logo
‘Open secret': Archibald Prize has been ‘captured' by the progressive left

‘Open secret': Archibald Prize has been ‘captured' by the progressive left

Sky News AU12-05-2025
The Australian's cartoonist Johannes Leak says the Archibald as an institution has been 'captured' by the progressive left.
Mr Leak and Executive Council of Australian Jewry Co-CEO Alex Ryvchin sat down with Sky News host Chris Kenny to discuss their Archibald entry painting.
When the Archibald finalists were announced on May 1, Leak's portrait of Ryvchin was not included.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Why do we need that?': Push to ban AI nudity apps
'Why do we need that?': Push to ban AI nudity apps

Perth Now

time29 minutes ago

  • Perth Now

'Why do we need that?': Push to ban AI nudity apps

Parents are being warned their kids may be exploited online for child abuse material, amid a push to criminalise the use of apps that "nudify" pictures. Possessing nudify apps, digital platforms that allow users to insert a person's photos and use generative artificial intelligence to sexualise them, would become a criminal offence and carry up to 15 years in jail under proposed laws. "Why do we need that in an Australian community?" International Centre for Missing and Exploited Children's Dannielle Kelly told reporters in Canberra on Monday. One in four children has experienced sexual abuse, according to the Australian Child Maltreatment Study. Independent MP Kate Chaney, who introduced the proposed laws, said the federal government needed to respond more nimbly to ensure it wasn't outpaced by technological developments, such as AI being used to exploit children with little consequence. The proposed laws contain small carve-outs for law enforcement and researchers. "This is just the start, but it's something that the government could do right now," Ms Chaney said after introducing her private member's bill on Monday. The legislation follows a roundtable on AI-facilitated child exploitation, which called for urgent action. Child safety advocates and law enforcement representatives at the roundtable called for AI literacy for young people, the use of new technology to detect child exploitation material, legal restrictions on downloading such apps and better resourcing for police to tackle the issue. There was a consensus that AI was being weaponised to harm children, from creating deepfakes - which digitally manipulate images and video to superimpose someone's face or voice - to generating child abuse material, creating the potential for exploitation, blackmail and bullying. MP Zali Steggall, who seconded Ms Chaney's bill, branded it every parent's worst nightmare. "When a criminal is downloading this technology to then create this material, that's going to have a lifelong impact on children and is really damaging," the independent MP said. "We need these guardrails with urgency, we need the government to show it can act quickly. "My concern is, amidst the paralysis of a broad review of AI, we have these very clear areas of harm that go unaddressed for months at a time ... this is a very clear area of harm identified that can be dealt with very quickly." International Justice Mission Australia chief executive David Braga called for the government to legislate a digital duty of care, requiring platforms to actively take steps to prevent harm. "Now is the time for the Australian government to strengthen the Online Safety Act to require companies ... to detect and disrupt child sexual abuse material in all its forms on their platforms," he said. Attorney-General Michelle Rowland said keeping vulnerable Australians safe was the government's priority, and it would consider the legislation. "Keeping young people safe from emerging harms is above politics and the government will give appropriate consideration to the private member's bill," she said in a statement to AAP. Lifeline 13 11 14 Kids Helpline 1800 55 1800 (for people aged 5 to 25) 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028

Barnaby Joyce delivers first Coalition bill in 48th Parliament, calling for net zero goal to be repealed
Barnaby Joyce delivers first Coalition bill in 48th Parliament, calling for net zero goal to be repealed

West Australian

time41 minutes ago

  • West Australian

Barnaby Joyce delivers first Coalition bill in 48th Parliament, calling for net zero goal to be repealed

