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Home » Federal budget 2026 live updates: Jim Chalmers to deliver budget announcement and speech tonight – latest news | Australian budget 2026
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Federal budget 2026 live updates: Jim Chalmers to deliver budget announcement and speech tonight – latest news | Australian budget 2026

JohnBy Johnmai 12, 2026Aucun commentaire20 Mins Read
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‘Governments have not done enough’: PM reflects on death of Kumanjayi Little Baby

The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, was asked in question time by Labor MP for Lingiari Marion Scrymgour how the government and parliament were standing with the family and community of Kumanjayi Little Baby in her electorate.

Albanese said it had been an “extraordinarily difficult period” and he extended his deepest condolences to her family.

double quotation markThey are trying to bear what must be unbearable.

Amid their devastation, they have asked for the space to allow Sorry Business to occur, so the memory of their beautiful child can be cherished and honoured.

He said the tragedy had shattered a family and shaken a community, and amid the pain, there was also anger.

double quotation markGovernments of all persuasions have not done enough to deal with what are generational challenges.

Every Australian child has the right to grow up safe and loved.

With the security of a roof over their head, with the opportunity of a great education, to be empowered to make the most of their potential their life.

Kumanjayi Little Baby deserved all of that.

Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price breaks down during Kumanjayi Little Baby condolence motion – video
Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price breaks down during Kumanjayi Little Baby condolence motion – video

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Updated at 06.38 BST

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Sarah Collard

Sarah Collard

Fortescue ordered to pay $150m in compensation to traditional owners

Mining company Fortescue has been ordered to pay $150m in compensation to traditional owners over cultural losses caused by the multi-billion dollar Solomon Hub iron ore mine – the largest compensation payout in native title history.

The mine, which has extracted millions of tonnes of iron ore and generated an estimated $80bn in revenue for Fortescue since operations began in 2013, was approved by the Western Australian government without the consent of the Yindjibarndi traditional owners.

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Caitlin Cassidy

Caitlin Cassidy

‘No agency’ and ‘no authenticity’ in halls of parliament, Fatima Payman says

The independent senator for WA, Fatima Payman, is also appearing at the Democracy in Colour webinar on racism. She says her time in politics has been a “tough journey” being the only hijab-wearing parliamentarian.

She says she realised the “tokenism that exists” in the halls of parliament upon being elected under a Labor ticket.

double quotation markThere is no authenticity, there is no agency, and the social license that’s given to certain politicians within that space to say what they want without realising the ramifications and implications it will have … really give the green light to the least adjusted Australians out there to use it.

Payman says she hadn’t received the levels of racism and Islamophobia as she did when crossing the floor against the Labor party, and reiterates her calls, alongside other colleagues of colour, for anti-racism training to be mandatory for politicians.

double quotation markSenator Lidia Thorpe, Mehreen Faruqi and I have been quite vocal lately … about the death threats we’ve been receiving, the lack of understanding the AFP originally showed.

She also highlights One Nation leader Pauline Hanson’s stunt to enter parliament with a burqa, as she did back in 2017, as “just horrendous”.

double quotation markTo see the lack of leadership from the government … gave Pauline Hanson the oxygen she was craving for.

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Migrants ‘blamed for everything’ in Australia, race discrimination commissioner says

The race discrimination commissioner, Giridharan Sivaraman says migrants are being “blamed for everything” in Australia in the absence of facing more “courageous and difficult solutions” to the cost of living and housing crisis.

Race discrimination commissioner Giridharan Sivaraman Photograph: Darren England/AAP

Appearing at a Democracy in Colour session titled Racism out of Politics on Tuesday evening, he says Australia has a “structural problem” with racism, pointing to a recent survey which found two-thirds of migrant workers reported being exploited, some of them severely so.

double quotation markMigrants and the targeting of migrants is one example of that … That happens in part because they are not white. Because they are of different racial backgrounds and they’re dehumanised …

Migrants are being blamed for everything, from not being able to buy a house, to the cost of milk going up, to being stuck in traffic. And at the same time … they’re being exploited, so we can all enjoy the lifestyles that we have.

