logo
Tense moment Ex-Senator slams colleague over embarrassing leaked email

Tense moment Ex-Senator slams colleague over embarrassing leaked email

Daily Mail​2 days ago
A former Liberal Senator has lashed out at her own party following the leak of an email from a newly elected colleague, who had asked members not to leak internal discussions.
The email, sent by Senator Jess Collins and made public on Thursday, reveals her staunch opposition to gender quotas and her frustrations with internal party divisions.
In the message, Collins argues quotas are unnecessary, insisting that candidates should be chosen on merit.
She points to the NSW State Liberals who achieved gender parity without any formal mandates.
Collins also takes aim at 'factional hacks' she claims are clinging to power within the party.
Appearing on Sky News, former Senator Hollie Hughes, who lost her seat to Collins in the 2024 preselection, did not hold back.
Hughes said she received a flurry of messages that morning about Collins' 'please don't leak' email, with most people mocking it.
Hughes said, noting her 'surprise' that the message focused on internal matters rather than holding the Albanese Government to account.
Hughes mentions that it was peculiar that Collins ran on a platform of foreign affairs expertise, but made no mention foreign policy in the email.
Listing her own work on Senate committees and shadow portfolios, Hughes questioned how Collins' campaign for 'merit-based' selection stacked up.
'I'm not sure how I missed out on that when it came to merit' Hughes said.
Hughes then slammed Collins over her role in unseating her during the preselection battle.
'What gave me a chuckle, when a woman knocks off a sitting female Senator in shadow portfolios and claims, A. Merit, and B. 'I'm supporting women',' she said.
During a panel discussion, journalist Joe Hildebrand asked how Collins was preselected, and whether factional support played a role.
Hughes responded with a sarcastic jab, 'How did she get there?' she said, before bursting out laughing.
'Honey, so what happens is, everyone else is a big bad faction. But my faction isn't a faction. I got elected because I was amazing,' Hughes said, mimicking Collins in a mocking tone.
Collins had the backing of the Liberal Party's Right faction, led federally by former Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor, who unsuccessfully challenged Sussan Ley for the leadership.
Hughes, who supported Ley in the leadership vote, was backed by the Centre-Right faction led by NSW powerbroker Alex Hawke.
Hughes wished Collins well in the future, and said she hoped Collins learned from the email debacle.
'I know that you don't send an email with please don't leak this, that's like flagging a red rag to a bull'.
A review into the Liberal Party's devastating election loss is underway, with a second probe ordered by leader Sussan Ley to confront the deeper, existential challenges threatening the party's future.
Parliament will sit for the first time since the election on July 22.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Children and families forced to run for their lives after busy synagogue set alight by arsonists in Melbourne
Children and families forced to run for their lives after busy synagogue set alight by arsonists in Melbourne

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Children and families forced to run for their lives after busy synagogue set alight by arsonists in Melbourne