Nationals maverick Barnaby Joyce has delivered his net zero repeal bill to Parliament while dispelling suggestions that Sussan Ley's leadership is being undermined. As the new Opposition leader settled into her second week in at the dispatch box, the Coalition's internal climate wars flared again as Mr Joyce forged ahead with his private members bill. The one-time Nationals leader told Parliament the emissions target harmed Australian jobs and industries. 'Why are we doing this to ourselves? Whether it's pie shops or hairdressers, it doesn't matter. It's hurting the Australians,' Mr Joyce said when introducing the bill. He had earlier labelled the policy 'totally, utterly illogical' when flanked by fellow Nationals — including ex-leader Michael McCormack — and a flock of farmers for a press conference on the forecourt of Parliament House. 'Net zero in Australia will have zero effect on the climate,' he said. 'The only thing it's affecting is our nation's capacity to defend itself, our manufacturing's capacity to continue on, and the dignity of the lives of people who can't afford the cost of living.' It makes the first bill that the Coalition have brought forward in the first few sittings of the 48th Parliament as one to scrap action on climate change. The push comes despite the fact both the Liberal and National parties are still reviewing their climate policies in the wake of their 2022 election loss. Asked if he was undermining Coalition leadership and the post-election review, Mr Joyce said he wasn't acting to offend politicians 'on a good wicket' but stick up for pensions struggling to pay their bills. Among the handful of Nationals out on Monday, Queensland Liberal Groom MP Garth Hamilton spoke alongside Mr Joyce — urging Coalition to have a 'mature' conversation around net zero. 'It's okay for us to discuss the impact on the economy that net zero is having. There's not some moral Rubicon that we're crossing by doing this,' Mr Hamilton said. Despite the full-court-press backing Mr Joyce on Monday morning, Nationals leader David Littleproud downplayed suggestions the bill undermines his authority. He said Mr Joyce's move doesn't threaten his leadership and that '19 very independent' Nationals MPs will make up their own minds. His deputy Kevin Hogan backed the leader and his decision to launch a review 'at the will of the room'. He also noted Mr Joyce's 'passion' on the issue, saying 'good on him'. 'This is what we're here for. This is Canberra in action. We're not a croquet club,' he told Sky News. Among those to speak along Mr Joyce on Monday was Yass Valley Council Mayor Jasmin Jones who labelled net zero an 'insane quest of virtue signaling' and expressed her support for Barnaby's 'Top Gun: Maverick' bill. She said hundreds of turbines in the regions under Labor's renewables push would make responding to bushfires more difficult and jeopardize beef producers' quality through the 'shedding of microfibre'. Delivering the bill in the House of Representatives on Monday comes after several State branches voted to take an axe to the target of net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. It includes a motion by WA Liberal party at the weekend, which was carried with an overwhelming show of support. It is expected that Queensland's LNP conference this weekend will also host a similar motion. Later on Monday, One Nation's Pauline Hanson is expected to bring an urgent motion into the Senate, which some Coalition members are expected to back. Greens agriculture spokesperson Peter Whish-Wilson described Mr Joyce's push as a 'predictable attack', 'out-of-touch' and 'reckless'.

‘Genocide:' Ex-Premier lashes Israel
‘Genocide:' Ex-Premier lashes Israel

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

‘Genocide:' Ex-Premier lashes Israel

Former Labor foreign minister Bob Carr has likened Israel's actions in Gaza to war crimes and humanitarian crisis committed by the Nazis, Joseph Stalin and People's Republic of China chairman Mao Zedong, urging tougher action on from the Australian government. Speaking to Radio National, the former NSW premier and Labor heavyweight said Israel was using 'mass starvation against the civilian population as a weapon of war'. 'There's a pattern of behaviour here that really demands comparison with the worst of the last 100 years, of Stalin's Ukraine, of the Warsaw Ghetto, of Mao's Great Leap Forward,' he said. 'Unspeakable cruelty is being visited against babies and children in the enforcement of something not seen in the modern world, that is an advanced state using mass starvation as a weapon of war and giving effect to a genocide.' Israel has started a 'tactical pause' to allow aid agerncies to tackle the hunger crisis in Gaza, but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his government was not to blame for the situation, adding there were 'secure routes' for aid. The former NSW premier Bob Carr weaponisation of starvation was 'giving effect to a genocide'. NewsWire / Dylan Coker Credit: News Corp Australia While he welcomed stronger comments from Anthony Albanese that Israel had 'quite clearly' breached international law by withholding aid to civilians in Gaza, Mr Carr called for further action. He urged the Prime Minister to follow French President Emmanuel Macron to recognise Palestinian statehood when he attends the United Nations General Assembly in September. On Sunday, the Labor leader watered down the action, stating there needed to be more detail on how a Palestinian state would function, plus assurances there would be no involvement from Hamas. 'How do you exclude Hamas from any involvement there? How do you ensure that a Palestinian State operates in an appropriate way which does not threaten the existence of Israel?' Mr Albanese told the ABC. 'And so we won't do any decision as a gesture. We will do it as a way forward, if the circumstances are met.' However Mr Carr said Australia was 'giving the impression that we need the comfort of Britain' before recognising Palestine, and urged Mr Albanese to show leadership and act sooner. 'I just think Australians are ready to see our country to show a flash of independence, strength and maturity by moving with the French and not huddling and waiting for the sanction that Britain would give us when Downing Street finally gets round to it,' he said. Mr Carr said Anthony Albanese should not wait for Britain before publicly stating Australia will recognise Palestinian statehood at the United Nations General Assembly. NewsWire/ Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia Mr Carr's comments have been criticised internally, with Labor Friends of Israel co-convener Nick Dyrenfurth calling on Mr Carr to 'promptly apologise' for the overly provocative comments. Dr Dyrenfurth said that while he was 'gravely concerned with the Netanyahu government's actions in Gaza,' there is 'no genocide taking place'. 'Mr Carr is wilfully lying and deliberately stoking community tensions with extremist language and deliberately provoking his former friends in Australia's Jewish community with Nazi slurs,' he said.

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