Australia news live: Minns considered scrapping Metro station over $2bn cost blowout; Victorian Liberals struggle to find election candidates

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NSW government considered cancelling metro station amid potential $2bn blowout

Penry Buckley

Penry Buckley

The NSW premier, Chris Minns, says the government considered – but decided against – cancelling one of the stations on Sydney’s largest metro line amid a potential multibillion-dollar cost blowout.

The Sydney Morning Herald has reported that confidential estimates show the cost of the Metro West line, set to open in 2032, could be at least $2bn higher than official forecasts. The blowout is reportedly due the cost of building underground stations following delays to awarding contracts, which could bring the total spend to more than $27bn.

Speaking today, Minns characterised the $2bn figure as being “at the upper end of a potential cost overrun”. He said:

Some of the ways that we’ve looked at, to be honest with you, reducing that bill and keeping it within its original envelope … is to cancel a station that we’d already announced.

And we’ve looked at all different ways of ensuring that that can come in on time and on budget, but that was a decision that we felt was too far.

But that’s what it would take to reduce the cost of that Metro.

Minns did not say which station the government was considering cancelling on the line, which will run from Hunter Street in the CBD to Westmead via Olympic Park and Parramatta, but said there were “a few options”.

NSW premier, Chris Minns.
NSW premier, Chris Minns. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP

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RBA leaves interest rates on hold

Luca Ittimani

Luca Ittimani

The Reserve Bank has left interest rates on hold at 3.6%, in a widely expected move.

Economists were confident the bank would hold today and are now parsing the RBA board’s statement for signs a fourth rate cut could still come this year.

The board has cut interest rates three times in 2025, most recently in August. Inflation has been on the rise in recent months but remains within the bank’s 2-3% target range.

We’ll bring you market reaction and more in a moment.

A sign for the Reserve Bank
Photograph: David Gray/Reuters

Tom McIlroy

Tom McIlroy

Albanese optimistic about Aukus amid reports Pentagon will stick to pact

Anthony Albanese is sounding positive after reports the Pentagon’s review of Aukus this morning said the massive submarine project with the US and UK should go ahead.

The Japan-based Nikkei Asia reported the Trump administration would retain the original timeline for the $368bn program, which includes the US selling three Virginia-class nuclear-powered submarines to Australia from 2032.

Anthony Albanese
The Australian prime minister, Anthony Albanese. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP

The reports come before the prime minister’s meeting with US president Donald Trump in Washington, next month.

Speaking before flying from the Middle East to Australia, the prime minister said:

Well, the Aukus review remains ongoing, but we’ve been participating very constructively with it, and Aukus has been meeting its milestones.

That is why, in discussions I’ve had with the United Kingdom and with the United States, there has been support for it.

We know that Aukus is in the interests of Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States. It is about a partnership which is in the interests of all three nations, which will make peace and security in our region so much stronger.

Krishani Dhanji

Krishani Dhanji

Australian artists urge government not to adopt data mining exemptions for AI models

Fair licensing deals are the only way for Australians to get paid fairly for their work that’s used to train AI models, Australian creatives say, calling on the government not to adopt text and data mining exemptions for generative AI models.

Over at the Senate inquiry into national cultural policy (where the productivity commission copped a flogging a bit earlier), several Australian artists and musicians have been calling for better protection for creators and their work.

Musician Holly Rankin known by her stage Jack River, told the committee copyright laws haven’t slowed creativity, but “enabled” it.

A text and data mining exception to the copyright act is not a technical tweak or small change; it would be a fundamental dismantling of our copyright system legalising the theft of Australian culture at scale.

Some of the largest companies in the world are asking for handouts from the Australian government; they want access to Australian culture and creativity for free.

Musician Holly Rankin appears before a Senate inquiry
Holly Rankin appears before the Senate inquiry into AI effects on Australian artists. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Rankin said companies like OpenAI and Google have already signed licensing agreements with news organisations including NewsCorp, the Guardian and AAP.

The truth is simple, technology companies are able to pay for licenses, they just don’t want to.

First Nations rapper Adam Briggs said it would be “hard to get genie back in the bottle” if Australia allowed companies to access Australian creativity without fair pay.

