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Morning Mail: Canada’s tit-for-tat tariff tactic, Dutton’s footy flights, the politics of writers’ festivals​on March 12, 2025 at 7:59 pm

Want to get this in your inbox every weekday? Sign up for the Morning Mail here, and finish your day with our Afternoon Update newsletterMorning everyone. The feisty trade war between Canada and the United States deepened overnight when the Canadian government said it would impose retaliatory 25% tariffs on American imports. They’re also falling out over water rights and we have a podcast on this dispute.At home, we have interesting details about Peter Dutton’s expenses, some shocking new numbers on Indigenous incarceration, and we look at the difficulty of building a program for a writers’ festival in our age of polarisation.Gap widens | The rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people imprisoned increased by 12% in a year and was up 20% since 2019 – despite state and federal governments agreeing to reduce rates of incarnation by 15% by 2031 in June 2020, the latest Closing the Gap figures show.Dutton flights | Peter Dutton billed taxpayers for flights to Sydney on the days of three NRL grand finals, a rugby tournament and a Matildas World Cup game, a Guardian analysis of records show. Last night, the Coalition was again forced to clarify its policy on breaking up the big insurance companies, with Dutton now saying “certainly something has failed” in the market.Baby death | A woman whose baby died after it was born in distress at Sydney’s Northern Beaches hospital had a vaginal birth 50 minutes after doctors called an emergency, according to staff present on the night.Super difficult | Donald Trump’s tariffs are disrupting financial markets all over the world and they could also be affecting your super. Our consumer affairs reporter looks at what’s happening, what the impact might be and what you can do.‘Emergency situation’ | One of the most mentally unwell patients in Victoria has been detained for almost a decade and will deteriorate further if she continues to be held in solitary confinement, a court has heard. Continue reading…Want to get this in your inbox every weekday? Sign up for the Morning Mail here, and finish your day with our Afternoon Update newsletterMorning everyone. The feisty trade war between Canada and the United States deepened overnight when the Canadian government said it would impose retaliatory 25% tariffs on American imports. They’re also falling out over water rights and we have a podcast on this dispute.At home, we have interesting details about Peter Dutton’s expenses, some shocking new numbers on Indigenous incarceration, and we look at the difficulty of building a program for a writers’ festival in our age of polarisation.Gap widens | The rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people imprisoned increased by 12% in a year and was up 20% since 2019 – despite state and federal governments agreeing to reduce rates of incarnation by 15% by 2031 in June 2020, the latest Closing the Gap figures show.Dutton flights | Peter Dutton billed taxpayers for flights to Sydney on the days of three NRL grand finals, a rugby tournament and a Matildas World Cup game, a Guardian analysis of records show. Last night, the Coalition was again forced to clarify its policy on breaking up the big insurance companies, with Dutton now saying “certainly something has failed” in the market.Baby death | A woman whose baby died after it was born in distress at Sydney’s Northern Beaches hospital had a vaginal birth 50 minutes after doctors called an emergency, according to staff present on the night.Super difficult | Donald Trump’s tariffs are disrupting financial markets all over the world and they could also be affecting your super. Our consumer affairs reporter looks at what’s happening, what the impact might be and what you can do.‘Emergency situation’ | One of the most mentally unwell patients in Victoria has been detained for almost a decade and will deteriorate further if she continues to be held in solitary confinement, a court has heard. Continue reading…   

Morning everyone. The feisty trade war between Canada and the United States deepened overnight when the Canadian government said it would impose retaliatory 25% tariffs on American imports. They’re also falling out over water rights and we have a podcast on this dispute.

At home, we have interesting details about Peter Dutton’s expenses, some shocking new numbers on Indigenous incarceration, and we look at the difficulty of building a program for a writers’ festival in our age of polarisation.

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Can Canada’s ‘rock star’ banker PM take on Trump and win?

Mark Carney, the former governor of the Bank of England, has a new role – saving his country from becoming America’s 51st state. Leyland Cecco reports.

In-depth

Triptych featuring (L-R): Anna Funder, Plestia Alaqad and Jeanette Winterson

On the eve of the launch of the lineup for this year’s Sydney writers’ festival – which includes Anna Funder, Plestia Alaqad and Jeanette Winterson – the organisers tell Kelly Burke about the difficulties of curating such events in the “incredibly polarised environment” of the Israel-Gaza conflict. Nevertheless, it will feature a diverse program with the conflict discussed directly during several sessions.

Not the news

Out latest local’s guide takes us to Orange in the central tablelands of New South Wales. Tom Ward, who was brought up in the region and now runs the local Swinging Bridge winery, says the city has excellent shops, bike trails, a popular food week event (pictured) and pubs that are “busier than Sydney’s”.

Sport

Media roundup

Liberal MPs are “losing faith” in Peter Dutton’s “small target” strategy and are calling for bolder economic policies, the Australian claims. The Climate 200 group says its polling shows a safe Labor seat in the ACT is “in play” at the federal election, the Canberra Times reports. Education officials face embarrassing questions after a new school sign contained a glaring spelling mistake, the Courier Mail reports. After two years of renovations and millions of dollars spent, Luna Park’s famous Wild Mouse is back, the Telegraph reports.

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Brain teaser

And finally, here are the Guardian’s crosswords to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow.

 

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