
Will this weekend's election end the political chaos in Tasmania?
Climate and environment editor – and Tasmanian – Adam Morton speaks to Reged Ahmad about the issues front of mind for voters and whether whoever wins office will work across the aisle to get things done
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
3 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
BREAKING NEWS Water bills set to soar by 30% in just five years as Labour confirms it will abolish Ofwat after damning report
Water bills are set to rise 30 per cent over the next five years, an independent report warned today as the Government confirmed the existing regulator will be abolished. Environment Secretary Steve Reed confirmed today that water regulator Ofwat will be scrapped as part of an overhaul of a 'broken' regulatory system. He said: 'Today I can announce that the Labour Government will abolish Ofwat. In the biggest overhaul of water regulation in a generation, we will bring water functions from four different regulators into one.' Mr Reed said the new single regulator would be 'powerful' and 'responsible for the entire water sector', with a clear mandate to 'stand firmly on the side of customers, investors and the environment'. 'It will prevent the abuses of the past,' he said. 'For customers, it will oversee investment and maintenance so hardworking British families are never again hit by the shocking bill hikes we saw last year.' Mr Reed also declared 'today marks the start of a water revolution' as he unveiled plans to create a single regulator for the water sector. He said the new body would end the 'tangle of ineffective regulation' and deliver for customers, investors and the environment. 'For the environment, it will cut all forms of pollution to clean up our rivers, lakes and seas for good,' Mr Reed said. Ofwat will remain in place during the transition, but he said it would be given a clear mandate to provide strong leadership in the interim. 'This is our chance to make sure our children and their children can create the same wonderful memories we remember from our own childhoods,' he added. 'Splashing about in the waves on the beach, rowing along a river, without having to worry about toxic sewage pollution. Today marks the start of a water revolution.' More to follow


Telegraph
3 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Reform candidate opens court battle after losing election on ‘coin toss'
A Reform UK candidate who lost a council election when a tie was settled with a random draw has asked the High Court to overturn the result. Liz Williams was beaten by Hannah Robson, a Green party candidate, in May's local elections, after several counts left them tied on 889 votes. The counsellor for the Littletons ward, in Worcestershire, was then chosen at random. Two ballot papers were placed in a box and Ms Robson's name was drawn out to secure her the victory for the county council seat. Now Ms Williams has handed an 'election petition' to the High Court in London, claiming the result should be declared void as the victory was decided by a 'toss of the coin'. At a preliminary hearing this week, Mrs Justice Yip said the petition, naming Ms Robson and Vic Allison, the deputy returning officer, as respondents, will be decided at the High Court later this year. According to Ms Williams's petition, the 'result was determined only by folding and placing two used election ballot papers into a ballot box and the deputy returning officer pulling one out'. The petition states the process was 'open to fraud and corruption' and did not allow the candidates time to seek legal advice before they were 'pressured into accepting the process in principle'. Ms Williams said she was not able to 'witness the entire process without obstruction'. She added: 'I could not see the box for all of the preparation and was not included in that. 'I did not agree to a third person shuffling the papers... Only the returning officer should have had their hand in the box.' Footage posted online shows the returning officer putting his hand into a large black box and pulling out a slip of paper, before declaring the winner. Ms Robson was said to have won by 890 to 889 votes. Ms Robson was not represented during the preliminary hearing this week, but Timothy Straker KC, representing the returning officer, said he would apply to dismiss Ms Williams' petition later this year. It is not the first time a council election in the UK has ended in a dead heat. In Blyth in 2007, the winner in one ward was chosen by the drawing of straws, while a candidate in Yorkshire in 2022 offered to play poker to decide the winner, before going on to draw straws. Electoral Commission guidance states: 'When two or more candidates have the same number of votes, and the addition of a vote would entitle any of those candidates to be declared elected, you must decide between the candidates by lot. 'Whichever candidate wins the lot is treated as though they had received an additional vote that enables them to be declared elected.'


