There are only 32 active users participating in the Minns government’s much-vaunted cashless gaming trial, with the minister blaming a suspicion of technology for the low uptake.
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North Sydney, New South Wales 30,715 followers
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The Sydney Morning Herald: Breaking news. Must-read columnists. Award-winning investigative journalism. Independent. Always. The Sydney Morning Herald sets the standard for journalistic excellence for Sydney, Australia, and the rest of the world. From breaking news, to travel and fashion, smh.com.au continues to transform the way Australians get their news.
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Updates
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Over the past two weeks, this masthead has granted anonymity to 17 federal Labor MPs in the cabinet, outer ministry and backbench so they can speak frankly about the government’s challenges.
‘Albo needs to turn the ship around’: Inside the government’s flagging fortunes
smh.com.au
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The festival law adding $30 to the price of a ticket: Sydney’s Mode Festival, a celebration of electronic music and digital art, has been required to pay for three police boats, dozens of supervising police officers, and put on private ferries as a result of a law the industry says is throttling the sector. Their claim adds pressure on NSW Labor to axe the Music Festivals Act, which promoters say is adding tens of thousands of dollars to their bottom-line costs, and turbocharging ticket prices during a cost-of-living crisis. Read the full story from Linda Morris.
The ‘harmful’ festival law adding $30 to the price of a ticket
smh.com.au
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Five per cent of the nation’s home borrowers are facing a “particularly challenging situation”, Reserve Bank governor Michele Bullock has revealed, saying some may have to sell their homes to stay afloat financially. #RBA
Some may have to sell their homes: RBA governor gives economic warning
smh.com.au
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Australia’s “lax approach” to gambling has caused harm to hundreds of thousands of people, including financial and mental distress, relationship breakdown, family violence, and suicide, according to a study by leading think tank, the Grattan Institute. Poker machines and online betting are particularly addictive, the report concluded. Read the full story by Matt Wade: https://lnkd.in/gQdpHnvn
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Breaking: Former Labor leader and minister for the National Disability Insurance Scheme Bill Shorten will call time on his parliamentary career today: https://lnkd.in/gTzgTy28
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In recent times, Australia’s largest employers have increasingly decided to take public positions on issues such as tax reform, vaccinations, fossil fuels and climate change. Where does this leave employees who might oppose the political “beliefs” of their employer? "I think employers really do face a quite impossible task democratising political opinions at work. Workplace anarchy would ensue if there were no consequences for political expressions that may objectively offend others," writes Paul O’Halloran, an employment law partner at law firm Dentons Australia. Read the full story:
It’s dangerous to talk politics at work – especially if you want to keep your job
smh.com.au
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Breaking: The national economy grew by 0.2 per cent in the three months to June as consumers slashed spending on discretionary goods. More: https://lnkd.in/g5k4c4Hq #nationalaccounts #Australianeconomy #Junequarter
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"I’m 29 and already hate my career. Am I wanting too much," asks one reader in this week's Got a Minute? column. Dr Kirstin Ferguson AM advises life is too short to keep working in a career you hate. Read her full response: https://lnkd.in/gpAySCWm
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Jim Chalmers has pushed back at claims by former Liberal prime minister John Howard that the treasurer is diverting attention from his own failures to control government spending by blaming the Reserve Bank for “smashing the economy”. Chalmers this morning told this masthead that while he respected Howard, he was not an objective observer and had had his own disputes with the #RBA.
A ‘partisan observer’: Chalmers rebuffs Howard criticism
smh.com.au