Albanese Government signs Defence MOU with Norway, helping make Australia more self reliant and boosting regional security

The Albanese Government has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Norwegian government, to further support the acquisition and domestic manufacturing of missiles in Australia.

The multilateral arrangement will enhance information sharing and collaboration between Australia, Norway and 10 other countries that use the Naval Strike Missile and Joint Strike Missile, which are developed by Norwegian defence company Kongsberg. The arrangement will support Australia to become a regional missile production hub.  

The Strike Missile Family MoU supports Australia’s efforts to acquire, manufacture and maintain the Naval Strike Missile and Joint Strike Missile, in line with the 2026 National Defence Strategy and 2024 Australian Guided Weapons and Explosive Ordnance Plan. 

The Albanese Government is investing up to $850 million to enable Australia to locally manufacture and maintain the Naval Strike Missile, Joint Strike Missile and priority missile components. This includes the construction of a new missile factory in Newcastle, which will be able to produce missiles for the Australian Defence Force and partner nations from 2027. 

These initiatives form part of the Albanese Government’s investment of up to $36 billion over the decade to accelerate the acquisition and manufacture of longer-range munitions in Australia, in line with the 2026 Integrated Investment Program.

Minister for Defence Industry, Pat Conroy:

“The Albanese Government is investing up to $36 billion over the next decade to make missiles in Australia and uplift our weapons stocks, making our nation more self-reliant and resilient.

“This arrangement will support local jobs and a defence future made in Australia by enabling domestic manufacturing through cooperation with international partners.” 

Investing in our region, resilience and security

The Albanese Government will continue to invest in strengthening Australia’s relationships, region and resilience in the 2026-27 Budget, ensuring Australia remains secure and influential in an increasingly uncertain world.

The Budget delivers investments to support peace, stability and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific, strengthen Australia’s partnerships and protect Australians at home and overseas.

The global development landscape is undergoing a profound transformation. Developing countries across the Indo-Pacific are confronting a triple shock of major global aid cuts, trade disruption and energy insecurity linked to conflict in the Middle East.

These pressures risk undermining hard-earned development gains and increasing instability across our region.

At a time of instability and uncertainty, the Albanese Government will continue to prioritise the Indo-Pacific, where Australia has most at stake.

In the 2026-27 Budget, Australia’s total Official Development Assistance will be maintained.

Australia’s development program must be strategic, effective and sustainable. This has required reprioritising some multilateral funding to meet immediate needs in the Indo-Pacific.

Funding will be reduced to the United Nations Development Programme, the Global Partnership for Education, UNAIDS and the Pandemic Fund.

This reprioritisation will ensure that over 75 cents in every development dollar is directed to our region.

The Budget also reinforces Australia’s long-term investment in regional security and strategic partnerships.

The Australia-Indonesia Treaty on Common Security (the Jakarta Treaty 2026), signed by leaders in February 2026, represents the most significant step in the bilateral relationship in decades and reflects the deep trust between our nations.

The Albanese Government will commit $33.2 million to strengthen institutional ties between Australia and Indonesia, increase Indonesian language and country expertise in Australia, and create a new leadership dialogue to foster connections and deepen understanding.

The next phase of our Comprehensive Strategic Partnership with India will build on the unprecedented progress that we have made across strategic, economic and people-to-people fields. The 2026-27 Budget commits $25.3 million to drive Australian business engagement with India’s rapidly growing economy, seed new areas of cooperation through Maitri grants, and strengthen maritime security in the Indian Ocean.

Keeping Australians safe is the first priority of the Albanese Government. The Budget invests $60.5 million to sustain Australia’s critical consular services around the world and support Smartraveller travel advice to help keep Australians safe overseas.

Australia will also continue its steadfast support for Ukraine’s sovereignty and economy in the face of Russia’s unjustified invasion, extending Ukraine’s duty-free access to Australia for a further two years until July 2028.

The Budget also includes $87 million to support the DFAT portfolio, alongside other government entities, to implement Australia’s nuclear-powered submarine program. We are committed to setting the highest non-proliferation standards and implementing robust domestic regulation to oversee Australia’s nuclear safeguards and non-proliferation and nuclear security obligations.

Foreign Minister Penny Wong:

“At a time of global uncertainty, Australia will remain a reliable partner our region can count on.

“We are building the region we want – one that is peaceful, stable and prosperous, where sovereignty is respected and countries can determine their own futures.

“Our investments in diplomacy, development and regional partnerships strengthen both Australia’s national security and the resilience of our region.”

Pacific Island Affairs Minister Pat Conroy:

“Pacific countries are facing growing pressures from climate change, economic disruption and global instability, and Australia is stepping up as a trusted partner.