Why is it a radical notion that artists should be compensated for their work?

Victoria premier says Vulin a person of ‘deep conviction’ and ‘immense strength’

In a statement, the premier, Jacinta Allan, said she was “shocked and deeply saddened” by Vulin’s diagnosis but proud of her work to raise awareness and funds since.

Emma has responded with grit, determination and her trademark sense of humour. She has brought our parliament together to raise awareness and funds for Fight MND and advocated for government funding for MND Victoria. That she would use her own experience to advocate for others comes as no surprise.

Emma is a person of deep conviction, immense strength and total selflessness. I am incredibly saddened that her health means she will not be able to stand for re-election in Pakenham next year. But I know she will continue to serve her community for as long as she is able.

Benita Kolovos

Benita Kolovos

Victorian Labor MP Emma Vulin not recontesting Pakenham

Victorian Labor MP Emma Vulin has announced she won’t recontest the seat of Pakenham at the 2026 state election.

Vulin was diagnosed with motor neurone disease in 2024. In a post on social media, she said her health meant she couldn’t commit to a another four years as an MP:

My mind knows that my body may not have the energy to give what’s required to represent the Pakenham district for a further four years. Whilst I can blame motor neurone disease for taking away that possibility, I can also reflect on the insight the disease has given me and be grateful for the friendships I’ve gained.

Emma Vulin.
Labor MP for Pakenham Emma Vulin. Photograph: Charlie Kinross/The Guardian

Vulin said it had been an honour to represent the community and her achievements included removing level crossings, opening two new train stations, three new schools, three new kindergartens and a new SES, with a community hospital also in the works.

I will continue to work until the November 2026 election and continue to fight hard for better outcomes, funding and infrastructure for the Pakenham District. I envision life after November 2026 will be quality time with my children and family and advocating from the sidelines, particularly for accessibility and awareness of stroke and MND.

We wrote this piece on Vulin earlier this year, as she pushed her party to introduce improved voluntary assisted dying laws:

RBA interest rate decision coming in an hour

The RBA will make its latest announcement on interest rates in about an hour, at 2.30pm Sydney time.

Australia’s central bank is widely expected to leave rates on hold, but we’ll bring you all the updates on that front as they happen.

Benita Kolovos

Benita Kolovos

Victoria opposition leader says Bourke Street mall car incident sends ‘shivers’ down parents’ spines

Victoria opposition leader, Brad Battin, held a press conference at Bourke Street mall earlier – after four teens were charged over an incident in the popular shopping precinct.

The teens were charged overnight after an allegedly stolen vehicle was driven into the CBD on Monday afternoon, before it was abandoned in the middle of the mall after allegedly striking a pedestrian. Three of the teenagers were remanded in custody, with one bailed.

Brad Battin
Brad Battin. Photograph: Nadir Kinani/AAP

Battin told reporters the community had “lost pride” in Melbourne due to increased crime. He went on:

What each and every Victorian saw yesterday during school holidays sends shivers down the spines of parents who just wanted their kids to come into what used to be a safe city here in Victoria – to come into Melbourne during your school holidays, meet under the [Flinders Street] clocks and go out with your mates in the town.

This is something that parents now fear, and what we see is empty streets because people have genuine concerns about coming into the city.

Krishani Dhanji

Krishani Dhanji

Albanese welcomes Gaza plan and calls on parties to ‘bring its vision into reality’

Anthony Albanese welcomed the Gaza peace plan, and has urged all parties to “engage seriously” with it.

In a statement – as the PM returns from an overseas trip to the UN general assembly, the UK and UAE – Albanese said the government commends the focus on Palestinian self-determination and its commitment to denying Hamas any role in the future governance of Gaza:

We commend the plan’s focus on Palestinian self-determination and statehood, and the Palestinian Authority taking back effective control of Gaza. President Trump’s plan reflects a clear rejection of annexation and forced displacement of Palestinians.

Australia urges all parties to engage seriously with the plan and to work to bring its vision into reality without delay.

Albanese added that he “welcomed the opportunity” to discuss the plan with other leaders over the past week.

Earlier this morning, the deputy prime minister. Richard Marles, said the plan “keeps the door open” to a two-state solution and represents “hope”.

