Good morning, this is Eleanor Ainge Roy bringing you the main stories and must-reads on Monday 12 March. Top stories If Malcolm Turnbull thought the Adani Carmichael coalmine was a political minefield exclusively for Bill Shorten, a new poll conducted in his own electorate may cause a rethink. The Australia Institute commissioned the poll of the Liberal-held electorates of Wentworth, which is Turnbull's, and Brisbane. It found 75% of voters in Wentworth (and 70% of Liberal supporters) would like to see the environmental approvals for the coalmine reviewed. In the seat of Brisbane, 59% supported a review, including 48.6% of LNP voters. "Adani isn't just a potent issue in Batman," said Ebony Bennett, the thinktank's deputy director. "It's an issue on the government and the prime minister's plate right now." A majority voters in Turnbull's electorate, 64.7%, also agreed with the statement: "Australia must halt the expansion of coalmining and fast-track building wind and solar power and storage in order to effectively reduce the worsening impacts of climate change" – including 54.2% of Liberal voters. A clear majority Liberal voters also favoured the adoption of a new rule to stop government agencies from putting taxpayer funds into coalmining projects. Residents of a small Queensland town have taken to social media to rally in support of a family of asylum seekers forcibly removed from their home a day after their visa expired. The Tamil family living in Biloela in central Queensland were woken at dawn on 5 March, given 10 minutes to pack and taken 1,500km to an immigration detention centre, where they have been told they will be deported. The family, Nadesalingam and Priya and their Australia-born daughters aged nine months and two years, were asked to sign "voluntary removal" documents once they arrived in Melbourne, but say they signed under duress. Biloela, where Nadesalingam worked at the local meatworks, has set up a change.org petition to have the family released, and residents expressed their shock at the handling of the case. Donald Trump is facing criticism from Republican allies after apparently agreeing to meet Kim Jong-un without demanding that North Korea start scrapping its nuclear program. Senators from Trump's party expressed scepticism and urged him to set tougher preconditions, amid growing concerns over the administration's chaotic approach to nuclear diplomacy. The CIA director and the White House spokeswoman have also contradicted each other regarding the planned meeting. The president himself has offered little clarity, saying in a rambling speech at the weekend of North Korean denuclearisation: "They are thinking about that – who knows what's going to happen?" There's been a lot said about the "genuine three-way contest" in this weekend's South Australian election but rather less about about the fourth option on the ballot paper: the Greens. The party is fighting an uphill battle for coverage in a campaign dominated by Nick Xenophon. Its parliamentary leader, Mark Parnell, tells Max Opray about the difficulty of conveying his message, even after a leaders' debate on the environment that the Adelaide Advertiser said he had won. "What struck me was on this double-page election spread, they'd cropped me out of all the photos, and had seven pictures of Nick," he said. "I don't want to be sour grapes, but that sums up how difficult it is." Hundreds of people who visited the pub and the restaurant in Salisbury where the Russian spy Sergei Skripal may have been poisoned have been told to wash their clothes and possessions. A full week after the attempted murder public health authorities said there may have been "limited contamination" in both venues, with a risk from low repetitive exposure, prompting the "highly precautionary" warning. Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, remain in a critical but stable condition. Police have identified more than 240 witnesses and 200 pieces of evidence. Sport Five sides remain realistically in contention for the AFLW grand final after shock wins to Collingwood and GWS. The veteran Courtney Gum was influential in her side's victory over the ladder-leading Bulldogs, her back story fittingly embodying the spirit of playing in a semi-professional league in a round dedicated to International Women's Day. An injury to another veteran in Mel Hickey, meanwhile, ended the round on a harrowing note. Shaun "Magic" Johnson may have run the Rabbitohs ragged but it was all thanks to Warriors recruit Blake Green doing the "boring" things well. He may yet prove to be the most influential recruit of the NRL off-season. Thinking time |
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