Australia news live: Bill Shorten says anti-immigrant politics a sign of ‘creeping cultural dementia’; man found dead in car after Sydney shooting | Australia news


Shorten labels rising anti-immigrant rhetoric a form of ‘political dementia’

Shorten said he believes there is a “creeping cultural dementia” taking place in Australian politics amid debates over multi- and monoculturalism.

The former Labor leader had this to say to RN:

double quotation markI do detect – I’ve read this expression somewhere, but I’ll apply it here – a sort of creeping cultural dementia across Australian political discourse, where we’re forgetting some of the basic memory of what makes this country such a special place … Saying that we should go to zero immigration, it forgets how we got here.

Like again, to be really straight talking, I could understand why perhaps some Aboriginal Australians might say, well, immigration hasn’t been a success. But you know what? The other 97% of us, we all came from somewhere else.

He went on:

double quotation markWe’ve got to stop this sort of rush to extremism, which extinguishes sort of the country’s history, which is a successful story of bringing things in. …

When I see people proposing very simplistic solutions and trying to put everything to a binary … that intolerance I think is a form of political dementia where we’re just shutting down our ability to think.

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Graham Readfearn

Graham Readfearn

Coalition and One Nation’s plan to ditch net zero would not lower power prices, CSIRO report finds

Claims by the Coalition and One Nation that abandoning a net zero climate target would bring down power prices are contradicted in a new CSIRO report on the costs of generating electricity.

Generation costs will probably rise after 2030 regardless of Australia’s policy on net zero, according to the CSIRO’s annual GenCost report, but prices should then stabilise at levels below recent price spikes.

The report concludes electricity from nuclear plants, which the Coalition and One Nation promote, would be the most expensive way to generate electricity among the current options.

Read more here:

Transmission lines in Queensland. Photograph: Krystle Wright/The Guardian
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