Want to get this in your inbox every weekday? Sign up for the Afternoon Update here, and start your day with our Morning Mail newsletter.Anthony Albanese has used his first major speech of the year to turn some of Peter Dutton’s own rhetoric against him. The prime minister responded to the opposition leader’s claims he is a weak leader by telling journalists weakness is “not having the guts to come to the National Press Club” – whose offer to speak Dutton is yet to take up during his leadership stint.Albanese also revealed federal Labor had secured new school funding agreements with South Australia and Victoria, a move greeted as a “very big win” for public education by the Victorian government.Novak Djokovic retires hurt from Australian Open semi-final after losing first set to Alexander Zverev as local heroes win mixed doublesRudd and Keating statues decapitated in mass vandalism attack on 20 prime ministers’ bustsTrump orders release of thousands of classified files on JFK assassinationTeenager fighting for life, another injured, after shooting in MelbourneInquest exposes poor leadership, insufficient testing at aged care home that saw 19 Covid deaths in 2020Russians say major oil refinery burning after Ukrainian drone strikes Continue reading…Want to get this in your inbox every weekday? Sign up for the Afternoon Update here, and start your day with our Morning Mail newsletter.Anthony Albanese has used his first major speech of the year to turn some of Peter Dutton’s own rhetoric against him. The prime minister responded to the opposition leader’s claims he is a weak leader by telling journalists weakness is “not having the guts to come to the National Press Club” – whose offer to speak Dutton is yet to take up during his leadership stint.Albanese also revealed federal Labor had secured new school funding agreements with South Australia and Victoria, a move greeted as a “very big win” for public education by the Victorian government.Novak Djokovic retires hurt from Australian Open semi-final after losing first set to Alexander Zverev as local heroes win mixed doublesRudd and Keating statues decapitated in mass vandalism attack on 20 prime ministers’ bustsTrump orders release of thousands of classified files on JFK assassinationTeenager fighting for life, another injured, after shooting in MelbourneInquest exposes poor leadership, insufficient testing at aged care home that saw 19 Covid deaths in 2020Russians say major oil refinery burning after Ukrainian drone strikes Continue reading…
Anthony Albanese has used his first major speech of the year to turn some of Peter Dutton’s own rhetoric against him. The prime minister responded to the opposition leader’s claims he is a weak leader by telling journalists weakness is “not having the guts to come to the National Press Club” – whose offer to speak Dutton is yet to take up during his leadership stint.
Albanese also revealed federal Labor had secured new school funding agreements with South Australia and Victoria, a move greeted as a “very big win” for public education by the Victorian government.
Dutton, meanwhile, has hosed down suggestions the Coalition’s policy on tax breaks for small business would extend to playing a round of golf.
Top news

-
Novak Djokovic retires hurt from Australian Open semi-final after losing first set to Alexander Zverev as local heroes win mixed doubles
-
Rudd and Keating statues decapitated in mass vandalism attack on 20 prime ministers’ busts
-
Trump orders release of thousands of classified files on JFK assassination
-
Teenager fighting for life, another injured, after shooting in Melbourne
-
Russians say major oil refinery burning after Ukrainian drone strikes
In pictures

In our daily gallery of photo highlights from around the world, students protest after reports of a mass culling of stray dogs in Morocco as part of a cleanup of streets in advance of the Fifa World Cup.
What they said …

“You’re playing for your country. That needs to be elite. And if you’re not elite, you’re not going to be able to play for the Socceroos.”
Four matches into his tenure as coach of Australia’s men’s football team, Tony Popovic has laid down a marker for his players.
In numbers

People have queued for hours to catch a glimpse – and whiff – of Australia’s most famous (for now) plant before it dies. “It has been a privilege to watch,” writes Bec Shaw of Putricia’s allure, “and a much-needed break from the obnoxious loudness of our current times.”
Before bed read

No one in New Zealand is entirely sure where, or how, the “manu” emerged. But the diving style developed by Māori and Pasifika communities has become a national pastime – and the bigger the splash and more inventive the jump, the louder the cheers.
Daily word game

Today’s starter word is: TWEE.You have five goes to get the longest word including the starter word. Play Wordiply.
Sign up
If you would like to receive this Afternoon Update to your email inbox every weekday, sign up here, or start your day with a curated breakdown of the key stories you need to know with our Morning Mail newsletter.
And check out the full list of our local and international newsletters, including The Stakes, your guide to the twists and turns of the US presidential election.
Discover more from World Byte News
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.


