Australia's Albanese defends antisemitism response
Anthony Albanese has shut down reporters asking when he was briefed on an explosive-laden caravan involved in an alleged anti-Semitic terror plot in Sydney.
The Prime Minister, Attorney-General and national security committee were all “out of the loop” and left in the dark over the alleged anti-Semitic caravan bomb plot by the AFP for ten days before the investigation was sensationally leaked to the media.
Sky News host Andrew Bolt says Jew-hatred in Australia has now turned into “more than a crisis” for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will address the media in Melbourne from 9am. The Labor leader will visit Swinburne TAFE alongside Skills and Training Minister Andrew Giles. He is set to be grilled on when he knew about the Sydney caravan bomb, after a report on Friday confirmed he had been kept in the dark.
Mr Albanese, who was touring the key outer eastern Melbourne electorate of Aston on Thursday, brushed aside questions relating to the event — which one guest described on social media as a “four hours of exquisite cuisine and hospitality — as “just a dinner”.
It's the start of the election year Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmers were banking on and the reason why talk of an early poll, either late last year or at the very start of this year, was always misguided.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has promised $12.7 million for a theatre and arts centre in Launceston in the seat of Bass, $5 million for Nowra housing projects in Gilmore and $6 million for the “living city” project in Devonport, in the marginal seat of Braddon.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has held a meeting of state and territory leaders to tackle a wave of antisemitic attacks across the country, the latest involving the suspected firebombing of a childcare center in Sydney. Albanese convened the ...
According to Anthony Albanese, the government he leads exemplifies a selfless devotion to public duty. Speaking at the National Press Club (NPC) last week, the Prime Minister invited us to join him in marvelling at the instinctive altruism that determines his every move.
When Peter Dutton was asked this week whether a Coalition government would continue to foster trade relations with China, he said "the relationship with China will be much stronger than it is under the Albanese government".
Former treasurer Josh Frydenberg has accused the federal government of not doing enough to combat rising antisemitism in Australia, following the discovery of a caravan containing explosives and addresses of Jewish targets.