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Australia news as it happened: Federal budget debate continues; Tony Abbott to become Liberal president; Australians released from Israeli prison allege mistreatment

Emily Kaine and Lachlan Abbott
Updated ,first published
Pinned post from 6.45pm on May 22, 2026
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What we covered today

By Lachlan Abbott

Thanks for reading the national news blog. This is where we’ll end today’s coverage.

To conclude, here’s a look back at the day’s major stories:

  • Debate over the recent federal budget has continued after cabinet secretary Andrew Charlton conceded concerns from start-ups about Labor’s proposed capital gains tax discount changes were “valid”.
  • Another group of Australian IS-linked women and children have departed a camp in north-eastern Syria, and are believed to be on the way home.
  • One Nation MP Barnaby Joyce has apologised to the journalist Pauline Hanson’s media adviser told to “shut up” at a press conference, but stopped short of calling out Hanson for labelling the same reporter a “nasty bitch”.
  • Tony Abbott will become the next federal president of the Liberal Party after Alexander Downer withdrew from the contest.
  • In NSW, it was revealed today that a record number of complaints against the state’s police were lodged after a protest against the visit of Israeli President Isaac Herzog earlier this year.
  • In Victoria, the state’s anti-corruption watchdog has called for greater powers after two mystery parties launched Supreme Court action and derailed the planned release of a long-running investigation into former premier Daniel Andrews and a union boss.
  • Queensland Premier David Crisafulli has backed his Olympics minister after he stood down following a referral to police the premier learnt of through media.
  • In Western Australia, Premier Roger Cook has been criticised after he said the state could be forced to start fracking in the Kimberley if a major Woodside project was not developed.
  • In business news, Mexican restaurant chain Guzman y Gomez announced on Friday it would pull out of an expansion into America.

Thanks for your company. Have a good night.

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Abbott to become Liberal president after Downer pulls out of contest

By Rob Harris

Tony Abbott will become the next federal president of the Liberal Party after Alexander Downer withdrew from the leadership contest.

The long-serving Howard era foreign minister will instead run for federal vice-president after being nominated by his daughter, Georgina Downer, who leads the Robert Menzies Institute.

Tony Abbott and Angus Taylor in 2018, when Taylor was energy minister.Alex Ellinghausen

“I only want to help them. I have no personal ambition, so whatever way they think I can help, I’m willing to do,” Downer told The Australian, adding that Opposition Leader Angus Taylor had backed Abbott for the presidency.

Nominations for the roles closed at midday on Friday.

Government accused of slow response to diphtheria outbreak

By Lloyd Jones

A peak Aboriginal health body has criticised the government’s response to a fast-spreading outbreak of diphtheria, calling it too slow.

The criticism came as Health Minister Mark Butler admitted “something has gone wrong” to allow an outbreak of the potentially deadly virus when most developed countries had relegated it to the “dustbin of history”.

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More than 230 diphtheria cases have been recorded across Australia in mostly Indigenous communities so far this year – about 30 times the yearly average.

About 60 per cent of cases have been in the Northern Territory. Other infections were recorded in Western Australia, South Australia and Queensland.

Teal MP believes Labor will change CGT discount plans

By Lachlan Abbott

Independent MP Sophie Scamps believes the federal government will revise its changes to the capital gains tax discount amid pressure from entrepreneurs to create a carve-out for start-ups.

Appearing on the ABC’s Afternoon Briefing today, the MP for Mackellar in Sydney’s north was asked whether she was confident Labor would tweak its CGT discount plans, which would particularly affect her affluent constituents.

Independent MP Sophie Scamps.Alex Ellinghausen

“Look, personally, I think they will,” Scamps said.

“I think they recognise that there were very valid concerns that were being raised by the tech sector, by start-ups, by small business that did need addressing.

“The government promised that they would consult on this.”

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Coalition hits out over submarine upgrade plan

By Lachlan Abbott

Shadow defence minister James Paterson has attacked the federal government’s management of upgrades to Collins-class submarines, warning Australia risks having too few boats before AUKUS vessels arrive.

The Australian National Audit Office released a report today that found Defence was “not well placed” to extend the life of Australia’s ageing submarine fleet as the “life-of-type extension” plan had suffered cost overruns and delays.

Opposition defence spokesman James Paterson.Alex Ellinghausen

Defence Minister Richard Marles announced a revised strategy for the submarines on Tuesday, and criticised the former Coalition government for underestimating the cost of its initial 2020 plan.