“We are prioritising targeted investments that back Pacific priorities, strengthen local resilience and support long-term development.

“Australia’s engagement in the Pacific is grounded in trusted partnerships, respect and our shared interest in a peaceful, stable, prosperous region.”

International Development Minister Anne Aly:

“Australia’s humanitarian program opens up opportunities and supports communities to be stronger, safer and more resilient.

“At a time of growing global uncertainty, Australia is continuing to invest in the people and relationships that help create a more stable and secure region for everyone.

“Our humanitarian program reaches some of the most vulnerable communities in our region, making real on the ground change when it comes to health, climate and gender equality.”

Police Commissioner confirms Town Hall protest charges under unlawful Minns laws will be dropped

The NSW Police Commissioner has confirmed on ABC Radio this morning that prosecutors are reviewing charges arising from the 9 February Town Hall protest to determine whether they were made under the unconstitutional Public Assembly Restriction Declaration laws struck down by the Court of Appeal, stating that charges laid under the PARD laws “will be dropped”.

Greens MP, solicitor and spokesperson for Justice Sue Higginson said the Commissioner’s admission confirms that the Minns Labor Government’s unlawful anti-protest laws directly contributed to wrongful arrests and legal chaos that unfolded at Town Hall.

“The Police Commissioner has now confirmed that people were charged under laws that were unconstitutional and invalid. Those charges should never have been laid,”

“These unlawful laws empowered police to violently crack down on a peaceful community protest at Town Hall. Premier Chris Minns is responsible for the chaos and harm that followed,”

“People were wrongfully arrested and brutally assaulted because the Minns Labor Government chose to impose unconstitutional anti-protest laws on the people of NSW,”

“All charges against every person charged that night at Town Hall should now be dropped. The entire police operation was built around unlawful restrictions that had no legal force,”

“Premier Chris Minns has exposed the people of NSW to massive civil liability risks as a result of wrongful arrests, excessive force and assaults against members of the community. That liability sits squarely with his Government,”

“The courts have once again pulled Chris Minns back into line after he chose authoritarianism over democratic rights and peaceful protest,” Ms Higginson said.

Coles misleading price verdict shows divestiture powers needed

Coles being found to have deliberately misled customers with fake discounts shows again that Australia needs powers to break up the supermarket duopoly and an economy-wide ban on price-gouging, the Greens say.

The Federal Court today found Coles misled customers with fake discounts, in a case brought by the ACCC.

“Coles and Woolworths treat customers with contempt because they have an iron grip on this country’s grocery sector,” Greens Economic Justice spokesperson Senator Nick McKim said.

“As the Greens-led Senate inquiry found, Australia needs divestiture powers to forcibly break up the supermarket duopoly, as well as other oligopolies.”

“We also need economy-wide price gouging laws, particularly during a cost of living crisis.”

“The major parties are in thrall to the big corporations because of their political donations. The Greens are not. We need divestiture and price gouging laws now.”

“The Greens have legislation already drafted and ready to go – the only thing we need is for a bit of courage from the Labor and Liberal parties.”

Greens say Labor is on notice to reinstate $2.4 billion for public schools after damning inquiry report

The Victorian Greens have said Labor is on notice to reinstate the $2.4 billion for public schools that was quietly cut last year by Jacinta Allan’s Labor government. 

It comes after a damning report was released from the Greens-secured inquiry into public school funding. The inquiry heard from teachers, school councils and parent groups.

This inquiry revealed – that Victorian public students are being left behind by Jacinta Allan’s Labor government when compared to other jurisdictions. 

The committee heard from parents having to give donations to ensure that the basics were being met – including essentials like tissues and paper. The inquiry also revealed the ripple effects of on students with disability, migrant and refugee, First Nation students and students taking alternative learning and online learning, who are being left behind by this government’s decision to cut funding. 

Key recommendations from the report require the government to specify when it will reach 75% of Schooling Resource Standard Funding and when the funding is met to advocate to the Federal government to compensate public schools for the lack of funding since 2014. 

Victorian Greens Education spokesperson, Tim Read:

“The situation in the so-called ‘Education State’ is dire right now. Teachers are being forced to strike, parents are having to fundraise for tissues, and children don’t have access to the support they need.” 

Victorian Greens Member for Northern Metropolitan and Legal and Social Issues committee member, Anasina Gray-Barberio:

“We won’t let Jacinta Allan’s Labor government’s complete lack of care for our public school students, teachers and staff degrade the future of Victoria’s education system. It is high time that this government reinstates the $2.4 billion they cut last year. With this report Jacinta Allan’s Labor government is officially on notice.”

