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| | | | 09/04/2025 Trump slaps China with 104% tariffs, first leaders debate washup, and what happened to the Bogong moths? |
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| | Good morning. The stage is set for US president Donald Trump’s trade war to begin. Steep tariffs are expected to apply to multiple countries from Wednesday local time, with China in particular facing a 104% rate after it said it would retaliate. In the first leaders’ debate back home, Anthony Albanese and Peter Dutton avoided major missteps. The PM attacked the opposition leader on his energy policies as Dutton buffed his own economic credentials. And the Greens have criticised an online advert that links the party to support of Hamas. |
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Full Story | |
| Yes, we are worse off – will Dutton or Albanese make it better? Are you better off than you were three years ago? It’s a question you’ll hear more and more during this cost-of-living election as Labor and the Coalition try to convince voters they have a plan that will help where Australians are hurting the most. Reged Ahmad talks to economics editor Patrick Commins about why we need bolder reform to make the next decade better than the last. | | |
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In-depth | |
| With measles outbreaks in the United States afflicting hundreds of patients, oncologist Ranjana Srivastava argues Australia must urgently invest its own health system. Srivasta explains how the effects of the US health cuts will be felt around the world and why we can not afford to be complacent. |
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Not the news | |
| The Melbourne international comedy festival is under way, with acts such as Garry Starr who is staging every novel in the Penguin Classic range – while naked but for a tailcoat and some orange flippers, because he’s also a penguin. Here’s our pick of the crop. Can’t get to Melbourne? Many acts will head up to the Sydney comedy festival, then Brisbane comedy festival, too. |
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What’s happening today | Environment | There will be a high court judgment on a dispute over a glider species habitat. | NSW | The public sector doctors strike enters its second of three days. | Gold Coast | The final report on the tourist helicopter crash will be released. |
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Brain teaser | And finally, here are the Guardian’s crosswords to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. | |
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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.
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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.
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Lenore Taylor Editor, Guardian Australia |
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