Palestinians who are struggling to access food due to ongoing Israeli attacks receive hot meals distributed by a charity organisation at Nuseirat refugee camp in Gaza City on 29 September.
Palestinians who are struggling to access food due to ongoing Israeli attacks receive hot meals distributed by a charity organisation at Nuseirat refugee camp in Gaza City on 29 September. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

Luca Ittimani

Luca Ittimani

Seven gets bigger boost than Southern Cross after merger news

Seven West Media’s shareholders enjoyed a much larger boost in value than Southern Cross Austereo’s after news of a proposed merger between the two.

Seven has jumped $15m in value to $230m, while the radio stable’s value is just $6m higher than it was yesterday, at $207.5m.

The companies told investors this morning they expected to get rid of up to $30m in annual costs by linking their assets, including combining their digital platforms, Seven Plus and Listnr.

Listnr has grown revenues by nearly a third annually, offsetting declining radio audiences and helping Southern Cross recover from its lows last year, when it was worth just $120m.

A Channel Seven logo
A Channel Seven logo Photograph: AAP

Southern Cross investors will see higher earnings per share under the merger, implying bigger profits and dividends, E&P Capital’s media analyst, Entcho Raykovski, said.

Seven West Media, meanwhile, reported a $61m drop in revenue in the year to June and after-tax profit nearly 20 times smaller than it recorded in 2021, with advertising revenue sliding everywhere except Seven Plus.

SWM’s share price has risen as investors weigh up the benefits of the deal to Seven against the chance they will have to sell their shares at a discount.

Seven investors would have to trade each of their shares for less than one-sixth of a Southern Cross share under the deal, which is less than their market value at current prices – a term Raykovski described as “unusual”.

Krishani Dhanji

Krishani Dhanji

Hanson-Young says commission didn’t consult enough with creative industries

Following from our last post, Sarah Hanson-Young also said the commission had “misread the value of the creative industry”.

You consulted with Mastercard, you consulted with Microsoft, you consulted with Meta, you consulted with OpenAI … you consulted with a lot of other players but you didn’t consult with all the creative industries.

I’m really interested to know who these many parties are who told you this was a problem that there needed to be an exemption, or that copyright was an issue. I’m assuming you didn’t write this report with AI itself.

Sarah Hanson-Young
Sarah Hanson-Young. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Commissioner Julie Abramson, said the commission was doing “wide consultation” and had received more than 400 submissions for the final report.

She said there wasn’t a “firm view” on what approach should be taken on copyright legislation.

Krishani Dhanji

Krishani Dhanji

Senators grill productivity commission during hearing on copyright and AI

The productivity commission was hounded by senators this morning during an inquiry hearing into copyright laws, artists and AI.

Senators accused the commission of “waving the white flag” on artists in their interim report on harnessing the benefits of AI in Australia.

A key element of the report was a proposal to implement a text and data mining exemption to the Copyright Act, which would allow tech companies to use copyrighted work to train AI.

Sarah Henderson
Sarah Henderson. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP

In a somewhat rare scene, Liberal senator Sarah Henderson and Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young were on a unity ticket, attacking the commission for not modelling the impact of a text and data mining exemption in the copyright law on the creative industry and for failing consult with the creative industry ahead of releasing their interim report.

Henderson “condemned” the commission for “not having regard to our creative industries”. She said:

Why is it not realistic that we would not look at ways to protect the work of Australian creatives that is being stolen by big tech overseas?

NSW government considered cancelling metro station amid potential $2bn blowout

Penry Buckley

Penry Buckley

The NSW premier, Chris Minns, says the government considered – but decided against – cancelling one of the stations on Sydney’s largest metro line amid a potential multibillion-dollar cost blowout.

The Sydney Morning Herald has reported that confidential estimates show the cost of the Metro West line, set to open in 2032, could be at least $2bn higher than official forecasts. The blowout is reportedly due the cost of building underground stations following delays to awarding contracts, which could bring the total spend to more than $27bn.

Speaking today, Minns characterised the $2bn figure as being “at the upper end of a potential cost overrun”. He said:

Some of the ways that we’ve looked at, to be honest with you, reducing that bill and keeping it within its original envelope … is to cancel a station that we’d already announced.