That blaming of migrants is just avoiding coming up with more courageous and difficult solutions, like tax reform, housing policy reform … All of this is aided and abetted by misinformation online … because racism is profitable for social media platforms.

He adds political rhetoric contributes to this as well, including racism parliamentarians have been subjected to themselves.

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Updated at 09.24 BST

Government timing on Murphy report response ‘disappointing’, Costello says

The leading advocate for gambling reform, Tim Costello, says it is “very disappointing” for the government to release its response to the Peta Murphy report on gambling reform when most senior journalists are in budget lockup, when the government is only tackling four of the 31 recommendations in the report.

The late member for Dunkley, Peta Murphy. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

He told the ABC there will still be gambling ads in family-friendly shows like MasterChef and Lego Masters.

double quotation markReducing the saturation of ads, reducing it from eight ads an hour to three ads and our, would we say we cigarette ads down to just three and our job done?

He said it was disturbing that 600,000 12-to-17-year olds in Australia gambled last year, which was more than playing basketball and soccer combined.

He said the prime minister saying the balance is right “is embarrassing” as no one was stopping adults having a punt.

Costello said children are not being protected “in the interests of foreign multinational sports betting companies”.

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Updated at 09.23 BST

Sian Cain

Sian Cain

Abbie Chatfield apologises for 2025 video after partner refused re-entry to US

Australian musician Keli Holiday was forced to cut short a US tour after officials stopped him from re-entering the country, with his partner, Abbie Chatfield, posting a lengthy apology about a joke she made about violent revolution almost a year ago.

On Friday, Holiday claimed he tried to return to the US for a show in New York, but was “detained” at the border “despite having the proper visa documentation”.

A spokesperson for Holiday stated that he was not given a reason by US authorities about why his visa had been cancelled and that this was still the case.

On Tuesday Chatfield shared a 10-minute long apology about a video she made in 2025, saying it had “come back to haunt me” and that Holiday had not even been aware of it.

Keli Holiday and Abbie Chatfield at the 2025 ARIAs. Photograph: Sitthixay Ditthavong/AAP

In the 2025 video, Chatfield joked about Luigi Mangione, who is accused of killing UnitedHealthcare chief executive, Brian Thompson, and the romantic attention he had subsequently received from women.

In the video Chatfield joked that “incels” should “start a revolution” if they wanted to “get pussy” like Mangione.

On Tuesday, Chatfield said the joke had been subsequently “warped” by media outlets who she said had framed her joke as a call for political violence against US president Donald Trump.

double quotation markPeople have said that I called for the assassination of Trump. I do not want that to happen. I want to be clear. I do not believe political assassinations are positive for anybody.

I disagree with Trump’s policy, his views, all these things, but I never said his name in that video, I never said it was about him. I never called for the assassination of him. This was a punchline that was meant to be about incels and the bizarre reaction to Luigi Mangione.

Chatfield did not expressly link her apology with the entry refusal.

Guardian Australia has sought clarification if Chatfield’s social media activity was a factor in the decision.

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Updated at 09.07 BST

Price’s plea to end ‘racism of low expectations’

Indigenous senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price says Australia can no longer “hide behind race” as she issued an emotional plea for change after the death of Kumanjayi Little Baby.

With tears welling in her eyes and her voice breaking, the NT senator paid tribute to her five-year-old niece, who was found dead in scrubland near Alice Springs on 30 April.

Jacinta Nampijinpa Price making a statement on the death of Kumanjayi Little Baby. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP

Jefferson Lewis, 47, has been charged with her murder and has yet to enter a plea.

The Liberal senator on Tuesday said: “We cannot continue hiding behind race”.

double quotation markWe cannot continue pretending that lowering expectations for Aboriginal children is compassion.

It’s not compassion, it’s neglect. It’s the racism of low expectations.

Children deserve safety before ideology. Most of all, we need courage.

The senator’s plea for action contrasted with that of outspoken independent senator Lidia Thorpe, who said the girl’s family did not want her death to be politicised.

Price said she didn’t want parliament to offer its condolences while “refusing to confront the conditions that made those condolences necessary in the first place”.

