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Unhinged mayor delivers extraordinary response after FOUR councillors quit within hours of each other - before she bizarrely talks herself up

Unhinged mayor delivers extraordinary response after FOUR councillors quit within hours of each other - before she bizarrely talks herself up

Daily Mail​3 days ago
The mayor of one of the wealthiest councils in Australia erupted into an unhinged rant after four of her councillors quit on the same day, claiming it was 'good news'.
The City of Nedlands was thrown into turmoil after councillors Hengameh Amiry, Noel Youngman, Fergus Bennett and Ben Hodsdon resigned within hours of each other.
Mayor Fiona Argyle told ABC Perth Radio on Monday it was 'a fantastic day' when the councillors resigned, including one who had served for more than two decades.
In the train-wreck interview that spanned seven minutes, Argyle claimed the councillors had deliberately worked against her.
'I am the most popularly elected mayor since the 70s,' she boasted to host Geraldine Mellett.
'I welcome these resignations. I think it's really good news.'
When pressed on her role in the collapse of the council, Argyle boasted about her achievements.
'I'm a globalised girl with almost three university degrees and can speak two languages,' she said.
'I have done nothing but work really hard for the ratepayers.'
Her most controversial comments came when she responded to criticism over the council's push to retain Crown Land earmarked for a park as part of a $34million hospice for dying children in the plush coastal suburb of Swanbourne.
The project, which sparked widespread backlash, was seen as a catalyst in the council's demise.
She maintained opposition to the development was not about the children it was designed to serve, but rather giving away land belonging to the council.
'No one hates dying children, everyone loves dying children,' she said.
'But should Class A reserve land be handed over to private use?
'That is the city's land. It is like giving away Hyde Park, Jardin du Luxembourg, the Royal National Park in Sydney.'
Western Australia does not currently have a dedicated children's hospice facility.
Western Australian Lands Minister John Carey has moved to take part of the reserve out of the hands of the council, stating it had not maintained the space in 'any meaningful way' describing it as a treeless 'dustbowl'.
He said last month he thought Nedlands was one of the 'worst councils in Western Australia'.
'This is NIMBYism gone mad,' he told the ABC.
'It makes absolutely no sense to want to keep a barren land there instead of a beautiful garden that will serve families and sick and dying children.'
Perth Children's Hospital Foundation chair Ian Campbell said the City of Nedlands had 'made absolute fools of themselves'.
Western Australian local government minister Hannah Beazley, the daughter of former deputy leader of the Keating government, will appoint a commissioner to oversee the dysfunctional council.
Beazley cited 'repeated poor behaviour' and a breakdown in governance.
These sentiments were echoed by the four councillors who all tendered their resignation on Monday, leaving the council without a quorum.
But Argyle rejected the suggestion the dysfunction was of her making and labelled Nedlands one of the great cities of the world.
Despite the turmoil, the council has been nominated for the prestigious Lee Kuan Yew World City Prize for creating a vibrant place to live.
When pressed on allegations of poor leadership, Argyle remained defiant and committed to public service, despite admitting that the role had taken a personal toll.
'My family want me to quit. I have four kids,' she said.
She dismissed claims the council's collapse would damage her political future, instead floating the idea of launching a new political party and running for higher office.
'I can do whatever. I have choice. I'm an educated, smart woman,' she said.
Argyle said, 'If anyone says anything bad about me, I will sue them.'
'I am really a good mayor who is highly educated and works hard and has been nothing but honest,' she said.
Argyle has also been involved in numerous controversies since she was elected in 2021, including a failed legal fight to stop her neighbours building a two-storey home next to her home in the well-heeled western suburbs.
She was also found to have breached the city's code of conduct by using offensive language when referring to another person, which led to recommendations for her to undergo counselling.
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Zohran Mamdani's videos are a masterclass. Eric Adams' posts are getting more bizarre
Zohran Mamdani's videos are a masterclass. Eric Adams' posts are getting more bizarre

