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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Antoun Issa

Afternoon Update: Jacinta Allan to lead Victoria; surging petrol prices fuel inflation; and the US government sues Amazon

Daniel Andrews and Jacinta Allan speak at a press conference
Jacinta Allan has been elected unopposed as premier of Victoria following the retirement of Daniel Andrews. Photograph: Luis Ascui/AAP

Good afternoon. Jacinta Allan has been elected unopposed as the 49th premier of Victoria, and Ben Carroll will serve as deputy premier.

It returns Victorian Labor to a compromise model of power sharing between left and right factions, with Allan a member of the socialist left – the same faction as Daniel Andrews – and Carroll a member of Labor’s right faction.

Who is Jacinta Allan, and what can we expect from her leadership? We take a closer look.

Top news

A petrol station in Sydney
Rising fuel prices and rents have contributed to a bump in inflation to 5.2%. Photograph: Flavio Brancaleone/AAP
  • Inflation at 5.2% | A surge in fuel prices and rising rents are the main drivers of a bump in inflation, up from 4.9% in July to 5.2% last month. Analysts say the CPI rate was in line with expectations and “won’t move the dial ahead of the October RBA meeting, where the RBA is widely expected to stay on hold”.

  • Tesla battery fire in Queensland | A Tesla battery fire at one of Queensland’s first large-scale battery storage sites could burn for days, as authorities warn nearby residents to stay indoors to avoid hazardous fumes. The cause of the fire at Bouldercombe, south of Rockhampton, is being investigated.

Qatar Airways executive Fathi Atti speaks at a Senate inquiry
Qatar Airways’ Fathi Atti told a Senate inquiry the airline had ‘been unfairly rejected’. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP
  • Qatar Airways ‘shocked’ by government rejection | The airline told a Senate inquiry it was “surprised and shocked” that the Australian government “unfairly” rejected its request to expand in Australia, adding the extra flights would have generated about $3bn in economic benefits over five years.

  • Doctors’ union head apologises over sexual assault remarks | The president of the doctors’ union, Dr Antony Sara, has apologised for comments he made that overall incidents of sexual assault in medicine are “not high”, and for describing findings from his own organisation’s research into the issue as “survey bias”. A 2019 inquiry conducted by the Australian Salaried Medical Officers Federation (Asmof) into sexual harassment found 33% of all doctors had experienced sexual harassment at least once in their careers. Sara says it is “unacceptable” that sexual harassment “remains distressingly prevalent” for doctors at work.

Donald Trump at a rally in Summerville, South Carolina this week
Donald Trump at a rally in Summerville, South Carolina this week. Photograph: Artie Walker Jr/AP
  • Trump court ruling | A New York judge ruled Donald Trump committed financial fraud by overstating the value of his assets to broker deals and obtain financing. Here are the five key takeaways from the verdict.

  • Hollywood writers end strike | Hollywood writers are officially ending their five-month strike, after union leaders approved an agreement made with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, and sent the full details of the new contract to union members for ratification.

  • Amazon v the US government | The US Federal Trade Commission and 17 states are suing the retail giant, alleging the e-commerce behemoth uses its position in the marketplace to inflate prices on other platforms, overcharge sellers and stifle competition. Is this big tech’s antitrust reckoning? Read our analysis.

An ethnic Armenian boy from Nagorno-Karabakh looks out from a car upon his arrival in Goris, Armenia
An ethnic Armenian boy from Nagorno-Karabakh looks out from a car on arrival in Goris. Photograph: Vasily Krestyaninov/AP
  • Armenians flee Nagorno-Karabakh | Almost a quarter of Nagorno-Karabakh’s population has fled into Armenia since Azerbaijan launched an attack on the breakaway region last week, according to Armenia’s government.

  • Deadly Iraqi wedding fire | More than 100 people have been killed and 150 people injured in a fire at a wedding celebration in the district of Hamdaniya in Iraq’s Nineveh province. The fire ripped through a large events hall in the north-eastern region after fireworks were lit during the celebration, state media said.

In pictures

AFL photographer Michael Willson captures Collingwood’s Nick Daicos in action
AFL photographer Michael Willson captures Collingwood’s Nick Daicos in action. Photograph: Michael Willson/AFL Photos/Getty Images

Michael Willson is the master photographer capturing AFL history from behind the lens. The key, he tells Guardian Australia, is the ability “to see a picture within a picture”. “You can teach someone the technical aspects of what we do, but the creativity is something you’re born with I think.”

What they said …

Indigenous leader Noel Pearson speaks at the National Press Club in Canberra
Indigenous leader Noel Pearson speaks at the National Press Club in Canberra. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP

***

“The referendum is testing the idea that a nation conceived in the lie of terra nullius, a continent empty of owners, can come to a new understanding of who we are. A nation blessed with an Indigenous heritage spanning six millennia. A British democracy captured in its constitution, and a multicultural triumph that is a beacon to the world.” – Noel Pearson

The Indigenous leader was speaking today at the National Press Club.

In numbers

The average unleaded petrol price across Australia last week – $2.11

Before bed read

Caitlin Cassidy at the MCG, aged six
Caitlin Cassidy at the MCG, aged six, when she went on the ground at half-time for Auskick. Photograph: Supplied by Caitlin Cassidy

Higher education reporter Caitlin Cassidy is also a Collingwood tragic, and tells of how her family came to become Pies supporters.

“My ties to the club date back to 1955. My dad, then five, and his brother, Megsie, had become separated from their parents while shopping in the Victorian town of Wangaratta. Eventually, the pair were found outside a sports store in tears, being comforted by the owner.

“‘Do you know who that is?’ Pa asked my dad of the man who had been comforting them. ‘That’s Bob Rose.’”

Daily word game

Wordiply screengrab

Today’s starter word is: MONA. You have five goes to get the longest word including the starter word. Play Wordiply.

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