“I want this parliament to put aside our political differences and stand up for what’s right for our children,” she said.

–AAP

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Updated at 08.35 BST

Caitlin Cassidy

Caitlin Cassidy

Eight in 10 Jewish Australian women have been exposed to antisemitism since 7 October 2023, survey finds

About 80% of Jewish Australian women say that they or an immediate family member has experienced antisemitism since 7 October 2023, a national survey has found, and one in five have been exposed to physical violence or verbal abuse.

The survey, released by the National Council of Jewish Women Australia (NCJWA) as the royal commission into antisemitism hears testimony from witnesses, was conducted over eight months using the International Holocaust Remembrance (IHRA) definition and heard from 668 women.

It found in addition to the lived experience of Jew hatred, around half the women surveyed had made changes to their daily lives because of vilification they had faced, including direct threats, antisemitic tropes and doxing and 43% were accused of being modern-day Nazis.

One survey participant said they had received death threats by phone and online, while others said their children had been bullied at school, including facing physical violence and antisemitic slurs. A survivor of the Chanukah terror attack said a post they made online about their experience “attracted cruelty and racism”.

President of the NCJWA, Lynda Ben-Menashe, said antisemitism affecting Jewish Australian women was “widespread”.

double quotation markIt is incredibly sad to find that so many Jewish Australian women are thinking about leaving this place which once was our haven … Jews are the canary in the mine of any population: throughout history we’ve seen that when Jewish citizens are targeted it’s a sign that social cohesion is fraying and fractured.

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Updated at 08.40 BST

Union proposes package to WiseTech for AI job cuts

Last week, Guardian Australia reported that staff at the ASX-listed software company WiseTech had been waiting several months to learn if they are among the 2,000 of 7,000 staff to be cut from the company as a result of AI advancements.

The union representing the sector, Professionals Australia, has told Guardian Australia on Tuesday that it has put a redundancy package to WiseTech management since our report.

Professionals Australia director, Paul Inglis said:

double quotation markProfessionals Australia has put forward a redundancy package that reflects the scale of this decision, including enhanced redundancy payments, additional pay based on years of service, protection of share and equity entitlements, waiver of clawback obligations and access to outplacement and retraining support.

He said employees had “serious doubts” on whether AI systems are capable of reliably performing the full scope of work undertaken by employees whose roles are being cut

double quotation markWorkers are concerned that experience, judgement, accountability, and deep technical knowledge are being undervalued in decisions driven by short-term cost reduction and AI hype.

We are also increasingly concerned about the psychosocial health and safety impacts of a redundancy process that has now stretched across several months with ongoing uncertainty for employees.

Workers have described significant stress, anxiety and fear about their future, their workloads and whether they will still have jobs from week to week.

He said there are real human consequences when workers are left in limbo.

double quotation markAustralian technology professionals helped build this company and continue to underpin its success to this day and they deserve to be treated with the utmost respect.

WiseTech was approached for comment.

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Updated at 08.04 BST

Liberal deputy leader suggests party could vote against CGT changes

Jane Hume has indicated the party could vote down expected changes to negative gearing and capital gains taxes in tonight’s budget.

Hume told ABC’s Afternoon Briefing that the party’s instinct “will always be to vote against higher taxes”.

double quotation markHigher taxes mean you get less of something, we want to see more houses, not fewer.

We instinctively will say if this is just a tax grab, a cash grab, because the Labor government cash-strapped, well, that is not something we can support.

Asked if a future Coalition government would repeal it, Hume said we would have to wait and see for opposition leader Angus Taylor’s budget reply speech on Thursday night.

double quotation markWe want to see more productivity injected into the economy so that we can grow the economy and everybody can benefit.

This idea of pitting one group, one demographic, against other demographic, we don’t think that is a recipe for not just economic growth, but a better society.

Deputy leader of the opposition, Jane Hume speaks to media with leader of the opposition Angus Taylor. Photograph: Con Chronis/AAP

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Updated at 08.31 BST

‘Hard not to be cynical’ of timing of government response to gambling report, Chaney says

Independent MP Kate Chaney has said it is hard not to be cynical about the government delivering its full response to the Peta Murphy inquiry report on gambling reform in parliament while most of the country’s political journalists are in budget lockup.