But Paterson said Labor had failed to make the timely decisions needed in the past four years to save the Collins life-of-type extension, leaving the country exposed.

Australian who died on Machu Picchu trail identified as police officer

By Alexander Darling

The Australian who died while hiking the Inca Trail in Peru has been identified as a Victorian police officer.

Matthew Paton, 52, tripped and fell up to 400 metres during a trek with other tourists and a guide at the world-famous trail to Machu Picchu, local police said.

Victoria Police has confirmed one of its members, Matthew Paton, has died after a fall while trekking the Inca Trail in Peru.Victoria Police

Victoria Police shared a statement from Paton’s family – his wife and three children, Ainsley, Luke and Meg – who said they were “shattered”.

“It seems surreal at the moment – everyone is bereft. Family was the most important thing to Matt. He was dedicated to his family, including his wife of 31 years and their three children. He adored his family. And we adored him.”

Read more about the update to this story here.

PM visits comrades of soldier killed in parachute accident

By Lachlan Abbott

The prime minister has met colleagues of an experienced Australian special forces soldier who died in a training accident this month.

Warrant Officer Lachlan Muddle, a 50-year-old SAS sniper, was killed after a midair collision during a parachuting descent while helping instruct an army exercise at Jervis Bay airfield on May 11.

Warrant Officer Lachlan Muddle, who died in a parachute training incident at Jervis Bay.Department of Defence

In a social media post, Anthony Albanese said he had visited Muddle’s friends and colleagues at HMAS Albatross south of Nowra.

“Since the tragic training accident that claimed Warrant Officer Muddle’s life, they have been grieving for a mate, someone they knew and loved and trusted as they served our nation together,” he said.

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Audit finds Defence ‘not well placed’ to extend ageing submarines

By Tess Ikonomou and Lachlan Abbott

A damning audit has found Defence is “not well placed” to extend the life of Australia’s ageing submarine fleet, potentially leaving the country with a capability gap after cost overruns and delays.

The Australian National Audit Office released a report today into the “life-of-type extension” plan for the navy’s Collins-class submarines, designed to get an extra decade of service out of them before the arrival of nuclear-powered boats.

Crew members working on board HMAS Rankin, a Collins-class submarine, at HMAS Stirling in Western Australia.

The 1980s-designed Collins submarines were previously slated to begin retirement this year, but the cancellation of the $90 billion French submarine program for the AUKUS deal means Australia won’t get new submarines until at least the early 2030s.

The auditor-general today revealed Defence’s planning and implementation of the Collins-class extension was not managed comparably to “its complexity, risk profile and strategic purpose”.

Hanson’s comment to journalist ‘not appropriate’: Albanese

By Nick Newling and Lachlan Abbott

The prime minister says it was inappropriate for Pauline Hanson to call a journalist a “nasty bitch” after a press conference yesterday.

Appearing in Jervis Bay earlier today, Anthony Albanese was asked about One Nation’s recent clash with the media, and he used the question to paint Labor as the only mainstream party left in Australia.

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“Well, it’s not appropriate,” he said of Hanson’s remark.

“Labor is now the only mainstream political party in Australia. We have three right-wing parties all competing against each other and their allies cheering them on.

“Parties of grievance could only achieve so much because they don’t put forward a positive agenda. And they need to be held to account as well for their actions, and for their policies, or lack thereof.”

One Nation MP Barnaby Joyce today apologised for Hanson’s staffer Richard Henderson telling the journalist to “shut up”, but did not apologise for Hanson’s comment.

Inheritances won’t be touched in budget legislation, says PM

By Nick Newling

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has left the door open to altering contentious tax changes announced in the budget.

Following reporting in this masthead that Albanese would be open to walking back proposed changes to taxing discretionary testamentary trusts – which the opposition have labelled a “death tax” – Albanese said today the government would “work through the legislation”.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.Dominic Lorrimer

The government announced in last week’s budget that a 30 per cent rate would soon apply to all discretionary trusts to better align earnings from investments with income tax.

There are about 10,500 testamentary trusts in the country, created within a person’s will so they can manage their assets and the income derived from them after they die.

In Wollongong this morning, Albanese said: “Let’s be very clear that we’ve said, when it comes to some of the misreporting that’s there, we’re not interested and there’s no measures in there that are going to hurt inheritances.

“So we’ll work through the legislation we’ve said will be introduced in the second half of the year. On trusts, there will be a consultation period about that, and we made that clear on budget night.”

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