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Australia election live 2025: Greens and teals condemn Labor putting gambling ad reform on hold, promise action in next parliament | Australian election 2025

Report PM overrode online gambling reforms ‘disturbing’, Greens say

Members of the crossbench have jumped on reports that the prime minister overrode his cabinet to shelve reform on online gambling advertising.

The reports from Nine newspapers say Anthony Albanese decided to put the reforms developed by communications minister Michelle Rowland on hold late last year.

The Greens have called the report “disturbing”, and senator Sarah Hanson-Young says the minor party will push Labor to act.

Today’s news that the prime minister personally intervened to protect the gambling lobby is disturbing. The prime minister may not have the guts to stand up to the gambling lobby – but the Greens will act.

The Albanese government has failed to act on the scourge of gambling ads, despite the pleading of their own backbenchers and even their own communications minister.

Independent MP for Goldstein, Zoe Daniel, took to X (formerly Twitter) and said “we can finally fix this” under a “balanced parliament”.

Gambling ads are everywhere – even during the footy. It’s not normal, and it’s not OK. I’ve written the bill to ban them. It’s ready. The major parties stalled. In a balanced parliament, we can make it law. Independence works.

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Christopher Knaus

Labor vows to consider strengthening animal welfare body if re-elected

Labor has promised to provide greater oversight of the nation’s export abattoirs if re-elected.

Guardian Australia on Saturday revealed shocking animal welfare breaches that went unpunished and “profound” failings in the agriculture department’s oversight of export abattoirs, which relies largely on its workforce of veterinarians placed inside slaughterhouses.

Whistleblower vets have made a series of internal and external complaints about the failures of the system in recent years, including failures to report welfare breaches, an understaffing crisis that has allegedly left facilities unmonitored, and new restrictions on the inspection of animals up-close.

Prior to the Guardian’s revelations, Labor had promised to use the independent Inspector-General for Animal Welfare to “promote greater transparency and accountability in the reporting of animal welfare breaches”, according to the Australian Alliance for Animals.

Labor told the Alliance: “If re-elected, Labor will expand the role of the Inspector General to include export abattoirs to provide additional assurances to our trading partners, noting the responsibility of states in managing these sites.”

Labor confirmed to the Guardian it would consider such changes if re-elected.

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