Rishworth defends jobseeker work program

Catie McLeod
The social services minister, Amanda Rishworth, has said she is concerned there is “varying quality” among the providers meant to help welfare recipients find work but defended keeping private companies in the system.
Rishworth was interviewed on the ABC’s 7.30 program last night, after announcing at the Press Club in Canberra that Labor would amend the unemployment system for jobseeker recipients.
The exact details of the new system were not announced yesterday but it is set to be separated into three streams depending on a jobseeker’s skill level and work readiness.
Asked by 7.30 if she accepted some of the responsibility for the “failures in the current system” were due to for-profit job providers who “ignore the more difficult cases”, Rishworth said:
I would say that I am concerned that there is varying quality in the system. So I am focused on how we lift quality.
Stream one really is about the public service delivery. Stream two is more like the services we understand today.
Stream three, I imagine, will be different types of providers – they will have deep connection with community and be able to do this specialised, intensive work.
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eSafety chief still investigating breaches of under-16s ban

Josh Taylor
The eSafety commissioner, Julie Inman Grant, says her office has yet to finalise investigations into five platforms over compliance with the under-16s social media ban, stating that she doesn’t have a “fine-issuing button”.
In March, Inman Grant announced five of the 10 platforms – Snapchat, TikTok, YouTube, Instagram and Facebook – were under investigation for non-compliance with the ban with two-thirds of under-16s remaining on the platforms.
Inman Grant told Senate estimates on Wednesday evening that she had yet to conclude the investigation on whether the platforms had taken “reasonable steps” to prevent under 16s from accessing the platform:
I know there is strong interest in why fines have not yet been issued. Unfortunately, we do not have a fine-issuing button. Rather, systemic non-compliance needs to be proven in court with solid evidence and complex legal proceedings.
She said some platforms had improved in the intervening period, including by requiring accounts to go under further age checks and introducing new age verifications when people try to change their data of birth.
She said some platforms that allowed under-16s multiple attempts to pass facial age assurance reversed this practice, and parents have been able to report their teens’ accounts more easily to the platforms.
Inman Grant said one platform was allowing users to try, on average, 24 times each day to pass facial age assurance.
NACC needs a ‘significant reset’ after Brereton says Haines
Helen Haines – a key advocate for the anti-corruption commission – says that the body has been “overshadowed” by controversy and needs a reset following the inaugural commissioner, Paul Brereton, standing down.
She says that the commission should restore trust by delivering outcomes from investigations, more timely outcomes, and the public understanding how the process works.
She tells the ABC’s RN Breakfast the process has so far been “a little secretive”.
Haines says:
“Unfortunately for Mr. Brereton, the issues regarding his perceived conflicts of interest with defence overshadowed all those other principles. There’s no question that when Mr. Breton was appointed to the NAC, he was a person of great reputation and merit. And I think it is really unfortunate that what followed did follow, and the NACC has, of course, been completely overshadowed by those events.
Haines adds that the NACC has held no public hearings – unlike its NSW state counterpart, the ICAC, which has held many. It shouldn’t necessarily go as far as NSW, but there should be some at least, she says.
An anti-corruption commission is not about a popcorn moment for the public … We want to see justice done when there has been corruption. And I think the public hearing is part of that, that people can see the process taking place. I’ve never called for routine public hearings, but I do think we need to see some public hearings at the right time.

Sarah Basford Canales
6,600 Iranians with visitor visas prevented from travelling to Australia
More than 6,600 Iranians with visitor visas were prevented from travelling to Australia after the Albanese government announced a six-month travel ban amid the overseas conflict, home affairs officials say.
At a Senate estimates hearing last night, the department confirmed 6,634 Iranian nationals with valid visas were unable to travel after the decision by home affairs minister, Tony Burke, in March. Officials said the department had received 752 appeals for an exemption and had granted 480 travel exemptions and denied 164 others.
“Their visa is frozen, and if it has an expiry date that is after the September date when the arrival control determination lifts, then the visa will come into effect again,” Clare Sharp, the department’s immigration head, said.
Expressions of interest for a new temporary humanitarian pathway available for Iranian nationals onshore opened on Friday, granting them a three-year stay while the US-Israeli war against Iran continues. The department said there are 2,833 Iranian nationals in the country with visitor visas. So far, no one has applied.
Greens senator David Shoebridge asked whether the temporary visa could be made permanent in a similar way to those offered to Ukrainians and Palestinians in recent years.
Sharpe said: “As [those] conflicts progressed, and we’ve gotten a better handle on [whether] is this a short term crisis with people able to return, or is this a long-term protracted conflict? We will look at what options need to be put in place there.”
Read more:

