Your daily digest of the top headlines and must-reads from Australia and around the world, along with sport, culture, lifestyle, opinion and more
͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌      ͏ ‌     
The Guardian Today Australia | The Guardian

Support the Guardian

Power independent journalism into 2025

The Guardian Today Australia
Headlines
Virginia Giuffre, a survivor of Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual abuse, has died aged 41
Western Australia  
Virginia Giuffre, a survivor of Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual abuse, has died aged 41
Giuffre’s family issued a statement confirming she took her own life at her farm in Western Australia, where she had lived for several years
Australia news live  
Virginia Giuffre, a survivor of Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual abuse, has died by suicide, family says
Business  
Woman who sold a cartoon cat T-shirt told to pay US$100,000 in Grumpy Cat copyright case
A minority Labor government could be truly progressive – and the conservatives know it
Politics  
Peter Dutton was fired up before the election was called – but has the Coalition wilted in the campaign furnace?
Federal election
Australia’s mini and micro-parties: how to avoid a vote you might regret in the Senate
Explainer  
Australia’s mini and micro-parties: how to avoid a vote you might regret in the Senate
Behind unassuming names lurk parties with some hair-raising and eccentric views. And others that are pretty much what they say they are
Interactive  
The great Australian election campaign quiz – week four
Full Story  
Back to Back Barries: Could soft voters prove the polls wrong?
 
Have your say
Join our research panel to share your thoughts on The Guardian's advertising and commercial partnerships. You'll also go into the running to win one of three $50 vouchers each month.
Join now
 
Tracking Pixel
The rural network
Progress or preservation: the bitter fight over plans to redevelop historic Berrima Gaol
Heritage  
Progress or preservation: the bitter fight over plans to redevelop historic Berrima Gaol
A property developer plans to turn the old jail into one of the largest hospitality venues in the NSW southern highlands but some locals want the landmark to stay in community hands
Full Story podcast
Full Story  
Newsroom edition: why a hung parliament may be good for Australia – Full Story podcast
Newsroom edition: why a hung parliament may be good for Australia – Full Story podcast
Advertisement
Sport
Football  
Postecoglou’s shadow looms large as Yokohama seek to defy odds in Saudi Arabia
Postecoglou’s shadow looms large as Yokohama seek to defy odds in Saudi Arabia
Collingwood’s Big Five outclass Essendon on Anzac Day’s big stage
Boxing  
Hard sell of Eubank Jr v Benn fails to disguise ugly fight full of spite
Culture
Australia news  
‘The file says I have a criminal record since the age of two’: the not-so-extraordinary story of Uncle Larry Walsh
‘The file says I have a criminal record since the age of two’: the not-so-extraordinary story of Uncle Larry Walsh
Music  
‘If Jesus and Buddha had our work schedule, they’d have fallen out too’: boyband Five on bullying, Britney and their blockbuster return
Travel  
Winter weekenders: 21 Australian festivals worth travelling for from May to August 2025
Opinion
Watching the election from afar, I can’t help but wonder – is this really the best Australia can do?
Watching the election from afar, I can’t help but wonder – is this really the best Australia can do?
While secularism is growing in Australia, Anzac commemorations remain fervently Christian
A high school singing audition inspired by Flashdance haunted me for years – until I found my voice again
Lifestyle
The moment I knew  
The moment I knew: standing on her shoulders, I was impressed she could bear my weight
The moment I knew: standing on her shoulders, I was impressed she could bear my weight
Australia holidays  
New renovations, retro vibes: reviving Australia’s rundown motels
Technology
Artificial intelligence (AI)  
Microsoft says everyone will be a boss in the future – of AI employees
Microsoft says everyone will be a boss in the future – of AI employees
Science
Archaeology  
Archaeologists find wreck of large medieval boat in Barcelona
Archaeologists find wreck of large medieval boat in Barcelona
Environment
Music  
‘People can’t imagine something on that scale dying’: Anohni on mourning the Great Barrier Reef
‘People can’t imagine something on that scale dying’: Anohni on mourning the Great Barrier Reef
Change by degrees  
Is it still worth getting a home battery in Australia if I can’t install solar panels on my roof?
Video
Hecklers boo Indigenous elder during Melbourne Anzac Day dawn service welcome to country – video
Hecklers boo Indigenous elder during Melbourne Anzac Day dawn service welcome to country – video
Get in touch
If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email [email protected]

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 wake every morning 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 definition of what constitutes a dictator, 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 – as we also cover a federal election - 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.

Lenore Taylor
Editor, Guardian Australia

You are receiving this email because you are a subscriber to The Guardian Today Australia. Guardian News & Media Limited - a member of Guardian Media Group PLC. Registered Office: Kings Place, 90 York Way, London, N1 9GU. Registered in England No. 908396