Australia news live: Bragg agrees Coalition ‘running out of people to offend’; 7 October anniversary ‘not a day for demonstrations’, Marles says | Australian politics

Australia news live: Bragg agrees Coalition ‘running out of people to offend’; 7 October anniversary ‘not a day for demonstrations’, Marles says | Australian politics

Andrew Bragg agrees Coalition ‘running out of people to offend’ amid Hastie immigration comments The Coalition can be united, says shadow minister Andrew Bragg, following the resignation of Andrew Hastie from the frontbench last week. Hastie has been making public claims about the impact of migration levels driving up housing prices, and calls for Australia…

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Andrew Bragg agrees Coalition ‘running out of people to offend’ amid Hastie immigration comments

The Coalition can be united, says shadow minister Andrew Bragg, following the resignation of Andrew Hastie from the frontbench last week.

Hastie has been making public claims about the impact of migration levels driving up housing prices, and calls for Australia to reinvest in manufacturing.

On ABC RN Breakfast a little earlier, Bragg, the shadow housing minister, said while Hastie’s arguments about migration levels are a factor in house prices, it’s a “much more complex dynamic” than just that.

He says just blaming migration can be a “very blunt way to speak, which can be offensive and it can be damaging.”

But asked whether Hastie is being directly blunt and offensive, Bragg says:

I think it’s one-dimensional. I wouldn’t say it’s offensive. I think Andrew is right to identify that it is one of the inputs.

On the issue of whether the Coalition is appealing to a broader demographic of Australians, Bragg himself is pretty blunt.

I think clearly you would know the demographics in which we have really struggled at the last few elections: women, multicultural communities. I think George Brandis at one point said in one of the election wash-ups that we were sort of running out of people to offend. I think that has been true through to a point. And so we’re going through this first year in this new parliament of opposition with a view to reflecting on all of that.

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Adding a bit of context to the last post, Anthony Albanese had said before that 8 October 2023 protest that it should not go ahead.

Both he and foreign minister Penny Wong condemned attendees at the rally who were filmed chanting anti-Jewish sentiments.

At the time, Albanese said images from the rally were “horrific”, and there were, “slogans which are antisemitic and just appalling, with no place”.

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