Children and their families were among those forced to evacuate a synagogue targeted by arsonists, just as protesters descended on a nearby Israeli restaurant shouting 'offensive chants'. A group of about 20 people had to flee when a man doused the front of the temple in a flammable liquid and set it alight about 8pm on Friday, Victoria Police said. East Melbourne Synagogue president Danny Segal and his wife Jenny were among those inside enjoying Shabbat dinner at the time. 'Somebody saw smoke coming and some passers-by rang the bell and said there's something going on,' he told reporters on Saturday morning. Everyone inside evacuated safely and firefighters stopped the flames from spreading. Ms Segal said he was worried about what might have happened had the attacker gotten inside. He said the incident frightened the children. 'They were pretty scared because they felt our fear and our shock,' he said. A group of about 20 people had to flee when a man doused the front of the temple in a flammable liquid and set it alight about 8pm on Friday, Victoria Police said Investigators are still working to establish the motivation and circumstances surrounding the fire. 'There is absolutely no place in our society for anti-Semitic or hate-based behaviour,' a police spokesperson said. The synagogue, one of Australia's oldest, is close to Victoria's parliament in the heart of the city. The suspect was last seen fleeing down Albert Street towards the CBD. A short time later, protesters gathered outside Israeli restaurant Miznon on nearby Hardware Lane. Police said about 20 of them shouted 'offensive chants' and were directed to leave the area. Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin said anti-Semitic terror had returned as a mob chanted 'death to the IDF', which stands for Israel Defence Forces. 'These events are a severe escalation directed towards our community and clear evidence that the anti-Semitism crisis is not only continuing but getting worse,' Mr Ryvchin said. Rabbi Dovid Gutnick (left) and Melbourne Lord Mayor Nicholas Reece outside of the East Melbourne Hebrew Congregation in Melbourne on Saturday Anti-Defamation Commission chair Dvir Abramovich said the diners were terrorised. 'Melbourne, for one night, stopped being a safe place for Jews,' he said. One person was arrested for hindering police and several others were spoken to by investigators. The force said it supported the right of Victorians to protest peacefully but would not tolerate 'anti-social and violent behaviour'. Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan said that the attack happened on Shabbat made it more abhorrent. 'This is disgraceful behaviour by a pack of cowards,' she said. Opposition frontbencher David Southwick called for greater action to stop people filled with hate who 'hijack our streets'. 'Enough talk. The perpetrators and organisers must be found and brought to justice,' he said. Melbourne Lord Mayor Nicholas Reece visited the synagogue and spoke with senior members on Saturday morning. He condemned the events and said Melbourne was a city of peace and tolerance despite the terrible events. 'Nothing that we are doing here in Melbourne is going to have any impact on the terrible events in Israel and Gaza and so we do need to ask ourselves, how do we keep ourselves together as a community?' he said. The incidents come seven months after a devastating fire at the Adass Israel Synagogue at Ripponlea, in the city's south. Two of the synagogue's three buildings were destroyed in the early morning blaze, which also forced members of the congregation to flee. No charges have been laid, although counter-terrorism police have raided multiple properties as part of that investigation. The latest attacks also follow disagreement between Australia's special envoy to combat anti-Semitism and NSW MPs over a call to ban pro-Palestine protests from city centres. Jillian Segal gave evidence to a parliamentary inquiry examining anti-Semitism in Sydney on Friday and was pressed on her previous statements labelling the weekly demonstrations 'intimidatory' and 'sinister'. Labor MP Stephen Lawrence suggested her comments were an 'uncivil way to describe them and the people participating'.

Wild kangaroo harvests are labelled ‘needlessly cruel' by US lawmakers – but backed by Australian conservationists
Wild kangaroo harvests are labelled ‘needlessly cruel' by US lawmakers – but backed by Australian conservationists

The Guardian

time5 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Wild kangaroo harvests are labelled ‘needlessly cruel' by US lawmakers – but backed by Australian conservationists