Record high prison numbers hiding crisis in remand services

The latest figures from the NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research (BOCSAR) released today have revealed twin records of both the number of adults in prison, and the number of people on remand awaiting court hearings.

The growth in prison numbers, a greater increase in the last four months than the previous four years, has been driven by people on remand for domestic and sexual violence (55% of increased remand numbers) but lack of services for people charged will create long term increases in offending.

Greens MP and spokesperson for Justice Sue Higginson said:

“The tough on crime populism of this Minns Labor Government is pushing hundreds of extra people into prisons that have little to no diversionary or rehabilitation services in place for them,”

“The increase in people on remand for domestic and family violence charges is only part of the story. Prisons are supposed to be places where people can be helped away from past mistakes, but at the moment these people are at best getting a brochure and just six sessions about healthier relationships,”

“A raw increase in the number of people in prison is not evidence that locking people up is a solution, it’s actually the opposite without a focus on effective services that will reduce the rate of offending once these people leave custody,”

“Statistical and expert evidence tells us over and over that when in remand people are exposed to awful, degrading, and traumatising prison experiences, increasing the likelihood of further offending upon release. We have to break the cycle or accept that the Government isn’t interested in rehabilitation,”

“NSW Prisons are so bad, so harmful to the people in them, that we are on the United Nations watchlist for our breaching of human rights. The chair of the UN’s Working Group on Arbitrary Detention has reinforced that ‘even short periods in remand can increase risk of reoffending, so these tough on crime reforms may make communities less safe, not more.’,”

“My call to the Premier and Ministers responsible is simple: the ‘lock them up’ media headlines are creating an assembly line for tomorrow’s continuing domestic violence crisis. We need coordinated and effective plans to help people on remand with access to a full suite of corrective services, or we will spend the rest of time locked into repeated cycles of violence,” Ms Higginson said.

Libs Budget: Broken Labor Promises, Higher Taxes, Lower Living Standards & Fewer Homes

After five Labor Budgets, Australians are paying more, working harder, and going backwards.

This is a Budget with higher taxes, more debt, more division and no plan to restore Australians’ standard of living or protect our way of life.

The Budget confirms Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmers are the owners of the highest taxing government in Australia’s history.

This Budget sees the economy burdened with $50 billion of higher taxes including $15 billion in higher personal income taxes.

The Budget also confirms that government spending will remain at its highest level in 40 years, outside of the pandemic.

In another blow to households, the Budget confirms home grown inflation compounded by international factors will hit 5 per cent, well above the RBA’s target band of 2 to 3 per cent, which means interest rates will continue to be higher for longer.

It confirms that living standards will go backwards again, confirming Australians with a typical mortgage are $32,000 a year worse off under Labor even after this Budget.

All families are also feeling the pain of wages not keeping up with Labor’s inflation, with the Budget revealing the buying power of Australians’ wages has declined by 3 per cent under this government.

Once again Labor have blown their own immigration targets, by the end of their first two terms they will have bought in 2 million migrants including overshooting its target by another 90,000 over the next two years. 

Australians are still staring at a decade of deficits, with debt forecast to hit $1.25 trillion.

The yearly interest bill on that debt will hit more than $42 billion or $80,000 per minute.

The Budget also confirms Labor’s housing taxes will reduce the supply of homes by 35,000 over the decade, whilst also increasing rents. 

We have consistently said if you tax something more you get less of it – and Labor’s own budget papers confirm that in relation to housing.

Shadow Treasurer Tim Wilson said the Budget only delivers debt, division and decline.

“This is a Budget of broken promises, higher taxes, lower living standards and fewer homes,” Mr Wilson said.

“It fails Australia’s future economy and has failed the basic test of restoring honesty, Australia’s security and living standards. It pulls the ladder of opportunity up from young Australians before they get their first foot on the rung.

“This Budget is taking from the future to feed Labor’s spending addiction today by taxing growth and opportunity, and adding more debt.

“Restoring honest government should be the easiest test to meet because it involves saving money, but the Treasurer has started Budget season in a trust deficit to match his Budget deficits by openly betraying Australians on new taxes.

“Labor governs for themselves, not Australians, and this Budget is designed to feed their outdated economy, not build the economy Australians will need in the future.

“Australians are living the consequences of Jim Chalmers’ active inflation agenda where he stokes inflation, taxes the inflation and then spends the inflation, eating away at Australians’ living standards. 

“The Albanese government is ignoring warnings from the Reserve Bank and the International Monetary Fund and doubling down on pouring debt petrol on the inflation fire.”

