News live: Bragg can’t imagine Australia leaving Paris agreement; NSW to ban bread tags under next phase of plastics plan | Australia news

News live: Bragg can’t imagine Australia leaving Paris agreement; NSW to ban bread tags under next phase of plastics plan | Australia news


Liberal senator Bragg can’t see Australia leaving Paris agreement

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Andrew Bragg is repeatedly pushed on Insiders on what a decision to dump net zero and leaving the Paris agreement would mean for his own future on the shadow frontbench.

He doesn’t think things will get to that point because he can’t imagine Australia is going to allow itself to be lumped with Azerbaijan, Iran and Syria in sitting outside the Paris pact.

Well, I just don’t believe that that’s going to happen. I don’t think it is within the realm of the possible.

Liberal senator Andrew Bragg at a press conference at Parliament House in Canberra
Liberal senator Andrew Bragg. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Host David Speers asks again if Bragg would quit the frontbench if the party dumped net zero and abandoned Paris.

Well, sure, but I don’t imagine we will ever leave Paris. We are not fringe dwellers. Most Australians want us to play our fair role in terms of reduction, so I just don’t think we are going to be leaving the Paris agreement.

(A quick point of clarification here: There is no serious talk that a future Coalition government would pull Australia out of the Paris agreement, the international treaty that aims to limit global warming to 1.5C. Even the Nationals – who are dumping net zero – say they are committed to Paris.)

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Key events

The Queensland premier, David Crisafulli, has declared an end to “cannoli diplomacy” until the state reaches a funding deal with the federal government over hospital funding.

Crisafulli coined the term last year – riffing on the fact both he and the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, are of Italian descent – to demonstrate a willingness for his LNP government to work with Labor in Canberra.

But he told the LNP State Council meeting on the Gold Coast on Sunday that the relationship was anything but sweet; in fact it had reached a crunch point.

Crisafulli said “access to more beds” is key to addressing issues with the state’s health system, and that currently there were more than 1100 long-term patients – who he claimed were the federal government’s responsibility – occupying acute care beds.

We need our partner, the Commonwealth government, to hold up [their end of the bargain.

Sadly the federal government is playing a cruel game at a critical time for our state.

The offer that is currently there falls well short of their 2023 promise for 42.5% funding by 2030 and 45% by 2035.

But most troublingly it’s a deal that abrogates the federal government’s responsibilities. An offer that will leave hundreds of long-stay patients, aged care and younger NDIS patients stranded in Queensland hospitals.

It’s not a deal I’m willing to take. I won’t accept it.

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