The Guardian
3 minutes ago
- The Guardian
SA algae crisis ‘incredibly disturbing' but federal government won't declare natural disaster, Watt says
Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young says $14m in federal funding is 'nowhere near what will be needed' to support South Australian communities dealing with the state's algal bloom catastrophe. The environment minister, Murray Watt, announced the federal assistance package on Monday while visiting South Australia to see the impacts of a toxic algal bloom that for months has caused mass deaths of marine life across the state's beaches. Watt said the bloom and its impacts were 'incredibly disturbing'. But he stopped short of declaring the event a natural disaster, saying the catastrophe did not meet the relevant definitions under the federal natural disaster framework. Hanson-Young said the criteria used to declare such events should be examined. As parliament returns, the South Australia-based senator also said she would push for an inquiry into the disaster to examine issues including the federal and state government responses to the event. 'South Australians have been crying out for weeks and months for federal action on this, so I'm glad to see the federal environment minister finally get to South Australia,' Hanson-Young told the ABC's Afternoon Briefing on Monday: '$14 million is good but nowhere near what will be needed.' Get Guardian Australia environment editor Adam Morton's Clear Air column as an email Asked if the bloom was a national disaster, the Nationals leader, David Littleproud, said, 'obviously it's one of significance'. 'I think we need to broaden those definitions, and as a parliament we should do that,' he told Sky News on Monday. He also urged Labor to pursue other measures that would provide financial support to agricultural workers affected. On Monday night, Anthony Albanese said federal funding had been timed 'appropriately' given the event was unfolding 'primarily in state waters'. 'Events do occur in our environment,' the prime minister told ABC's 7.30. 'What is important is that there be a response. We're responding, giving support to the South Australian government.' The bloom of the microalgae species karenia mikimotoi was identified off South Australia's Fleurieu Peninsula in March, and grew to more than 4400 sq km, close to the size of Kangaroo Island. It has been breaking up in recent weeks, spreading north into Spencer Gulf, south into the Coorong wetlands and along Adelaide's beaches in Gulf St Vincent into the Port River, killing tens of thousands of marine animals. The money is likely to be used to pay for the clean-up of dead marine life from SA's beaches, support impacted businesses, bolster community awareness about the bloom and invest in science and research to better understand the incident. 'There's no doubting whatsoever that this is a very serious environmental event facing South Australia,' Watt told reporters on Monday. 'We are in uncharted waters here.' Asked if the bloom and its impact should be declared a natural disaster, Watt said it was not possible under the existing definition despite calls from scientists, the Greens and SA's Labor premier. A natural disaster declaration would trigger special federal assistance measures to support individuals, businesses and communities in their recovery. 'We have managed outside the usual natural disaster framework to marshal the type of resources that South Australia has asked for,' Watt said. 'One of the difficulties has been understanding exactly what its impacts are and what sort of response is required. 'We won't solve this overnight and we are, to some extent, relying on weather conditions to help disperse the algal bloom.' Darcie Carruthers, the South Australia-based nature campaigner for the Australian Conservation Foundation, welcomed Watt's funding announcement but said it was overdue and more needed to be done. 'The federal government needs to focus on the causes of this economic and environmental disaster to prevent it from happening again,' Carruthers said. 'A marine heatwave and the water from the disastrous 2023 Murray Darling floods are both factors that have allowed the algae to take hold and both warming waters and floods are supercharged by burning fossil fuels.' Paul Gamblin, the chief executive of the Australian Marine Conservation Society, said the devastating bloom shows 'nowhere is immune from the accelerating impacts of climate change', and called for ' major coordinated response that matches the scale of this emergency'. 'This unnatural, shocking event needs all hands on deck,' Gamblin said. The algal bloom is naturally occurring, but the state's environment department has listed potential contributing factors including a marine heatwave that started in 2024, when sea temperatures were about 2.5C warmer than usual, combined with calm conditions. Another was the 2022/23 River Murray flood that washed extra nutrients into the sea followed by an unprecedented cold-water upwelling in the summer of 2023/24 that brought nutrient-rich water to the surface. Marine ecologist Dominic McAfee said the mortality in most heavily impacted areas was 'extremely confronting'. 'It seems like almost everything has died,' Dr McAfee, from the University of Adelaide's Environment Institute, told AAP. 'The impacts we're seeing now could just be the start of something more prolonged.' Dr McAfee said it had been hoped winter winds and swells would 'disperse and nullify' the algae bloom, but this had not happened. 'And there's a chance that it will continue for many more months.'