The Guardian

time3 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Zohran Mamdani's videos are a masterclass. Eric Adams' posts are getting more bizarre

Eric Adams, possible resident of New Jersey and mayor of New York City, is a man of many talents. He is the city's 'most famous vegan', albeit one who eats fish. He has a knack for scoring freebies from foreign governments. He managed the great feat of being the first mayor in the city's history to be indicted while in office. And, on top of all that, he may well be the most unintentionally hilarious man on the internet. Please see, as exhibit one, a classic piece of Adams surrealism from 2011, shot when the mayor was just a humble state senator. Dressed like an undertaker, Adams instructs viewers to search their child's room for contraband. Per Adams, a jewelry box may have a gun in it, and the bullets may be behind a picture frame. Unappreciated for many years, the video finally found an audience when it went viral during Adams's indictment. More recently, the mayor posted a very weird Instagram video of him listening to Katy Perry, and another one captioned, 'Make an important call with me,' in which he fake chats to Usher to announce a free concert series in New York City. And, of course, there was his famous 'trash revolution' press conference where he helpfully demonstrated how to use a wheelie bin. You open the lid and then you close it: magic! This article includes content provided by Instagram. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. To view this content, click 'Allow and continue'. In another Instagram video, Adam shares his morning routine. The mayor once told an audience: 'I get out of the shower sometimes and I say: 'Damn!'' This little bit of the routine, alas, did not make it into the cut. Instead he irons a shirt, munches a carrot stick in his bizarre industrial kitchen, and rants about how he is being guided by his GPS ('God positioning satellite'). The video was posted a month ago but it really took off this week after internet detectives pointed out that a clock in the footage tells a completely different time than the purported time on the screen. In other words, the whole 'routine' was about as natural as a ski slope in Dubai. One glaring reason for Adams suddenly trying to up his Instagram game is the rise of Zohran Mamdani, the Queens assemblyman whose socialist ideas and (admittedly elite) TikTok strategy recently propelled him to victory in New York City's mayoral primary. Adams is currently slated to run as an independent in the general election against Mamdani, and he's clearly running scared. Adams is not the only Democrat making headlines this week for attempting to make waves on the internet. There's an influential web series called Subway Takes in which the New York-based comedian Kareem Rahma solicits hot takes from strangers, and the occasional celebrity, on the train. Kamala Harris was on it last year, but you wouldn't have seen the segment because it was reportedly so bad that it didn't run. 'Her take was really confusing and weird, not good, and so [we] mutually agreed we shouldn't publish it,' Rahma told Forbes. One day it may fall out of a coconut tree, but right now it is hidden from scrutiny. Then there's the Democratic house minority leader, Hakeem Jeffries, who was recently mocked for posting what appeared to be a badly photoshopped picture of himself, altered to make his waist thinner, on Instagram. (He seems to have deleted the photo on Thursday.) Jeffries was also just ridiculed (mainly by conservatives) for an Instagram photo in which he holds a baseball bat in metaphoric opposition to Donald Trump's 'One Big Ugly Bill'. 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'I regret not running for mayor in 2021,' state senator Jessica Ramos said during the mayoral primary debate. 'I had been in the senate for two years. I'd already passed over a dozen bills. I thought I needed more experience. But turns out you just need to make good videos.' Of course, Mamdani doesn't resonate with so many people because he's studied vertical videos strategies. He's successful because his core messaging connects with the needs of normal New Yorkers rather than the 1%. He's been successful because he seems to genuinely want to fight for people rather than just collect a paycheck and then head off for a cushy job at whatever lobbying company donates the most to him. He's relatable and authentic and those are two things that are very hard to manufacture. Although that hasn't stopped the Democrats from trying: they have discussed throwing millions of dollars into creating a 'Joe Rogan of the left'. 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Australian government not suspending ads or posts on X amid antisemitic Grok chatbot incident
Australian government not suspending ads or posts on X amid antisemitic Grok chatbot incident

