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Australia politics live: Judges to rule on Opera House Palestine protest; capital gains discount claimed by wealthiest | Australia news

Judges to rule on Sydney Palestine protest

Thousands of protesters will discover whether they can rally at Sydney Opera House as a trio of judges rule on the legality of a pro-Palestine demonstration, Australian Associated Press reports.

Police challenged the Palestine Action Group’s proposed protest in the NSW court of appeal.

Organisers believe Sunday’s march, if approved, will see about 40,000 people wind through Sydney’s city centre to the forecourt of the Sydney Opera House. But police believe the number could be greater and would cause a safety risk.

The judges, who are due to deliver a decision today, also raised concerns over crowd safety during earlier hearings.

Comparing the protest to a massive August rally at the Sydney Harbour Bridge, where between 90,000 and 300,000 marched in the rain, the chief justice, Andrew Bell, said even more could attend Sunday’s event.

He also noted Macquarie Street could become a “narrow funnel” that pushes protesters into a tight space.

But the organiser’s barrister, Felicity Graham, said previous unticketed events at the Opera House, like the popular light show Vivid, were managed capably. Read more here:

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Krishani Dhanji

Good morning,

Krishani Dhanji here with you, for another day of parliamentary shenanigans, and we’ve got plenty to look forward to. Thanks to Martin Farrer for getting us started.

Estimates (which went a bit wild yesterday with new revelations around the Optus outage) continues so we’ll have eyes on that, but before then Sussan Ley is doing the media rounds this morning trying to push a bill for mandatory minimum sentencing for child sexual offences.

The attorney general, Michelle Rowland, when asked about it yesterday said the government was “open” to ideas to combat child abuse. But mandatory minimum sentencing goes against Labor’s platform (despite them voting for mandatory minimum sentencing for terror offences earlier this year).

Stick with us, it’s going to be a busy one!

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