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Macnamara MP Josh Burns and Victorian Animal Justice councillor Georgie Purcell share baby news

Macnamara MP Josh Burns and Victorian Animal Justice councillor Georgie Purcell share baby news

News.com.au5 days ago
Melbourne Labor MP Josh Burns and Victorian Animal Justice MP Georgie Purcell have announced that they're expecting a baby girl due in the new year.
The political power couple shared the news in separate posts on social media on Sunday night.
'Georgie and I are so excited to share with you that we're expecting a baby girl in the very first few days of 2026,' Mr Burns wrote.
This will be the Macnamara MP's second child, after daughter, Tia, from a former marriage.
'Our little baby already has the most excited and loving big sister in Tia. And she'll have a home full of animals, love, and fun,' he wrote.
'Next year, my team and I will keep working hard for the community we love, but I also plan on being a present and involved dad every step of the way.
'I'm over the moon excited and can't wait for this next chapter with my beautiful partner, Georgie, who I love with all my heart.'
Mr Burns and Ms Purcell publicly announced their relationship during Canberra's Midwinter Ball in 2024, with the couple sharing opposing political views.
Ms Purcell is a prominent pro-Palestinian activist, while Mr Burns has publicly spoken about his Jewish faith and is vocally pro-Israel.
Ms Purcell said it would be a 'vegan pregnancy (and baby),' and said she's been 'feeling good' during the pregnancy.
However, she said her auto-immune condition has categorised her pregnancy as 'high-risk,' and this has required weekly hospital visits.
'This is obviously a vegan pregnancy (and baby) and I've been feeling good, which has let me keep pace with sitting weeks, late nights, international travel, community events and the general silliness of this job,' she wrote on Instagram.
'It's weekly hospital visits for the time being, and I am so grateful to the incredibly kind, reassuring and supportive medical care I've been receiving.'
She also acknowledged her past abortions, stating that she was 'more grateful than ever before to have had access to choice so that I could do this on my own terms and timeline, and will always fight for everybody to have the same'.
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Bangladesh will hold historic elections in 2026 but millions of its citizens will not be able to vote
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Bangladesh will hold historic elections in 2026 but millions of its citizens will not be able to vote

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She fled into exile in India — paving the way for new elections in April 2026. The estimated 7.5 million Bangladeshis who live in other countries, including Mr Rahman, have the legal right to vote in elections from overseas. Sydney-based researcher Ashraful Azad said that in practice, however, complex postal voting procedures prevented them from doing so. Bangladesh is the sixth-largest migrant-sending country in the world, according to the International Organization for Migration. Many Bangladeshis work largely in wealthy Gulf nations in the Middle East, as well as parts of Asia including Hong Kong, Malaysia and Singapore. A smaller, though growing, population of highly skilled migrants live in Western nations including Australia. Bangladeshis abroad provide a vital source of economic growth via remittances they send home. But it remained "almost impossible for this large diaspora to vote", Dr Azad found in recent research for the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance. Local media reported in April that the Bangladesh Election Commission was assessing the feasibility of postal ballots, online voting or voting by proxy for overseas residents, but would not commit to a timeframe for implementation. Iffath Yeasmine, who is studying for her masters in Australia, told the ABC she wanted to be able to choose the next government. "But logistically speaking, it won't be possible for me to fly from Sydney to Dhaka to Chittagong, where I'm from, just to vote," she said. Like many Bangladeshis, Ms Yeasmine said she had been unaware of her right to vote overseas — but would like to see the country's interim government make that a reality. The ABC contacted the Bangladesh Election Commission and the country's embassy in Australia for comment but did not receive a response by deadline. "It's really important that our voice is heard," said Ms Yeasmine, who previously worked for the United Nations in Bangladesh. "We don't want to limit our right [to participate in the election] to a few social media posts." Main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) boycotted the 2024 general election because it argued Ms Hasina was staging a "sham election". Muhammad Yunus, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate appointed as interim leader of Bangladesh, has pledged to restore its democratic institutions. "Sheikh Hasina was the key to the problem. She held fake elections one after another," Mr Yunus told FRANCE24 last year. "We are free from all the oppression … all the mismanagement, all the corruption." Yet holding elections announced for April 2026 will be a major undertaking. Despite intending to fly to Bangladesh, Mr Rahman acknowledged that "holding a fully free and fair election will be difficult". "The anti-Awami League forces are fragmented and lack unity," he said. 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