The Guardian

time4 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Australian government not suspending ads or posts on X amid antisemitic Grok chatbot incident

The Australian government has continued advertising on X after its AI chatbot Grok praised Hitler and made antisemitic comments, despite earlier pausing ads on the platform after Elon Musk's takeover. The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, among other federal politicians, has also continued posting on X, after launching a proposed plan to combat antisemitism in Australia this week. On Wednesday, Musk's artificial intelligence firm xAI deleted 'inappropriate' posts on X after Grok began praising Adolf Hitler, referring to itself as 'MechaHitler' and making antisemitic comments in response to user queries. The department of finance, which manages federal government advertising on social media, said their advertising was not paused when this incident occurred, or after. 'Brand safety for media platforms is assessed according to a range of criteria, including ensuring that appropriate policies and technology are in place to mitigate the risk of Australian government advertising appearing adjacent to inappropriate content,' the spokesperson said. 'The [advertising] agency has not recommended that government advertising on X should be paused at this time. Assessments of brand safety on all accessed media platforms, including X, is ongoing and subject to change.' Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email The government's ad spend on X is relatively small compared with all media. Guardian Australia revealed in April that in the first year after Musk bought the platform, $2.7m was spent on advertising on X, compared with the total digital ad spending for 2022-2023 of $56.3m. Several ministers in the Albanese government have continued to post on X in the days following Grok's outburst. On Friday, Albanese posted on X about trade with China, a day after launching a wide-ranging plan proposed by Australia's antisemitism envoy. The minister for foreign affairs, Penny Wong, posted photos on Friday from a meeting of Asean foreign ministers in Malaysia. Axel Bruns, a professor in the Digital Media Research Centre at the Queensland University of Technology (QUT), said there was no benefit for government, business, politicians, journalists or other professionals to remain on X after the Grok incident. 'To remain on a platform whose built-in AI chatbot has explicitly adopted the Nazi alias 'MechaHitler' for itself is wholly inappropriate. The standard you walk past is the standard you accept,' he said. Timothy Graham, an associate professor also at QUT, said it was contradictory for politicians to take a strong stance against antisemitism, and to be communicating on a platform 'that has repeatedly failed to remove antisemitic content'. 'Not only that, but [the platform] is actually generating it,' Graham said. 'Grok is a fundamental part of the architecture of X. When the core features are antisemitic, I think you've got a problem.' The special envoy to combat antisemitism, Jillian Segal, told ABC's RN Breakfast on Friday she had held meetings with a number of social media platforms, including X. 'They're very keen to ensure that hate is not associated with their platform,' she said, adding: 'AI is the answer.' 'They are very focused on how they can construct their algorithms to root out hate or make sure it is swept from the platform without impeding proper free speech arguments,' Segal said. Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion Graham said he believed part of the reluctance to shift away from X is the entrenched role of what was formerly Twitter as a means for governments and politicians to communicate directly with the public. 'It's like the Rome of platforms – all the roads lead to it and out of it, because it's still inherited that power of infrastructure that it had before,' he said. 'Elon Musk knew that and that's why he bought it.' When asked what the government would do to crack down on antisemitic content on social media on Thursday, Albanese said the platforms had a social responsibility, and said he often received antisemitic replies to his posts. 'Some of those are no doubt produced by bots, but some of those are produced by individuals as well, which is why so much of this [antisemitism] report as well goes to education.' A spokesperson for the Albanese government told Guardian Australia that like most Australian politicians and world leaders, 'the prime minister engages through social media platforms, new media and traditional media to reach as many Australians as possible'. 'All social media companies need to do more to protect the vulnerable, eliminate hate speech and act as responsible corporate citizens,' the spokesperson said. Guardian Australia has sought comment from X. Government advertising was previously suspended on what was then Twitter on 29 September 2022, after reports of a number of brands' advertisements appearing next to inappropriate content, a report from the Australian National Audit Office revealed in April. A spokesperson for the finance department said at the time it was suspended 'to evaluate brand safety measures' and restored shortly after.

