch, including levies on TVs, tyres and wine glasses, and will consult on the proposed list.

Chalmers says the full list of tariffs to be removed will be in next years’ budget.

With this reform, we’ll have removed around 1,000 tariffs over two years and streamlined approximately $23bn worth of trade, saving Australian businesses $157m in compliance costs annually.

The idea was canvassed at last week’s roundtable, so no surprises that it has been announced today.

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