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Morning Mail: Sabsabi’s Biennale ‘torture’, election candidates on Rednote, Trump tariff countdown​on April 1, 2025 at 8:24 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 newsletterGood morning. Khaled Sabsabi, the artist dumped as Australia’s representative at the Venice Biennale, has savaged the decision to drop him, accusing Creative Australia of subjecting him to “torture” and of dismantling his career. We have an exclusive interview, plus another scoop on how election candidates are using influencers to bypass a “shadow ban” on campaigning on a Chinese social media app. Elsewhere, the world awaits Donald Trump’s tariff reveal and Moscow knocks back his Ukraine peace plan.Exclusive | Chinese-language influencers who mostly post lifestyle content are interviewing Australian election candidates on the social media app Rednote, allowing politicians to bypass an apparent “shadow ban” on campaigning by the app and reach a disengaged but vital audience.Exclusive | Lebanese Australian artist Khaled Sabsabi has blamed Creative Australia for the “dismantling” of his career and said the board’s decision to revoke his appointment as Australia’s Venice Biennale representative has given the green light for others to smear his reputation.DV survivor ‘investigation’ | The Queensland police commissioner sought to access the confidential domestic and family violence records of a female officer – allegedly the victim of “significant” acts of violence by her husband – in order to investigate her.‘More competitive’ | House prices are rising again after February’s rate cut – but that’s not good news for all homebuyers as some describe being priced out by the latest increases. And we examine Peter Dutton’s proposals to help first-time buyers and ask whether they’ll work.Bail tale | The case of a young man accused of a violent crime and detained under Victoria’s new bail laws shows there is nothing simple about youth justice. 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 newsletterGood morning. Khaled Sabsabi, the artist dumped as Australia’s representative at the Venice Biennale, has savaged the decision to drop him, accusing Creative Australia of subjecting him to “torture” and of dismantling his career. We have an exclusive interview, plus another scoop on how election candidates are using influencers to bypass a “shadow ban” on campaigning on a Chinese social media app. Elsewhere, the world awaits Donald Trump’s tariff reveal and Moscow knocks back his Ukraine peace plan.Exclusive | Chinese-language influencers who mostly post lifestyle content are interviewing Australian election candidates on the social media app Rednote, allowing politicians to bypass an apparent “shadow ban” on campaigning by the app and reach a disengaged but vital audience.Exclusive | Lebanese Australian artist Khaled Sabsabi has blamed Creative Australia for the “dismantling” of his career and said the board’s decision to revoke his appointment as Australia’s Venice Biennale representative has given the green light for others to smear his reputation.DV survivor ‘investigation’ | The Queensland police commissioner sought to access the confidential domestic and family violence records of a female officer – allegedly the victim of “significant” acts of violence by her husband – in order to investigate her.‘More competitive’ | House prices are rising again after February’s rate cut – but that’s not good news for all homebuyers as some describe being priced out by the latest increases. And we examine Peter Dutton’s proposals to help first-time buyers and ask whether they’ll work.Bail tale | The case of a young man accused of a violent crime and detained under Victoria’s new bail laws shows there is nothing simple about youth justice. Continue reading…   

Good morning. Khaled Sabsabi, the artist dumped as Australia’s representative at the Venice Biennale, has savaged the decision to drop him, accusing Creative Australia of subjecting him to “torture” and of dismantling his career. We have an exclusive interview, plus another scoop on how election candidates are using influencers to bypass a “shadow ban” on campaigning on a Chinese social media app. Elsewhere, the world awaits Donald Trump’s tariff reveal and Moscow knocks back his Ukraine peace plan.

Australia

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Full Story podcast: Khaled Sabsabi

Khaled Sabsabi speaks on the damage of being dumped from the Venice Biennale

Nearly two months after being dropped as Australia’s representative at the prestigious art exhibition, the Lebanese-born artist speaks to Nour Haydar about his work, how he found out about the decision, and how damaging it has been for his career.

In-depth

A central question in the federal election is the economy – and Peter Dutton is asking voters whether they feel better off now compared with three years ago. Our economics editor, Patrick Commins, says the numbers show we have less disposable income (see illustration above), but the bigger picture is that we’ve been flatlining for a decade – Covid era excepted – and neither party is talking about how that might change in the future. Zooming in more on individual battles, Nino Bucci hears from the sitting MPs in three regional electorates – Wannon, Calare and Cowper – and the candidates hoping to unseat them as the independent movement spreads.

Not the news

With comparisons between the present day and 1930s Europe becoming commonplace, the staging of Bernie Dieter’s Weimar-soaked Club Kabarettin Melbourne seems timely. The show’s star, Australian German performer Jen Byrne, talks about its “dirty, gritty, raw, social commentary energy” and her family connection to cabaret traditions.

Sport

Media roundup

The Sydney Morning Herald reports how much funding each NSW school receives and gives the details. The Australian says the Coalition will abolish fines for car companies that exceed emissions. The Courier Mail worries that Tropical Cyclone Dianne is going to deluge south-east Queensland and ruin the upcoming Easter holidays. Tom de Koning has a path to becoming the AFL’s first $2m man, the Herald Sun 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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