Morning mail: Chalmers on cost of living crisis, Texas shooting response questioned, Ray Liotta dies | Australia news

Good morning. The new treasurer, Jim Chalmers, hopes capital spending will ease the cost of living pressures, while the new foreign minister, Penny Wong, tries to strengthen ties in Fiji. And Texas law authorities are facing questions about their response to the devastating school shooting.

As Australians grapple with rising prices, the new treasurer, Jim Chalmers, is banking on a surge in capital spending to boost productivity in the economy and ease a “cost of living crisis”. His comments come after news that standard power prices would increase by as much as 20% for some customers – but that’s not the only thing hurting household budgets. “Electricity prices are the pointy end of the cost of living crisis,” Chalmers said. Economic data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics found 38% of businesses planned to lift prices in the next three months, with almost all of them citing rising costs of goods and services and just over 75% reporting rising energy costs. Meanwhile, the foreign minister, Penny Wong, has used her trip to Fiji to suggest Pacific nations consider the long-term consequences of China’s proposed economic and security deal, saying Australia won’t “impose unsustainable financial burdens”.

Texas law enforcement agencies are facing escalating criticism over their response to the mass shooting at Robb elementary school in Uvalde after it emerged the gunman remained locked inside a classroom for up to an hour while large numbers of police were amassed outside the room without taking any action. Texas authorities confirmed “numerous” police officers decided to wait for a specialist tactical unit to arrive before confronting and killing the shooter in the classroom. The shooter committed all 21 murders inside that room – including 19 children and two teachers.

Australia’s gun control laws, introduced by the Howard government after the Port Arthur massacre, have been widely celebrated for their effectiveness in reducing gun deaths, massacres, and suicides using firearms. But significant gaps remain in Australia’s regulation of firearms, including the lack of a genuine national firearms database. Australian police have renewed their plea for a proper national firearms database in the wake of the Texas school shooting, a reform that successive Australian governments have struggled to implement since it was first recommended 30 years ago. Each Australian jurisdiction maintains its firearms register, creating inconsistent data holdings and weapons classifications.

Australia news

A Palestinian investigation into the shooting death of Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh has concluded that Israeli forces deliberately killed her, the Palestinian Authority has announced. Israel is likely to reject the findings as biased and unfounded. The Palestinian attorney general, Akram Al-Khateeb, announced the investigation results at a news conference in the West Bank city of Ramallah. “The only shooting was by the occupation forces, with the aim of killing,” he said.

Australia

Analysis by German academics, developed in conjunction with Australian experts, found it was ‘highly implausible’ that mines in the central Queensland basin could run profitably. Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP

Any new coalmines in Australia’s Galilee Basin, including Adani’s Carmichael mine, will not be economically viable in the long run under even the most generous assumptions about the future of the fossil fuel, according to an analysis by German academics.

The Law Society of New South Wales has called on the premier, Dominic Perrottet, to “urgently” review thousands of Covid fines issued to the state’s most vulnerable, warning many were invalid, unfair, and have caused the disadvantaged to amass “debt they are unable to pay”.

A Melbourne woman with cerebral palsy is fighting to stay in her home just a year after moving in because the agency running the national disability insurance scheme has decided her funding is no longer “value for money”.

Public hospitals in Australia are postponing non-urgent screening tests. They recommend doctors consider alternative imaging options as the health system grapples with a global shortage of medical imaging dyes, widely used in diagnostic tests such as CT scans.

The world

Pro-Russian troops fire a leaflet shell in the direction of Sievierodonetsk. Photograph: Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters

Officials in Ukraine have admitted that Russia has the “upper hand” in fighting in the country’s east, as Ukrainian forces fell back from some of their positions in the Donbas region.

The US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, has called for a vigorous defense of the existing global order but stressed that Joe Biden’s administration did not seek a “cold war” with China. The Biden administration’s policy towards the world’s most populous country contained three words: invest, align, and compete.

According to court records, the FBI claims an Islamic State sympathizer living in Ohio plotted to assassinate George W Bush, but confidential informants helped federal agents foil the plan.

The actor Kevin Spacey is facing four counts of sexual assault against three men, the Crown Prosecution Service has said. The CPS said it had also authorized a charge against the 62-year-old of causing a person to engage in penetrative sexual activity without consent.

Ray Liotta, star of Goodfellas and Field of Dreams, has died at the Age of 67. According to his representative who confirmed the news, the actor died in his sleep in the Dominican Republic while shooting his latest film.

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From ancient Egyptian cubits to fitness tracker apps, humankind has long been seeking more ways to measure the world – and ourselves. But what is this doing to us? “Measures, then, are both meaningful and arbitrary; iron guides in our lives that are malleable if we want them to be,” writes James Vincent.

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Listen

The dust is beginning to settle on an election where Australians overwhelmingly voted for the end of politics as usual. But during the election campaign, voters were continually bombarded with gaffes, gotcha questions, and empty political theatre. In this episode of Full Story, Gabrielle Jackson talks to Lenore Taylor and Mike Ticher about the disconnect between the media, the major parties, and voters clamoring for a more productive and representative political debate.

Full Story

The end of political coverage as usual – with Lenore Taylor

Sorry your browser does not support audio – but you can download it here and listen https://audio.guim.co.uk/2020/05/05-61553-gnl.fw.200505.jf.ch7DW.mp3

Full Story is Guardian Australia’s daily news podcast. Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other podcasting app.

Sport

Bangarra’s lead choreographer and youth program director Sani Townson directs dancers during rehearsals at the Broncos’ clubhouse in Brisbane. Photograph: Dan Peled/Dan Peled for The Guardian Australia

More than 200 school students will perform at Suncorp Stadium Friday night for NRL’s Indigenous round. It results from a partnership between the Brisbane Broncos and the Bangarra Dance Theatre aiming to empower Indigenous youth.

Media roundup

The ABC reveals that Scott Morrison instructed the Australian Border Force to publicize an interception of a suspected asylum seeker boat on election day. The Age reports that women are giving birth in emergency departments or discharging themselves early due to a shortage of midwives. And NSW Health is warning of a potential legionnaires’ outbreak in Sydney’s CBD in the Daily Telegraph.

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Bella E. McMahon
I am a freelance writer who started blogging in college. I am fascinated by human nature, politics, culture, technology, and pop culture. In addition to my writing, I enjoy exploring new places, trying out new things, and engaging in conversations with new people. Some of my favorite hobbies are reading, playing music, making crafts, writing, traveling, and spending time with my family.