Elon Musk’s X had a win over the Australian government after the Federal Court overturned a legal block on videos of the Sydney church stabbing.

The eSafety Commission won a temporary court injunction last month after X refused to comply with a take-down order made by the Australian regulator.

Musk has argued that that by blocking the video to all Australians – including those using networks that obscure their location – the watchdog was in effect seeking a global ban outside its jurisdiction.

X owner Elon Musk has slammed Australian government attempts to remove videos on his site.

X owner Elon Musk has slammed Australian government attempts to remove videos on his site.Credit: Bloomberg

Justice Geoffrey Kennett today rejected a bid to extend the injunction until a full trial on the merits of the regulator’s demand, which will be held at a later day.

“The orders of the court will be that the application to extend … is refused,” he said.

A full statement on the reasons for his judgement will be heard in coming weeks.

The injunction forced X to hide about 65 posts which included videos of the Wakeley church stabbing.

Authorities suspect the teen attacker was motivated by religious extremism.

The online watchdog is worried the video could be used to radicalise people online.

But lawyers acting for X Corp argued the video should never have been the subject of a removal notice because it was not overly graphic, did not glorify terrorism and did not meet the legal threshold for removal under Australian law.

The decision does not represent a final legal win for X in the case that prompting weeks of local debate about online harm and creating a war of words between Musk and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

A lack of competition is being blamed for the latest surge in petrol costs in the major capital cities, as high prices at the bowser risk keeping inflation higher for longer and reduce the chance of interest rate cuts any time soon.

NRMA spokesman Peter Khoury said Sydney and Melbourne recently broke petrol price records and Brisbane had come close to new highs.

Petrol prices reached new highs in Sydney and Melbourne recently.

Petrol prices reached new highs in Sydney and Melbourne recently.Credit: Eddie Jim

He said the fuel price cycles in those cities were experiencing bigger upswings and that more service stations were charging prices at the top of the range.

“When we get to the highest point in those capital cities, what we noticed in the last cycle was over 50 per cent of the service stations were charging on or near the highest price in Sydney,” Khoury said.

Catch up here.

The number of international students applying for study visas from inside Australia has reached a record high, casting doubt on a crucial Labor pledge to control the post-pandemic explosion in foreign enrolments.

Australian Bureau of Statistics data shows that the number of internal student visa applications rose to 35,000 in March.

The migration fight between Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil and Coalition immigration spokesman Dan Tehan will feature prominently in political debate this year.

The migration fight between Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil and Coalition immigration spokesman Dan Tehan will feature prominently in political debate this year.Credit: Alex Ellinghausen

Over the past two years, internal student visa applications have generally hovered between 9000 and 20,000.

The Coalition has seized on the data to warn that the uptick in existing visa holders seeking to extend their stay threatens to counteract Labor’s push to drastically cut the number of students entering Australia.

“It’s a mess,” said opposition immigration spokesman Dan Tehan, who also warned of the risk of future rises in bridging visas and bogus asylum claims.

Continue reading more on this issue here.

Returning to Australia, where International Education Association of Australia boss Phil Honeywood has spoken about a federal plan for universities to slash overseas student numbers.

This masthead revealed the Labor government’s plan for a drastic cap on overseas students, which would force universities to stop a surge in international students to help cut annual migration to 260,000 a year.

Four ministers; Education Minister Jason Clare, Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil, Immigration Minister Andrew Giles and Skills Minister Brendan O’Connor, will join a meeting this morning with the Council for International Education to discuss the draft law.

Education Minister Jason Clare is meeting with higher education leaders today.

Education Minister Jason Clare is meeting with higher education leaders today.Credit: Alex Ellinghausen

Honeywood told ABC RN Breakfast this morning said the sector needed to establish what the proposal really meant, and that policy couldn’t be decided on the run.

“This comes off the back … off English language entry levels already being lifted a couple of months ago … it also comes off the back of student visa fees in this week’s budget to be almost doubled, making it expensive student visa destination in the world,” he said.

However, he said the organisation supported the government’s position on “quality over quantity”, but was worried it would a very blunt instrument.

“We’re worried how the government is going to be able to negotiation with 1,400 international education colleges, let alone 39 public universities to agree on different numbers, bearing in mind this is going to be based on what courses we want,” he said.

In overseas news, Russian President Vladimir Putin replaced defence minister Sergei Shoigu in a cabinet shakeup that comes as he begins his fifth term in office.

In line with Russian law, the entire Russian cabinet resigned Tuesday following Putin’s glittering inauguration in the Kremlin, and most members have been widely expected to keep their jobs.

Putin signed a decree on Sunday appointing Shoigu as secretary of Russia’s Security Council, the Kremlin said.

The appointment was announced shortly after Putin proposed Andrei Belousov to become the country’s defence minister.

Outgoing Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu.

Outgoing Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu.Credit: AP

The announcement of Shoigu’s new role came as 13 people were reported dead and 20 more wounded in Russia’s border city of Belgorod, where a section of a residential building collapsed after what Russian officials said was Ukrainian shelling.

Belousov’s candidacy will need to be approved by Russia’s upper house in parliament, the Federation Council.