Krishani Dhanji
Good morning, Krishani Dhanji here with you, thanks to Martin Farrer for getting us started.
It’s the last sitting day of the week and the drama might just be dialled up to 11 today with the government to introduce its bill that will include changes to capital gains tax and its $250 working Australians offset – despite all the controversy and commentary surrounding it.
Yesterday the treasurer gave us a hint that the broad legislation would go through first and all the finer details would be introduced later.
There have been more headlines out of Senate estimates overnight, with new details on how many Iranians with visitor visas have been barred from travelling to Australia under the government’s temporary travel ban, and eSafety is still investigating breaches of the under 16s social media ban. More on those in a moment.
Grab your coffee, I’ve got mine – let’s get cracking!

Patrick Commins
Reserve Bank board member says rate settings not a choice between prioritising inflation or jobs
Carolyn Hewson, an independent member of the Reserve Bank’s rate-setting board, said the global oil shock has made it more “complex” to manage monetary policy but that it was wrong to frame the central bank’s deliberations as a “stark choice” between “prioritising inflation or prioritising jobs”.
The RBA has hiked interest rates three times this year as it attempts to juggle a (hopefully) temporary stagflationary shock from surging fuel prices that is pushing unemployment and inflation higher.
Hewson’s address at Adelaide University last night gave little extra insight into what the RBA will do next on rates.
But it was notable as the first of its kind since the central bank committed to having each of its independent board members deliver at least one speech a year.
“Supply constraints push inflation higher at the same time as they weaken economic activity and employment,” Hewson said, in a nod to the impact from the closure of the strait of Hormuz.
It is often said that central banks face a stark choice in such moments between prioritising inflation or prioritising jobs.
But “that framing misses the point”, she said.
It is not a question of which objective matters more; instead, it is about understanding that they are generally complementary over the longer term.
Seen this way, the RBA’s dual mandate is an expression of economics in service of the broader public interest.
Something to keep in mind the next time the RBA pushes up your mortgage costs. For the record, that could happen as soon as August.

Catie McLeod
Labor flags changes to mutual obligations
Amanada Rishworth also flagged changes to so-called mutual obligations, which require jobseeker recipients to prove that they have applied for a certain number of jobs in order to continue to receive welfare payments.
But she said the contentious system would remain, despite criticism from some welfare advocates.
She told 7.30:
Mutual obligations have been a feature in the system for a long time. [They] play a really important role.It is part of the social contract that, if you’re receiving income support … and you’re able to work, you do take steps to find a job.
What I think is being commented on, where I do agree, is that there’s no point in having pointless, meaningless mutual obligations.
Rishworth defends jobseeker work program

Catie McLeod
The social services minister, Amanda Rishworth, has said she is concerned there is “varying quality” among the providers meant to help welfare recipients find work but defended keeping private companies in the system.
Rishworth was interviewed on the ABC’s 7.30 program last night, after announcing at the Press Club in Canberra that Labor would amend the unemployment system for jobseeker recipients.
The exact details of the new system were not announced yesterday but it is set to be separated into three streams depending on a jobseeker’s skill level and work readiness.
Asked by 7.30 if she accepted some of the responsibility for the “failures in the current system” were due to for-profit job providers who “ignore the more difficult cases”, Rishworth said:
I would say that I am concerned that there is varying quality in the system. So I am focused on how we lift quality.
Stream one really is about the public service delivery. Stream two is more like the services we understand today.
Stream three, I imagine, will be different types of providers – they will have deep connection with community and be able to do this specialised, intensive work.
Welcome
Good morning and welcome to our live politics blog. I’m Martin Farrer with the top overnight stories and then it will be Krishani Dhanji with the main action.
The social services minister, Amanda Rishworth, was on 7.30 last night defending her decision not to get rid of the controversial for-profit aspects of the jobseeker program. More coming up.
The eSafety commissioner told Senate estimates last night that she is yet to finalise the investigations into five social media platforms for failing to comply with the under-16s social media ban, stating that she doesn’t have a “fine-issuing button” to deal with the problem. More to follow.

56 minutes ago
