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Ruston asked AI why Liberals lost – and ‘no clear theme’ emerged

After the disastrous 2025 election result for the Coalition, Ruston says she asked an “off the shelf” large-language model, commonly referred to as AI, what people thought about the party and the election results, and that the result returned “no clear theme”.

Actually more than anything, it showed me that there were so many different issues that Australians were considering when they went to the ballot box to vote that I think it shows us we absolutely have to look at everything. There was no clear theme apart from quite clearly the Australian public went to the ballot box and didn’t vote for us.

Liberal senator Anne Ruston: ‘We need to go back to the drawing board.’ Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

The senator continued:

Basically, it said that the product offer that we took to the Australian public, Australians did not support quite clearly and we need to go back to the drawing board and have a look at all of the issues that factored into it. Many issues have been ventilated over the last two weeks by colleagues, by commentators and every single one of them deserved to be considered.

Ruston was also quick to add that the party won’t be relying entirely on AI to conduct its post-election review.

There are many ways that we need to address this. We need to speak to our party members, we need to speak to the frontbench and the backbench. We need to make sure the backbench is included in the process of going forward. We need to speak to the Australian public.

But obviously, technology gives us an opportunity to be able to collate the broader commentary across Australia that something we probably haven’t had access to before and we should use that as well. Every tool that’s available should be used.

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Glossy black cockatoos could be pushed towards extinction in Victoria if burns go ahead, experts warn

Glossy black cockatoos could be pushed towards extinction in Victoria if planned burns of 13,000 hectares of forest go ahead, ecologists and conservationists warn.

The Victorian government is being urged to abandon the burn, which is intended to reduce bushfire risk.

Glossy black cockatoos are listed as vulnerable in Victoria, where they are found only in East Gippsland.

Nearly two-thirds (64%) of their Victorian habitat was burned in the 2019-20 black summer bushfires, leaving the species almost entirely dependent on 48,000 hectares of unburnt coastal forest between Lake Tyers and Orbost, about 350km east of Melbourne.

A peer-reviewed study published in the journal Australian Field Ornithology estimated that the Victorian population had declined by three-quarters since the fires.

Glossy black cockatoos feed almost exclusively on the cones of black sheoak trees.

For more on this story, read the full report by Guardian Australia’s Petra Stock:

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