Shadow Finance Minister Claire Chandler said the Albanese government’s attempt at economic reform was really just a cash grab.

“This is a Budget with higher taxes, more debt, more division and no plan to restore Australians’ standard of living or protect our way of life,” Senator Chandler said.

“It is clear when you take a look under the hood, this budget that doesn’t do what it says on the box – it’s simply a tax on Australians trying to get ahead. 

“The Budget and the government’s higher taxes will do nothing to increase productivity and nothing to improve living standards. 

“This is a Budget that projects deficits because Labor cannot control their spending addiction, and that passes the bill onto the next generation of Australians through higher taxes into the future. 

“This government is the master of betrayal. They promise savings in one breath and then spend more in the next.

“Jim Chalmers claims $221 billion in savings, yet this Budget shows the government has also gone on a $324 billion spending spree.” 

“For the last four years, the Albanese government has failed to get its spending under control, and tonight’s budget is no different. The Budget confirms that government spending is still growing twice as fast as the rest of the economy, and it will be young Australians who have to pay the price of that through higher taxes.”

On Thursday night, Opposition Leader Angus Taylor will deliver the Budget in Reply and outline the Coalition’s plan for a Better Australia.

A plan to restore Australians’ standard of living.

A plan to protect our way of life.

A plan to back hard work, reward aspiration, grow the economy and get Australia on the right track.

Australians cannot afford more broken promises, more taxes, more debt and more division.

Novocastrian knowledge needed to localise State housing reforms

City of Newcastle will use community feedback to help plan for more housing near train stations at Hamilton, Adamstown, Kotara and the Newcastle Interchange.

The four areas have been selected by the NSW Government to be part of the Transport Oriented Development (TOD) Program, which is designed to enable greater residential density near key transport hubs.

Executive Director Planning and Environment Michelle Bisson said City of Newcastle wants to hear what residents love about their suburb and what changes could help accommodate the growth in housing.

“We support the intent of the NSW Government reforms to provide more housing and increased density close to transport,” Ms Bisson said.

“However, a one-size-fits-all approach does not consider factors such as heritage or environmental constraints, so we’re designing a place-based approach to each precinct.

“We want the community to tell us what they love about their local area and what they believe should be prioritised in the future to accommodate more housing.

“That could include improved open public spaces, walking and cycling connections, transport and traffic upgrades, more lighting or the diversity of housing choices.”

Under the National Housing Accord, the NSW Government has committed to delivering 377,000 new homes across the state between 2024 and 2029, with a target of 11,100 new homes for the Newcastle Local Government Area during that period.

To help facilitate these targets, the NSW Government has introduced a range of planning reforms including the TOD program, which permit mid and high-rise development, including apartments and shop-top housing, by changing development standards such as building heights and floor space ratios.

Councils can create their own planning controls for TOD precincts, taking into consideration the distinct characteristics and needs of each location, as long as the planning controls still allow for the Government’s dwelling targets.

Using input from residents, City of Newcastle will produce an urban design framework for each of the four transport hubs, establishing the overall vision, objectives and actions that will provide guidance to property developers.

“The urban design frameworks will outline for property developers and owners what the area should look and feel like, and how things such as land use, streets, public spaces and buildings should work together, taking into consideration hazards such as flooding, bushfire, contamination and high-pressure gas pipelines,” Ms Bisson said.

“The framework will respect the unique local character of each precinct, while still delivering the outcomes that meet the needs of current and future people who live, work and enjoy these areas.”

The development of the urban design frameworks is being delivered with support from a NSW Government grant through the Regional Housing Strategic Planning Fund.

Community members can find out more or make a submission via the Have Your Say page until 5pm on Friday 12 June 2026.

More DV offenders than ever being brought before the courts

New data from the Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research (BOCSAR) shows NSW Police are bringing more domestic violence offenders than ever before the courts, as the Minns Labor Government continues its crackdown on domestic and family violence.

There has been a 17 per cent increase in the number of adults remanded for domestic violence offences in the four months to March.

More than 40 per cent of the additional people remanded since December are charged with a domestic violence offence.

Over the past year, the proportion of domestic violence incidents resulting in legal action within 30 days rose from 66 to 74 per cent.

People in custody charged with domestic violence offences now represent more than a quarter of the overall prison population.

Domestic and family violence is occurring at an unacceptable rate across NSW.

The Minns Labor Government will continue to target these crimes at every stage, through prevention, early intervention, stronger laws, tougher enforcement and better support for victim-survivors.

NSW Police are sending a clear message to offenders: there is nowhere to hide from the consequences of domestic violence offending.