And we’ve looked at all different ways of ensuring that that can come in on time and on budget, but that was a decision that we felt was too far.

But that’s what it would take to reduce the cost of that Metro.

Minns did not say which station the government was considering cancelling on the line, which will run from Hunter Street in the CBD to Westmead via Olympic Park and Parramatta, but said there were “a few options”.

NSW premier, Chris Minns.
NSW premier, Chris Minns. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP

Josh Taylor

Josh Taylor

Ombudsman fields hundreds of complaints of social media users locked out

The Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman (TIO) has received hundreds of complaints from social media users and businesses locked out of their accounts, despite the office not having a role in mediating disputes between consumers and social media companies.

Guardian Australia reported in August a spate of users finding themselves locked out of their accounts on Meta platforms after they were incorrectly flagged as breaching community standards.

The TIO reported on Tuesday that in data covering before the most recent spike in reports of being block, that for 2023 and 2024, there were 500 complaints to the TIO about social media platforms overall, with 70% of these complaints linked to Meta and Google platforms. The TIO said 60% of these were regarding blocked accounts.

The TIO is responsible for mediating complaints between consumers and telecommunications companies, but is now arguing that there needs to be a digital platforms ombudsman to deal with complaints made about social media companies, and it is a role the TIO wants to take on.

Freyja McCarthy, the TIO’s executive general manager for legal, policy and
regulatory affairs said:

The TIO already hears from consumers and small businesses falling through the cracks. They are unable to get fair outcomes when internal dispute resolution offered by social media companies falls short.

We need an ombudsman to play a vital role in increasing trust and confidence in the digital economy and providing individual redress to consumers when things go wrong.

Victorian Liberals extend timeline to nominate for preselection to try to find more candidates

Benita Kolovos

Benita Kolovos

The Victorian Liberals have extended the timeline for nominations for preselection in four seats where sitting MPs have signalled their plans to retire at the next election.

While nominations for Liberal-held lower house seats close at 12pm today, Guardian Australia understands the party has left open nominations for the seats of Benambra, Croydon, Malvern and Rowville until a date to be fixed to allow for more candidates to come forward.

One Liberal source says there “hasn’t been a flood of nominations”, with several strong prospective candidates concerned about the impact nominating would have on their careers.

Another barrier could also be the $5,000 application fee for prospective candidates.

In early 2024, Benambra MP Bill Tilley announced he wouldn’t be contesting the election due to his ongoing cancer battle. This month David Hodgett, Michael O’Brien and Kim Wells announced they wouldn’t run again in Croydon, Malvern and Rowville, respectively.

Both Croydon and Rowville are considered target seats by Labor, on margins of 1.2% and 3.7%.

Liberal MP Kim Wells.
Liberal MP Kim Wells. Photograph: Joel Carrett/AAP

Communications minister meets with Optus owner Singtel, says triple-zero outage ‘must never happen again’

The communications minister, Anika Wells, says she has told Optus owner Singtel that the troubled telco must take full responsibility for its obligations to the community.

Wells met with Singtel group CEO, Yuen Kuan Moon, earlier today after two Optus outages in less than a fortnight, including one that blocked emergency calls for telco customers in South Australia, Western Australia, the Northern Territory and parts of NSW.

The deaths of two people in South Australia and one in Western Australia have been linked to the outages (a fourth death – an infant in SA – was found to have been likely unrelated).

In a statement, Wells restated that the government had ordered an Australian Communications and Media Authority (Acma) investigation and said she had used today’s meeting to convey the government’s “serious concern” over the triple-zero outage and “reinforce that it must never happen again”.

Wells added:

Optus and all telecommunications providers have legal obligations under Australian law to make sure calls to emergency services go through. As the parent company of Optus, Singtel is also accountable.

I have requested Optus employs external advisers to independently assess the company’s network plans to provide confidence to the Australian Communications and Media Authority [Acma] and the Australian government that these problems will not recur.

The Australian government has directed Acma to investigate, and I reiterated to Optus and Singtel they must be fully transparent as part of this process.

We have made clear that Optus is accountable for what happened, and Optus needs to take full responsibility for its obligations to the community.

