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Morning Mail: where Dutton’s cost-cutting axe could fall, pushback at Trump’s grants pause, Mona Lisa to move​on January 28, 2025 at 7:52 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. Peter Dutton has made cost-cutting a central part of his re-election pitch, with a focus on reversing Labor’s expansion of the public service. But what do the new hires do – and are they actually in Canberra?Plus: today’s inflation numbers could be a make-or-break moment for a February interest rates cut (and pretty significant for the election). We also have more on what dentistry tells us about the state of the nation, the latest on the AI stock market wobble, and how a very famous lady might get her own room in Paris.Dentist drought | In the latest part of our Broken Smiles series about dental care, Natasha May reports on how people living in rural Australia such as Dave Morthorpe, pictured, are being worst hit by higher charges and fewer dentists to do the work. We also look at how poor oral health is an indicator of inequality and ask why we don’t do much to fix the problem.Rate crunch | Inflation figures due out today could “make or break” the case for a pre-election rate cut next month, according to economists, in one of the most politically consequential set of numbers of recent times.Exclusive | People who believe global heating is a conspiracy get most of their information about news and current events from commercial and social media, according to a study that points to a lower sense of “civic values” among the same cohort.Jobs question | Peter Dutton wants to slash thousands of newly created public service jobs, the Labor government claims, but where would the axe fall?Nuclear option | Australia’s new chief scientist has said he is open to the prospect of nuclear power playing a role in the country’s energy mix but remained focused on forms of energy that were “available to help us right now”. 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. Peter Dutton has made cost-cutting a central part of his re-election pitch, with a focus on reversing Labor’s expansion of the public service. But what do the new hires do – and are they actually in Canberra?Plus: today’s inflation numbers could be a make-or-break moment for a February interest rates cut (and pretty significant for the election). We also have more on what dentistry tells us about the state of the nation, the latest on the AI stock market wobble, and how a very famous lady might get her own room in Paris.Dentist drought | In the latest part of our Broken Smiles series about dental care, Natasha May reports on how people living in rural Australia such as Dave Morthorpe, pictured, are being worst hit by higher charges and fewer dentists to do the work. We also look at how poor oral health is an indicator of inequality and ask why we don’t do much to fix the problem.Rate crunch | Inflation figures due out today could “make or break” the case for a pre-election rate cut next month, according to economists, in one of the most politically consequential set of numbers of recent times.Exclusive | People who believe global heating is a conspiracy get most of their information about news and current events from commercial and social media, according to a study that points to a lower sense of “civic values” among the same cohort.Jobs question | Peter Dutton wants to slash thousands of newly created public service jobs, the Labor government claims, but where would the axe fall?Nuclear option | Australia’s new chief scientist has said he is open to the prospect of nuclear power playing a role in the country’s energy mix but remained focused on forms of energy that were “available to help us right now”. Continue reading…   

Morning everyone. Peter Dutton has made cost-cutting a central part of his re-election pitch, with a focus on reversing Labor’s expansion of the public service. But what do the new hires do – and are they actually in Canberra?

Plus: today’s inflation numbers could be a make-or-break moment for a February interest rates cut (and pretty significant for the election). We also have more on what dentistry tells us about the state of the nation, the latest on the AI stock market wobble, and how a very famous lady might get her own room in Paris.

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The tech titans: who’s really in charge of Donald Trump’s America?

Technology editor Blake Montgomery tells Reged Ahmad why US tech billionaires – dubbed the “broligarchs” – have become just as important to President Donald Trump as he is to them.

In-depth

One of the people attending the commemoration at Auschwitz was Australia’s attorney general, Mark Dreyfus (pictured with Australia’s special envoy to combat antisemitism, Jillian Segal). Three of his grandparents died at the hands of the Nazis and today he writes a moving piece about the “shocking rise in antisemitism in Australia” and how attempts to politicise the issue must be rejected. He simply says: “Today I say never again.”

Not the news

A proud Victorian, Caitlin Cassidy is happy to admit that she loves living in Sydney. But there’s one thing she doesn’t like about life in the harbour city – Sydneysiders’ apparent hatred for people who ride bikes, leading to “encounters that have filled me with a deep-seated rage, that have forced me to repeat profanities I would never have imagined possible”.

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The big news in Melbourne is the shooting dead of gangland figure Sam Abdulrahim whom the Herald Sun says had survived several attempts on his life. The Financial Review says Australians have 28bn reasons to worry about the future of stocks in Nvidia after yesterday’s market moves. The parents of BBL final hero Mitch Owen tell the Hobart Mercury the media attention is “like being in a movie”. A phone found underwater after being missing for a year has turned on and charged up, showing that “miracles can happen”, Bega News reports.

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

 

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