These strong policing results follow a series of reforms to keep the community safe including:

  • Introducing legislation to strengthen stalking laws
  • Bringing in Serious Domestic Abuse Prevention Orders (SDAPOs) to provide the strictest possible monitoring of high-risk offenders
  • Making it harder for people accused of serious domestic violence offences to get bail and ensuring those who are bailed are electronically monitored by Corrective Services
  • Strengthening penalties for serious, repeat breaches of Apprehended Domestic Violence Orders (ADVOs)

Since coming to Government, we’ve increased funding for domestic and family violence programs in every budget to support victim-survivors.

This includes $272 million in the most recent budget to support frontline services, $6.6 billion for social and affordable housing with half of new builds prioritised for victim-survivors, $130 million to increase crisis accommodation and expanding access to important programs such as Staying Home Leaving Violence Program.

The Minns Labor Government continues to address violence against women and children, including implementing NSW’s first dedicated Primary Prevention Strategy and investing in programs focused on changing harmful attitudes and behaviours that can lead to violence against women.

Minister for Police and Counter-terrorism Yasmin Catley said:

“Our police are the frontline. They are often the first through the door, the first to see the harm, and the first to act to protect victim-survivors.

“These figures are sobering, but they also show our tough laws are working. Police are moving earlier, acting harder and bringing more domestic violence offenders before the courts.

“Our message to perpetrators is clear: there is nowhere to hide. If you use violence, intimidation or coercion, police will come for you.”

Attorney General Michael Daley said:

“Domestic violence is a horrendous crime. It’s cowardly and destructive and causes intergenerational trauma.

“The Government has given law enforcement and the courts more tools to hold domestic violence offenders to account.

“NSW Police have been relentless in pursuing domestic violence offenders and that‘s exactly what this data shows.”

Minister for the Prevention of Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Jodie Harrison said:

“The government has been working hard to keep victim-survivors safe and hold perpetrators to account.

“These figures show our tough bail laws are keeping domestic violence perpetrators off the streets, and making sure they are brought before the courts.

“Behind every statistic is a person who has experienced real and often devastating trauma, as well as a family and community impacted by that violence. That is why the Minns Labor Government is taking action to ensure victim-survivors have access to ongoing wraparound support, while also working to break cycles of violence before they begin.”

Minns Labor Government expands advanced and extension HSC subject access for every NSW public high school

For the first time, every NSW public high school will be able to offer the most academically demanding HSC courses with a new HSC Subject Guarantee, as the Minns Labor Government continues to grow the Inspire High Potential and Gifted Education program.

From 2027, all students across NSW, including Sydney, Newcastle and Wollongong, will be able to study HSC courses via the state’s virtual public school, Aurora College.

Until now, access to HSC courses via Aurora College has been limited to students in remote and rural areas of NSW. The Minns Labor Government is expanding access to ensure students can study more academic courses, regardless of where they live or which public school they attend.

While Year 11 and 12 students can choose from more than 120 HSC courses, not every school can offer every subject via face-to-face teaching. Aurora College’s high-quality virtual learning addresses this challenge by expanding access to subject-specific specialist teachers across NSW, allowing more students to access advanced and extension subjects.

As part of the Minns Labor Government’s HSC Subject Guarantee, the following 11 HSC courses will be offered virtually to all public school students for the first time: English Advanced, English Extension 1, English Extension 2, Mathematics Advanced, Mathematics Extension 1, Mathematics Extension 2, Chemistry, Physics, Science Extension, Economics and History Extension.

This expansion means more students than ever before can study the HSC courses aligned to their ability and aspirations, setting them up for future success.

Expanding advanced HSC subject access builds on the Minns Labor Government’s Inspire program, which is expanding opportunities for high potential and gifted students across NSW public schools.

All public schools are now embedding high potential and gifted education into their schools and their teaching, with each school’s Inspire offerings now published on their school website.

As part of this commitment, the Minns Labor Government is investing $100 million to build state-of-the-art learning facilities at 33 high potential and gifted education partner schools across NSW and rolling out new extension class opportunities.

This expansion is underpinned by the Minns Labor Government’s work to rebuild the teaching workforce, with teacher vacancies now at a 12‑year low following Labor’s historic wage rise and additional policies to reduce teacher workload.

NSW Deputy Premier and Minister for Education and Early Learning Prue Car said:

“Every HSC student in a NSW public school should be able to choose the courses they want to study, setting themselves up for success, regardless of their postcode or which public school they attend.

“That’s why the Minns Labor Government is expanding access to advanced and extension HSC subjects, ensuring all students can reach their full potential at school.

“Our government will ensure every student can pursue their passion and strengths as we continue our work to build a stronger public education system.”