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Morning Mail: Sam Kerr in London court, mining lobby spruiks nuclear memes, Dutton’s $10,000-a-head dinner​on January 14, 2025 at 7:46 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. As pre-election campaigning heats up, some Liberal supporters are paying $10,000 a head to attend a fundraising dinner with Peter Dutton next week in the key Sydney marginal of Bennelong.Elsewhere, Sam Kerr has appeared in court in London overnight ahead of a trial next month for alleged racially aggravated harassment of a police officer; Los Angeles is braced for “extreme” fire danger today as winds pick up again; and it’s no problem for the Australian Open’s main character, Alex de Minaur.$10,000 dinner | The Coalition leader Peter Dutton will host a $10,000-per-head dinner for wealthy supporters in the marginal Sydney seat of Bennelong as he seeks to build support for Liberal candidate Scott Yung.Kerr in court | The Matildas superstar Sam Kerr has appeared in court in south-west London charged with alleged racially aggravated harassment of a police officer. Her trial is set to start on 3 February.Housing pain | Australians on median incomes are spending 33% of their earnings on housing costs, a report has found, despite last year seeing the smallest annual rental increase since 2021.‘Urgent inquiries’ | The Australian government is “making urgent inquiries” after reports of the death of an Australian citizen, 32-year-old teacher Oscar Jenkins, captured by Russian forces while fighting for Ukraine.Wicked words | Australia’s peak mining lobby group is promoting nuclear energy to young women with a social media campaign generating millions of views on TikTok through memes about Wicked, The Grinch and seasoning steak with sawdust. Meanwhile, a cautionary tale from the UK, where the cost of building the Sizewell C nuclear power plant in Suffolk has doubled to £40bn (around A$80bn). 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. As pre-election campaigning heats up, some Liberal supporters are paying $10,000 a head to attend a fundraising dinner with Peter Dutton next week in the key Sydney marginal of Bennelong.Elsewhere, Sam Kerr has appeared in court in London overnight ahead of a trial next month for alleged racially aggravated harassment of a police officer; Los Angeles is braced for “extreme” fire danger today as winds pick up again; and it’s no problem for the Australian Open’s main character, Alex de Minaur.$10,000 dinner | The Coalition leader Peter Dutton will host a $10,000-per-head dinner for wealthy supporters in the marginal Sydney seat of Bennelong as he seeks to build support for Liberal candidate Scott Yung.Kerr in court | The Matildas superstar Sam Kerr has appeared in court in south-west London charged with alleged racially aggravated harassment of a police officer. Her trial is set to start on 3 February.Housing pain | Australians on median incomes are spending 33% of their earnings on housing costs, a report has found, despite last year seeing the smallest annual rental increase since 2021.‘Urgent inquiries’ | The Australian government is “making urgent inquiries” after reports of the death of an Australian citizen, 32-year-old teacher Oscar Jenkins, captured by Russian forces while fighting for Ukraine.Wicked words | Australia’s peak mining lobby group is promoting nuclear energy to young women with a social media campaign generating millions of views on TikTok through memes about Wicked, The Grinch and seasoning steak with sawdust. Meanwhile, a cautionary tale from the UK, where the cost of building the Sizewell C nuclear power plant in Suffolk has doubled to £40bn (around A$80bn). Continue reading…   

Morning everyone. As pre-election campaigning heats up, some Liberal supporters are paying $10,000 a head to attend a fundraising dinner with Peter Dutton next week in the key Sydney marginal of Bennelong.

Elsewhere, Sam Kerr has appeared in court in London overnight ahead of a trial next month for alleged racially aggravated harassment of a police officer; Los Angeles is braced for “extreme” fire danger today as winds pick up again; and it’s no problem for the Australian Open’s main character, Alex de Minaur.

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Episode tile for Full Story featuring Lebanese tennis player Hady Habib

A history-making moment at the Australian Open

After winning through to the second round of the Australian Open today, Hady Habib found time to talk to Nour Haydar about how his success has been a source of celebration for Lebanese Australians amid months of war and devastation.

In-depth

The rescue of Hadi Nazari from dense bushland in the national park captured the nation’s imagination. Kate Lyons has been talking to one of the people who led the rescue, how they ran the operation and how it turned out to be one of the longest-ever to result in a happy ending.

Not the news

It’s the time of year when many people take a look at how much they’re drinking and decide that it’s too much. Our resident GP columnist, Ranjana Srivastava, writes today that although she has not met a patient who doesn’t know that smoking causes cancer not so many know that boozing, too, much carries “a higher absolute risk of a cancer diagnosis”.

Sport

Media roundup

There has been a “massive” number of failures in the Australian citizenship test, according to the Adelaide Advertiser. The owner of a house on the Mornington Peninsula destroyed by a landslide has told the Age he feels “bloody lucky” given his family’s near miss. Four subjects have been axed, along with 91 jobs, under a shakeup at the University of Wollongong according to the Illawarra Mercury.

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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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