Nasser Sultan recycles suit worn on MAFS to Dalai Lama's 90th birthday event at Parliament House
Nasser Sultan recycles suit worn on MAFS to Dalai Lama's 90th birthday event at Parliament House

Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Nasser Sultan recycles suit worn on MAFS to Dalai Lama's 90th birthday event at Parliament House

Nasser Sultan made sure he was in his best dressed on Friday evening when he scored an unexpected invite to the Dalai Lama 's 90th birthday event. The Married At First Sight alum, 58, stepped out at Parliament House in Sydney with his partner, SBS journalist Karla Grant, who interviewed the spiritual leader twice. Arriving as Karla's plus one, as she prepared to deliver a speech at the event, Nasser made sure to look his sharpest as he re-used a suit from his MAFS stint in 2018. He shared video of the outfit to his Instagram Stories, showing off the blue suit with a black undershirt as he stood outside the prestigious event. 'I'm off to the Dalai Lama's 90th birthday dinner at Parliament House with my lovely partner Karla,' he began. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. He continued: 'What I'm wearing is this suit. I'm wearing a blue suit. And it's the same suit as I wore on MAFS. I've kept it since 2018, and look at this it still fits.' Nasser shared a slew of content from the birthday event to his socials, including images of chief guest Sikyong Penpa Tsering of Tibet, who sat at his table. The former reality TV star kicked off the night with a tribute to his 58-year-old girlfriend Karla. 'Karla and I are absolutely honoured to be invited to celebrate his holiness' 90th birthday dinner tonight at Parliament House,' he wrote. 'Karla was honoured to interview his holiness twice and has been asked to make a speech. Go girl.' Nasser went on to upload video footage from inside the event which showed tables packed with esteemed guests and monks from Tibet and Australia. Though Nasser was left stunned when he realised he and Karla were to be seated at a table with Sikyong Tsering, the political leader of Tibet. 'Oh my goodness, the president of Tibet is on my table,' he wrote over a video of Sikyong Tsering taking a seat across from him. Arriving as Karla's plus one, as she prepared to deliver a speech at the event, Nasser made sure to look his sharpest as he re-used a suit from his MAFS stint in 2018 Throughout the night, Nasser continued to take video of the celebration and traditional entertainment organised for the event. He also filmed Karla giving her speech, saying he was 'very proud' of his beloved. Nasser then went on to tell his followers, 'We should all be Buddhist. Seriously, the different cultures are to be loved. 'Life is not just white blond or Gold Coast house wife's [sic]. When the kids are united they will never be divided.' Later in the night, Nasser uploaded a photo of himself holding hands with Karla, who wore a black suit and white scarf, as they posed in front of a photo of the Dalai Lama. He finished off the evening with a bizarre video lashing out at the British royal family. 'So, I'm on the steps of New South Wales Parliament House,' he began. 'Just been to the Dalai Lama's 90th birthday and I ask you this: Who would you prefer—the Dalai Lama or bloody Prince Charles?' 'Let me tell you, I prefer the Dalai Lama any day. Prince Charles does nothing. Dalai Lama preaches peace, harmony and good will,' he continued. 'Prince Charles walks around, shakes hands, and pretends he's into it. So, Dalai Lama for me all the way. God bless Dalai Lama.' It comes as thousands of Buddhist followers descended on India with the 14th Dalai Lama to celebrate his 90th birthday, including Hollywood star Richard Gere. Describing himself as a 'a simple Buddhist monk' who usually doesn't celebrate birthday, the Dalai Lama rang in the milestone by praying for peace. The call for peace came after China insisted it would have the final say on who succeeded the Tibetan spiritual leader. Richard, 75, a practising Buddhist since 1978 and long-time friend of the Dalai Lama, was seen reverently kissing the spiritual leader's hand at the event. The celebration was held at Dharamshala, the headquarters of the Tibetan government-in-exile.

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