The bill, introduced into the US Senate last month, came with plenty of emotive and uncompromising language. 'The mass killing of millions of kangaroos to make commercial products is needless and inhumane,' said the Democratic senator Tammy Duckworth, as she introduced the Kangaroo Protection Act to ban the sale and manufacture of kangaroo products in the US. With the high-profile former Democratic presidential nominee Cory Booker as a co-sponsor, the two senators said Australia's commercial kangaroo harvest was 'unnecessarily cruel' and their proposed ban would protect 'millions of wild kangaroos and their innocent babies who are needlessly killed every year'. Backed by animal rights campaigners, the move is the latest in a string of attempts in recent years in the US Congress to ban kangaroo products. A similar push is ongoing in Europe. Last week the Center for a Humane Economy, which runs the Kangaroos Are Not Shoes campaign, announced British sportswear brand Umbro was the latest to join the likes of Nike, Adidas, Puma and Asics in phasing out the use of so-called 'k-leather' that has most often been used in some of their brand's football boots. But the success of the campaigns, and the ongoing criticism of Australia's regulated kangaroo harvests, hides a complex story and one which, Prof Chris Johnson says, is 'infuriating' for many Australian conservationists and ecologists. 'The public advocacy by opponents has been very effective, but unfortunately it's all wrong, is conceptually muddled and it's not based on knowledge or experience,' says Johnson, a kangaroo expert and professor of wildlife conservation at the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage. The Nationals leader and shadow agriculture minister, David Littleproud, accused the governing Labor party of failing to 'dispel misconceptions around the use and overseas imports of kangaroo products'. 'This has allowed animal activists to spread false information that kangaroos are being killed solely for [soccer] cleats. 'It's important to note that without a commercial industry, conservation culling is still needed to occur to manage populations. 'We know kangaroos can breed easily and are not a threatened species. The practical reality of import bans in the US would be detrimental to kangaroo populations in Australia.' The government did not answer questions sent to the agriculture minister, Julie Collins. Since European colonisation, farmers have grown pasture for livestock and added watering holes across Australia's landscape, both of which help kangaroos to survive and, in times of good rainfall, have backed controls and culls of the kangaroo's natural predator – the dingo. Johnson says grazing from abundant kangaroos can take away areas that other native animals such as bandicoots and dunnarts use to hide from introduced predators like cats and foxes. 'Overgrazing can be a serious ecological threat,' he says. 'The harvest protects other native species because it protects vegetation. If the kangaroo program fails, that would be a contributor to increased extinction threat.' Regulated commercial kangaroo harvesting takes place every year in New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia and Western Australia. Since 2010, data collated by the Australian government shows that between 1.1 million and 1.7 million kangaroos have been killed annually under the commercial harvest. Harvest quotas are set at about 15% of the estimated kangaroo population, but the data suggests less than a third of the quota is used up each year. Kangaroo harvesting takes place at night, and a national code of practice says the animals should be killed by a bullet to the head. Ben Pearson, Australia and New Zealand country director for World Animal Protection, says this method of killing, coupled with a lack of oversight of both commercial and non-commercial kangaroo culling, which is also done under licence, is a concern. 'In other animal farming industries there is a requirement for humane slaughter which includes stunning before slaughter,' he says. 'With wild harvesting, kangaroos are shot outright and evidence suggests that many are not killed instantaneously, instead being merely wounded and thus suffering from gunshot wounds. Kangaroos that are wounded but escape could suffer over a prolonged period.' Sign up to Clear Air Australia Adam Morton brings you incisive analysis about the politics and impact of the climate crisis after newsletter promotion A 2021 inquiry in the New South Wales parliament on kangaroo welfare found there was a lack of monitoring at the 'point of kill' for both commercial and non-commercial shooting, but the state government supported only two of the 23 recommendations in full. The inquiry heard that kangaroo kills were deeply distressing for some Aboriginal people, and animal rights groups said kangaroos had a right to live freely without human interference. If female kangaroos are shot, harvesters can find young joeys still alive in the mother's pouch. A national code of practice for commercial kangaroo harvesting recommends joeys are killed using blunt force trauma to the back of the head, and suggests using the tray of a utility vehicle as a suitable immovable object. It's a method which Pearson says is 'barbaric'. 'On an ethical level, we are opposed to the killing of kangaroos for non-essential items like football boots, particularly given alternatives exist and are in widespread use,' he says. Neal Finch is a wildlife ecologist and executive officer of the Australian Wild Game Industry Council, which represents kangaroo harvesters. He says the codes of practice of the kind covering kangaroo harvesting do not exist in other jurisdictions. 'It is not that we are inhumane. It is that we are exemplary,' he claims. 'Over 6 million native deer are killed in the USA every year. Over-abundant herbivores need management. The code of practice for shooting kangaroos requires a shot to the brain. Virtually all deer shot in the USA are shot in the chest. 'The reason campaigners can quote how many kangaroos are killed is because we actually publish that information,' he said. Kangaroo numbers are known to boom in times of good rainfall and then crash during droughts – swings that mirror Australia's variable climate. Between 2010 and 2023, official estimates of kangaroo numbers across four states show numbers fell as low as 25 million in 2010 and went as high as 53 million in 2013. Latest figures estimate a kangaroo population of 34 million. 'We either choose to sustainably harvest these kangaroo populations or we will see kangaroos starve in their many thousands during droughts, and habitats will be overgrazed and degraded,' says Prof Euan Ritchie, a wildlife ecologist at Deakin University. 'It's a choice.' As uncomfortable as the thought may be for many, Johnson says that in lean times, many kangaroo deaths may not be as short and sharp as one from a harvester's gun. 'The natural alternatives are being killed by a dingo or dying by starvation,' he says. 'There's less suffering entailed by the harvest than by either of those alternatives.'

Man arrested over Caernarfon David Lloyd George statue vandalism
Man arrested over Caernarfon David Lloyd George statue vandalism

BBC News

time13 hours ago

  • BBC News

Man arrested over Caernarfon David Lloyd George statue vandalism

A man has been arrested after a statue of Wales' only UK Prime Minister, David Lloyd George, was 38-year-old has been arrested on suspicion of criminal damage after the statue in Caernarfon, Gwynedd, was spray painted on graffiti had slogans calling for a free Palestine and branded Lloyd George a coloniser, but has since been Wales Police said the man, from Penmaenmawr, Conwy county, had been released on bail while inquiries continued. The statue, next to Caernarfon Castle, was erected in 1921 while Lloyd George, who represented the town at Westminster, was still prime minister.A Liberal Party politician, he was the MP for Carnarvon Boroughs, as the seat was then called, from 1890 to 1945 and served as prime minister from 1916 to 1922, during World War One.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store