She told ABC’s Afternoon Briefing that it took 1051 days for the full response, and “literally most of the political journalists in the country are locked up, so it’s hard not to be cynical about the government not wanting to draw attention to this.”

She said the reform package refers to at best three or four of the total recommendations.

Chaney said the issue is not neutralised, given polling suggests that three out of four Australians want a total ban on online gambling advertisements.

double quotation markThese things take time, but there is no doubt it is directionally correct to move towards a total phaseout.

On the Farrer byelection, Chaney says the Liberal party preferencing One Nation “will not go down well in my electorate”.

double quotation markIt is a sign that the Liberal party really doesn’t know who they are, and seem to be shifting more to the right, which will not be popular in seats.

Times are changing, but the one thing that isn’t changing is we are seeing a continuation of that long-term decline in support for the major parties.

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Updated at 07.56 BST

One Nation gas proposal an ‘equity stake’, Joyce says

One Nation MP Barnaby Joyce says Pauline Hanson’s proposal on gas is not a tax – as some have called for – but an equity stake for the government.

He said the government would be “equity partners” with the gas companies, and would make money from the gas they sell.

He told ABC’s Afternoon Briefing:

double quotation markIt’s like me saying well if I am a 30% owner of your pie shop am I entitled to 30% of the profits if we make money?

Yes, you are, because you’re 30% owner of a pie shop.

It gives the people a chance to have a real asset on the balance sheet.

He said the Australian people want a better return, and an equity partnership is the best way to go.

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Updated at 07.33 BST

Botched Bass Strait ferries $717m over budget

A bungled delivery of two Bass Strait ferries, in which the vessels were finished before a berth was ready, has cost $717mn more than an original business case, AAP reports.

And the overall cost to taxpayers will be even higher, with bailout money and the price tag for ongoing temporary berths not included in the figure.

The new, bigger, Spirit of Tasmania ships are expected to begin operating between the island state and Victoria in October, years behind the original schedule.

In 2024 the Tasmanian government and state-owned ferry operator TT-Line were left red-faced when it was revealed a new, larger, berth in Devonport would not be ready in time for the vessels.

TT-Line chair Ken Kanofski on Tuesday told a parliamentary committee examining the project, which began in 2018, that its cost overrun was $717m.

The figure includes a rise in the new Devonport berth build, from $90m to $493m, announced in 2025.

The $717m does not include the costs to keep the new ferries in berths while they await the completion of the new berth.

It cost roughly $6m to berth Spirit of Tasmania IV in Scotland for several months – both new vessels are now being held in Australian ports.

TT-Line also received a $75m cash injection from the state government in November.

It appears likely to get further money from the state government when the 2026/27 budget is delivered on 21 May.

TT-Line has put its financial position to the state government but neither the company or government ministers have speculated on whether more money is on the way.

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Updated at 07.35 BST

Graham Readfearn

Graham Readfearn

Datacentres could be forced to invest in new solar and wind generation

Power hungry datacentres that are growing to meet the energy demand of artificial intelligence could be forced to invest in enough new solar and wind generation to completely cover their electricity needs.

State and federal energy ministers agreed at a meeting last week that datacentres across the country should “fully offset” their electricity demand through investments in new renewable generation and energy storage.

The push, backed by all ministers except Queensland’s, also said datacentres should provide “demand flexibility services” – steps that allow a datacentre to control the amount of electricity being drawn from the network.

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Andrew Messenger

Andrew Messenger

Brisbane mayor halts plans for Airbnb permits; opposition calls it ‘total capitulation at the expense of renters’

Brisbane mayor Adrian Schrinner has halted a plan to require a permit to rent a house on Airbnb “at this time”.

The policy has been three years in the works. A taskforce established in 2023 recommended in 2024 that a property should only be allowed to be rented on the short-stay market with planning approval, the support of its body corporate and a 24-7 property manager.

Schrinner told a Brisbane City Council meeting on Tuesday that the idea would “not proceed at this time,” blaming the federal budget, which he said is expected to include changes to property taxes, and rising interest rates.

