Australia politics live: Tim Wilson says Coalition needs time to regain trust after another poll in the doldrums | Australia news


Wilson says time and trust needed to win the public back

The Guardian Essential poll shows the Coalition is still in dire straits, with its vote being eaten up by One Nation.

There’s some interesting data in the latest poll around One Nation, and a little less appetite from the public for some of their key policies – have a read below:

But it also shows that while One Nation’s primary vote dropped from 28% to 26%, and Labor ticked up from 29% to 30%, the Coalition is still coming third with a very low primary vote of just 23%. So Sky News host Pete Stefanovic asks Tim Wilson why people still aren’t buying what the Liberal party is selling.

Wilson says it’s about time and trust.

double quotation markThere’s absolutely policies we need to get right, to articulate and to articulate to the Australian people. We’ve put out a series of policies already around the tax back guarantee to actually protect Australians against Jim Chalmer’s active inflation agenda.

And every time we talk to people about it, they see the benefit and the advantage of it, but this is going to take time. No one’s pretending otherwise.

The key thing we’ve got to do is solidify trust … and part of the challenge is we’ve got to be a sustainable alternative that clearly articulates a vision for the country.

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Greens push for digital duty of care legislation

Sarah Hanson-Young says the government should be implementing the promised digital duty of care bill now, over the social media ban for under-16s which she says was a “design failure right from the beginning”.

The Greens senator says the ban doesn’t require social media platforms to make their online spaces safer for kids and that the algorithms need to be cracked down on.

She says Josh Burns, who yesterday detailed the antisemitic abuse targeting him and his partner, is right, in that social media is pushing people to hate based on race, religion and bigotry, and that should be stopped.

double quotation markYou know what works? You know what funnels that? What makes that happen? Is these nasty algorithms. That is what churns these social media companies profits. It is their business model. So if you want to hit them where it hurts, if you want to make these places safer for everybody, you’ve got to tackle them.

Sarah Hanson-Young in June. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
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