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Troy de Ruyter and Kimberley BraddishThe Nightly
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Senator Mehreen Faruqi holds up a pro Palestine sign during Governor-General Sam Mostyn’s address to the Senate.
Camera IconSenator Mehreen Faruqi holds up a pro Palestine sign during Governor-General Sam Mostyn’s address to the Senate. Credit: Martin Ollman/NCA NewsWire

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Key Events

Read the full wrap of Ali France’s speech
France says Dickson voters ‘rejected the politics of fear and division’ in the 2025 election
Getting a job as a disabled person is ‘difficult’, France says
‘Disability is not a barrier’ France says
Greens senator skirts rules with sign protest
Health, child care and cost of living top agenda
Intrigue surrounds House seating plan
Milton Dick warmly welcomed by both sides of politics back to speaker’s chair
RBA minutes: Cautiously seeking clarity on productivity
Why RBA surprised markets and kept rates unchanged at 3.85 per cent
Albanese and MPs sworn in as parliament gathers for first time since election
Israeli Ambassador condemns Gaza statement as ‘disconnected from reality’
Terrorist group Hamas welcomes call to end Gaza war
Cash blasts Albanese Government’s ‘disappointing’ Gaza statement
US ambassador calls Gaza peace statement ‘disgusting’
Welcome to Country ‘powerful’ start to Parliament: Albanese
Ley calls for Hamas to release Israeli hostages
Greens: Australia must do more than words on Gaza aid
Burke calls latest Gaza statement Australia's strongest yet
Both sides of politics come together in traditional service
Australia joins UK and more than 20 other countries condemning Gaza aid site killings
Eloise Budimlich

Winding up for the day

Thanks for joining The Nightly’s live coverage.

For a recap of today’s key events, including coverage of the 48th Parliament’s first day in session, scroll down.

We will be back with rolling coverage tomorrow morning.

You can read tonight’s edition of The Nightly below.

Eloise Budimlich

Read the full wrap of Ali France’s speech

The woman who unseated Peter Dutton on her third tilt at the seat of Dickson says her “epic journey” into Parliament is neither a sad nor happy story, but a very human one.

Ali France led the speeches from new MPs on Tuesday evening, the first of 20 freshman members of Labor’s caucus who will introduce themselves to Parliament this week.

In a moving speech, she laid out her deep Labor roots and the struggles she has faced, including losing a leg in 2011 and her son Henry dying of leukaemia in early 2024.

Read the full wrap below.

Eloise Budimlich

France says Dickson voters ‘rejected the politics of fear and division’ in the 2025 election

The new Dickson MP says her community wanted help with the cost of living, access to healthcare and housing.

“In voting for me they rejected the politics of fear and division,” France said.

Eloise Budimlich

Getting a job as a disabled person is ‘difficult’, France says

France says she was ‘pretty angry’ by the time she joined the Labor party in 2016.

“Labor delivered the NDIS, but people with a disability still struggle to be seen, to get around the community and get jobs,” she said.

“Landing a job was incredibly difficult for me. People only saw disability.”

Eloise Budimlich

‘Disability is not a barrier’ France says

France says the experience of losing her leg has connected her to the disability community.

Following her amputation she was wheelchair bound, but then underwent osseointegration surgery which enabled her to walk again.

“Disability is not the barrier, but our environment, assumptions and lack of opportunity are the barriers,” she said.

Eloise Budimlich

France is detailing her struggle after losing her leg

France lost her leg in 2011, and has thanked her trauma surgeon, Professor Martin Wullschleger, who is in the gallery.

She says the decision to amputate her leg was life-saving.

“Martin’s split-second decision to amputate my leg with a makeshift tourniquet saved me and ensured my kids had their mum,” she said.

Eloise Budimlich

France says the time she spent as a journalist enriched her

The Labor MP says her time studying and practicing journalism gave her a broad understanding of different walks of life.

She worked for The Courier-Mail, and went on to cover the Right of Abode cases in Hong Kong.

“The work was great but the people, all walks of life and cultures, gave me a huge appreciation and understanding of lives that looked different to my own,” she said.

Eloise Budimlich

France says Medicare is Labor’s heart, and her own

The Dickson MP shared her personal connection to Medicare, and said she will not stop fighting for it.

“Medicare is Labor’s heart, but it is also mine,” she said.

“Medicare saved my life and gave my Henry the very best chance of surviving Leukemia.”

Eloise Budimlich

France says she grew up living Labor values

The new Labor MP has begun her speech by saying she has been instilled with Labor values since childhood.

“Labor values of economic and social justice are not just something my family has voted for, they have underpinned our weekends, our work and our friendships for generations,” she said.

“Those values drive everything I do and fight for in Dickson.”

Eloise Budimlich

Labor MP who ousted Peter Dutton set to speak

Ali France, the Labor MP who ousted Peter Dutton at the Federal election is set to address Parliament at 5.30pm AEST.

France is the new member for Dickson, a seat that Dutton held since 2001.

She ended Mr Dutton’s 24 year run in the seat, one of the big election upsets as Labor recorded a landslide victory.

2025 Federal Election

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