Key events
Taylor says leaked immigration plan has ‘no validity’

Josh Taylor
Following the leak of immigration policy developed under former Liberal leader Sussan Ley on Monday, the new opposition leader, Angus Taylor, said he had not seen the plan, and that it had not been brought to shadow cabinet and it had “no validity”.
The Ley plan proposed to ban migrants from specific regions of 13 countries, and would seek to remove up to 100,000 asylum seekers and people on student visas more quickly from Australia.
On ABC’s 7.30 program, Taylor said he had not seen the document:
Frankly, I don’t know what the document is. I don’t know where it’s come from, and I don’t know what’s in it.
Taylor said that the plan he would announce would be developed with his soon-to-be-announced shadow cabinet, but would not be drawn on detail beyond the principles he had outlined in his speech after becoming Liberal leader on Friday.
In response to being asked on whether social media would be checked, Taylor said intelligence agencies “need to be looking at this very very closely”, and there would be some regions migrants are coming from “where the risks are high”.
That doesn’t mean you necessarily shut the door on those places, but it does mean, you do the work to make sure the people who are coming are not people who are going to threaten our way of life, and bring violence to our country.
Read more here:
And we are also reporting on Taylor being warned not to copy Donald Trump’s hardline border policies:

Caitlin Cassidy
Race discrimination commissioner says racism ‘pervasive’ across university sector
The race discrimination commissioner, Giridharan Sivaraman, said the findings of the study were deeply troubling and universities were falling short of their duty of care to students and staff.
Racism at university is not confined to isolated incidents or individual behaviour – it is systemic. Racism is pervasive across the sector, affecting many groups in serious ways … The attack on Camp Sovereignty, the antisemitic terror attack in Bondi and the recent alleged attempted bombing targeting First Peoples on 26 January in Perth – these are the horrifying outcomes when racism in our society isn’t addressed.
The report made 47 recommendations for the federal government and universities, including a national framework for anti-racism in tertiary education, better accountability and a more diverse leadership and workforce.
Only 11 universities were found to have advanced, standalone anti‐racism strategies.
Sivaraman said the report showed the “critical importance” of the federal government endorsing and funding key recommendations of the National Anti-Racism Framework, which the commission delivered in November 2024.
We cannot wait any longer as racism continues to impact the lives of many in visceral ways.
Racism is ‘systemic’ at Australia’s universities, report finds

Caitlin Cassidy
Racism is “systemic” at Australia’s universities, the race discrimination commissioner says, with a landmark report finding seven in 10 respondents have experienced indirect racism, rising to nine in 10 Palestinian and Jewish students and staff.
The Australian Human Rights Commission’s national study was commissioned in 2024 to investigate the prevalence and impact of racism at universities for the first time. The federal government received the report in December but it was not publicly released until Tuesday.
Of the 76,000 students and staff that were surveyed as part of the study, 70% had experienced indirect racism, including hearing or seeing racist behaviour directed at their community. Some 15% had experienced direct racism at university.
The rates were highest for religious Jewish and Palestinian respondents (over 90%), followed by First Nations, Chinese, Jewish (secular), Middle Eastern and north-east Asian respondents (over 80%).
At the same time, just 6% of people who experienced direct racism make a complaint to their university, with many citing fear of consequences and low trust in university complaints systems.
Welcome
Good morning and welcome to our live news blog. I’m Martin Farrer with the best of the breaking news this morning before Nick Visser takes the reins.
Angus Taylor says he knew nothing about a plan drawn up by ousted Liberal leader Sussan Ley to ban immigration from regions of 13 countries including Gaza and Somalia. However, he has been warned by leading party figures not to mimic Trump-style hardline immigration policies. More to come.
A group of 34 Australian women and children released from a Kurdish-run detention camp in Syria were sent back after falling foul of the government. They had hoped to travel back to Australia but their hopes were dashed and they are now back in the Roj camp.
A report out today says racism is “systemic” at Australian universities. We have more coming up.