It reported Sunday that Putin introduced proposals for othercabinet positions as well but Shoigu is the only minister on that list who is being replaced. Several other new candidates for federal ministers were proposed Saturday by Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin, reappointed by Putin on Friday.

AP

Crossbench senator Jacqui Lambie says she wants to see more mental health funding in the budget when it gets handed down tomorrow.

“Right now we have a lot of kids there that are most at risk, whether they’ve got addictions to screen, drugs or alcohol, we have kids out there are completely out of control,” Lambie told Nine’s Today program this morning.

Federal Tasmanian senator Jacqui Lambie.

Federal Tasmanian senator Jacqui Lambie.Credit: Alex Ellinghausen

She pointed to statistics that showed up to 40 per cent of young people age 16 to 24 were having mental health problems.

“We have a problem here, and we have a crisis with mental health for our youth, and we’re going to have to throw a lot of money behind it. There’s no other way to put it,” she said.

The proposed legislation which would give Education Minister Jason Clare unprecedented powers to set the overseas student intake for every university is something the Coalition will wait to read through before coming to a position, says Coalition finance spokeswoman Jane Hume.

Speaking on ABC Radio National, Hume said all the Coalition have seen so far is a press release.

“It will inevitably affect the university sector, and we would like to have a better understanding from them exactly how the government’s policy will do that,” Hume said.

“Labor keeps telling us that they’re cracking down, but it just doesn’t seem to be working. Housing completions aren’t keeping up with immigration, there’s a resurgence in illegal boat arrivals, this is an area of profound failure of government.

“Hopefully, this is a policy that is backed up with evidence but frankly it may be too little too late because we’re already in a per capita recession, we’re only being propped up by those migration figures, it’s really important this budget delivers on its promise to restore economic growth.”

Earlier, NSW Premier Chris Minns responded to calls from the state opposition to extend electronic monitoring for domestic violence offenders.

The Coalition introduced a separate bill aimed to extend electronic monitoring, but it did not get the support of Labor, with the attorney-general saying the government had received advice from some experts in the domestic violence sector urging caution.

Minns told 2GB’s Ben Fordham this morning the government had assessed programs in other states and was not convinced electronic monitoring would be enough to curb high-risk offenders.

NSW Premier Chris Minns says electronic monitoring for high-risk domestic violence offenders.

NSW Premier Chris Minns says electronic monitoring for high-risk domestic violence offenders.Credit: Louise Kennerley

“I’m particularly worried about the individual who says, ‘I don’t care whether I spend the rest of my life in a jail cell, I’m determined to hurt or inflict assault or damage or even go in further and kill my former partner – and I don’t care about the consequences’,” Minns said.

“Electronic monitoring is not going to make a difference to those particular offenders – remand [staying in custody until trial] is the only answer for them.”

Minns said police issued 39,000 domestic violence charges in NSW every year.

“That is a massive number, it affects a lot of families and a lot of people have to go through a very difficult period in their life,” he said.

“We have to make sure that we’ve got a balanced package that the police can … make a case for remand because they think it’s in the public’s interest.”

Staying with the opposition’s finance spokeswoman Jane Hume, who was quizzed about the Coalition’s plans for nuclear energy.

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton delayed announcing up to six sites for future nuclear power plants, and the announcement is now expected after the budget.

She told ABC RN Breakfast this morning the Coalition would announce the policy “in advance of the next election”.

Shadow finance minister Jane Hume.

Shadow finance minister Jane Hume.Credit: Alex Ellinghausen

“It will be very clear in advance of the next election the way we want to go about opening up a new energy source for Australia, that will deliver emissions-free energy and lower energy prices by increasing the mix of types of energy over the long term,” Hume said this morning.

In the short and medium term Australia needed to transition through gas, but she lashed the government’s plans because it had “torn their cabinet apart”.

Hume said the future gas strategy announced last week didn’t show any financial support, but hoped it would be included in the budget tomorrow night.

It didn’t need to be subsidies for the industry, but could include fast-tracking of approvals in places like the Beetaloo, Scarborough or the Bass Strait, she said.

The MP was also quizzed on when the Australian public could expect to hear about their nuclear policy, and this is what she said:

“We will announce our policy on energy, and we will on tax as we will on other issues prior to the next election. We won’t be driven by the government’s agenda.”

Coalition spokeswoman for finance Jane Hume says the government’s forecast that inflation will go down to the target band of 2 to 3 per cent is very different from the Reserve Bank’s forecast six days ago that inflation was likely to rise from 3.6 per cent to 3.8 per cent through the second half of this year.

Speaking on ABC Radio National, Hume said Chalmers’ outlook is much more optimistic than economists have been saying for some time.

The opposition’s finance spokeswoman Jane Hume.

The opposition’s finance spokeswoman Jane Hume.Credit: Alex Ellinghausen

“Is the treasurer saying that with all that spending, interest rates are going to be higher for longer than the RBA currently anticipates and that’s going to bring consumption down or is he assuming that consumer sentiment is subdued for a longer period because the economic conditions aren’t improving and that’s causing consumption to be lower or is it because unemployment is going to increase?” Hume said.

“These are the questions that we’re going to make sure that we are asking the treasurer as he breaks down his budget tomorrow night.”

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