He said just 1% of Brisbane homes were used for short-term accommodation, and they represented just 100 complaints in the last 12 months.

double quotation markConsultation revealed that short-stay accommodation services provide a broader purpose over and above tourism.

You will not tax your way out of a housing crisis and you will not regulate your way out of a housing crisis. Only building new homes will change this.

Council opposition leader Jared Cassidy accused the mayor of “total capitulation to the short-stay accommodation industry at the expense of renters”.

double quotation markConsiderable time and money have gone into these reforms, and it’s all been for nothing.

This LNP council’s earlier reforms promised more than 300 new rentals would go back into the market. That hasn’t happened. Now the lord mayor is using the federal budget as cover to admit his failure.

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Updated at 06.54 BST

‘Governments have not done enough’: PM reflects on death of Kumanjayi Little Baby

The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, was asked in question time by Labor MP for Lingiari Marion Scrymgour how the government and parliament were standing with the family and community of Kumanjayi Little Baby in her electorate.

Albanese said it had been an “extraordinarily difficult period” and he extended his deepest condolences to her family.

double quotation markThey are trying to bear what must be unbearable.

Amid their devastation, they have asked for the space to allow Sorry Business to occur, so the memory of their beautiful child can be cherished and honoured.

He said the tragedy had shattered a family and shaken a community, and amid the pain, there was also anger.

double quotation markGovernments of all persuasions have not done enough to deal with what are generational challenges.

Every Australian child has the right to grow up safe and loved.

With the security of a roof over their head, with the opportunity of a great education, to be empowered to make the most of their potential their life.

Kumanjayi Little Baby deserved all of that.

Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price breaks down during Kumanjayi Little Baby condolence motion – video
Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price breaks down during Kumanjayi Little Baby condolence motion – video

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Updated at 06.38 BST

Users report issues with Google search

Google search seemed to be suffering intermittent issues this afternoon, with a massive spike in user reports to the tracking website DownDetector.

It seems to have resolved after about half an hour, and Google’s status page doesn’t appear to note any issues.

We’ll keep you posted if it keeps happening, but a mild moment of panic for users across the world.

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Nick Visser

Nick Visser

That’s all from me. Josh Taylor will be your guide into the evening. Take care.

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Canberra teen charged with terrorism offences

ACT teen charged with new terrorism offences, including planning an attack

The Australian federal police have charged a Canberra teenager with new terrorism offences, including acts in preparation for a terrorist act.

The AFP said today the 17-year-old is the first person to be charged with planning a terrorist act in the ACT. The teen is alleged to have planned an attack on people not known to him, motivated by views aligned with nationalist or racist extremism, the AFP says.

The teen appeared in ACT children’s court today, where they faced one charge of preparing or planning a terrorist act, which carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment if convicted. They also faced a charge of transmitting violent extremist material, which can be punished by up to five years in prison.

Peter Crozier, the AFP assistant commissioner on counter-terrorism, said it was alarming to see young Australians exposed to such material, adding in a statement:

double quotation markWe strongly emphasise the important role that parents, schools, social services and technology companies have in preventing access to violent extremist material by our youth.

Read more here:

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Updated at 05.56 BST

Albanese pledges budget will help make Australia ‘even more resilient’

The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, is speaking during question time ahead of the release of the budget later tonight.

He says the budget is focused on making the economy “even more resilient”, pointing to plans to increase Australia’s fuel reserve and his efforts across the world to secure fuel shipments for the nation. He said:

double quotation markAll we can do is to put in place every measure at our disposal, to protect Australia’s national interest, that’s what I’ve been doing.

Albanese has also been facing questions about plans to slash the capital gains tax discount and how Australians can trust the Labor government. The prime minister responded to a question from Angus Taylor, saying:

double quotation markOur budget tonight will build on everything that Australia is doing to shield Australia from the worst of the global fuel crisis, but also to ensure that we come out the other side a stronger, fairer, more resilient economy.

Our budget will be true to Labor values and Australian values: fairness and aspiration as we go forward.

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Updated at 05.40 BST



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