Andrew Messenger

Andrew Messenger

Plan for troubled Brisbane childcare centre

Students at a troubled Brisbane childcare centre will be relocated to a disused classroom at a nearby school, while a dispute over its finances and management is investigated.

The community-run Craigslea kindergarten, in Brisbane’s north, made international headlines last Monday, after its management committee asked parents for $2,200 for their children’s own artwork to pay off debts. It has since been returned and the centre has gone into administration.

Education minister John-Paul Langbroek announced on Monday that all 44 children would be accommodated at the Craigslea state school until the centre could be re-established next year.

He said the department’s regulator would investigate allegations that the centre had been run by a single person, and whether any crime had been committed:

It’s a very rare situation where you have a voluntary management committee that ends up in the situation this one did …

What we’ll take from this is, following the completion of the investigation, we’ll have a look at the situation to try to strengthen procedures that happen early childhood is a completely different situation for schooling, as you’ve already mentioned. It’s the only part of our education system that has an element of private involvement in it as well, and so it’s quite complicated.

Stokes to step down from Seven if merger succeeds

Luca Ittimani

Luca Ittimani

Kerry Stokes, Seven’s billionaire chair, will step down from the media business in February if its merger with Southern Cross Media goes ahead.

As we reported earlier, Seven West’s proposed merge with Southern Cross Media would combine the former’s TV and news stable with the latter’s radio networks.

Stokes, the 85-year-old Western Australian businessman, took a major stake in the Seven Network in 1995 and has chaired the media company since 2008.

He stepped down as chair of his industrial and materials company, Seven Group Holdings, in 2021. SGH held two-fifths of the shares in the media business and will now control one-fifth of the merger.

Kerry Stokes
Kerry Stokes. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Stokes will be succeeded as chair of the merged companies by the sitting chair of Southern Cross, Heith Mackay-Cruise. Stokes said:

I have every confidence Heith will continue to guide the combined group successfully. Following my retirement from the Board in February 2026 I intend to continue to support the Chair and Board wherever I can add value.

Joining Mackay-Cruise on the new board will be Stokes’ son, Ryan Stokes, who has sat on the board of Seven West since 2012 and has served as chief executive of SGH since 2010.

The Seven West chief executive, Jeff Howard, will remain CEO in the merged company and will also sit on the board, along with two more Seven West directors plus two others from Southern Cross.

Henry Belot

Henry Belot

Australia’s Future Fund discloses huge profits from weapons manufacturers despite fierce criticisms of support for industry

Australia’s $250bn sovereign wealth fund has secured huge returns on investment in weapons and defence companies in less than two years, despite long-running criticism of its support for the industry.

The value of shares held in eight companies increased by $76m between October 2023 and June 2025 amid wars in the Middle East and Ukraine and the sharpest increase in military spending since the cold war.

What's Australia's role in making the F-35s Israel is using to strike Gaza? – video

The fund’s investments in Israel’s largest private defence contractor, Elbit, which is a major supplier to the Israeli Defense Forces, increased from $489,000 to $2.69m as of 30 June, according to the fund’s latest disclosures.

Elbit Systems describes itself as the “backbone” of the IDF’s drone fleet, which has been used extensively in the assault on Gaza. Its portfolio also includes systems for command and control, military aircraft and helicopters, armed remote control boats, and land vehicles.

Read more:

Singtel and Optus executives defend Optus CEO after triple-zero outages

Yuen Kuan Moon, the CEO of Singtel, just spoke to reporters and said a review of the Optus triple-zero outage would be conducted “thoroughly to make sure this will not happen in the future”. The telco appointed Dr Kerry Schott to lead an independent review into the outages last week.

Yuen told reporters the Optus CEO, Stephen Rue, had only been in the role for 11 months and was brought on to “transform” the telco, but it was still “very early days”:

It takes time to transform a company.

An Optus store
An Optus store. Photograph: William West/AFP/Getty Images

John Arthur, the chair of the Optus board, said the company was “committed to working with the government to do whatever needs to be done here”:

We are going to get all of the expertise and help that we need to make sure we make things right here.

Arthur went on to say the board was “satisfied” with Rue’s work:

He has been in the job 11 months, the board is satisfied that he is making progress. But it is a work in progress.

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