Doorstop - Marrickville

ED HUSIC, MINISTER FOR INDUSTRY AND SCIENCE: Thank you for joining us here today, because here at Pallion, like in communities in different parts of the country, we know that manufacturing makes a difference, creating great firms, generating terrific jobs and adding huge economic value to the nation. We know that after the pandemic we need to be able to find ways to make things that we need at the time that we need them.

Racing to a Future Made in Australia

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Minister for Industry and Science Ed Husic toured ABC Refinery in Marrickville today and viewed the iconic Melbourne Cup trophy.

ABC Refinery is part of Pallion which employs more than 300 people in Marrickville, and hundreds more across Australia, processing, refining and working precious metals.

Pallion employs metallurgists, chemists, assayers, engineers, traders, jewellers and gold and silver smiths.

Boosting Parental Leave To Enhance Economic Security, Support And Flexibility For Australia's Families

The Albanese Labor Government will deliver the biggest boost to Australia’s Paid Parental Leave scheme since it was created by the former Labor Government in 2011, giving every family with a new baby more choice, greater security and better support.

Labor will add an additional six weeks of Paid Parental Leave (PPL) for families, bumping the total leave payable up to 26 weeks. A full six months.

Address to NSW Labor Conference

I acknowledge the traditional owners of the land on which we meet, I pay my respects to elders past, present and emerging.

And on behalf of the Australian Labor Government that I am proud to lead, I re-commit to the Uluru Statement from the Heart, in full.

Including a constitutionally-enshrined Voice to our National Parliament.

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Delegate Albanese, New South Wales Administrative Committee.

Thank you all very much for that warm welcome.

I have to say, I didn’t always get that sort of universal reception here.

Television Interview - Today Show

ALLY LANGDON, HOST: Twenty years ago today, Australia suffered its largest loss of life from a single terrorist attack when those two bombs went off in the party district of Kuta in Bali.

KARL STEFANOVIC, HOST: Memorial services are being held across the country and in Indonesia. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is in Coogee for the Australian service this morning and he joins us now. PM, good morning to you. Tough morning for Australia.

20th Anniversary of the Bali Bombing - Sydney

Twenty years ago, the shockwaves from Bali reached our shores.

Twenty years ago, an act of malice and calculated depravity robbed the world of 202 lives.

They were visitors and locals alike, gathered in a place of joy.

Eighty-eight of them Australian.

Twenty years on, the ache does not dim.

For most of us, what happened on that fateful night is beyond imagining.

The sudden terrible light, the sudden terrible darkness. The awful postscript of fire.