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Moira Deeming launches court challenge as Victorian Liberals consider her fate

Victorian MP Moira Deeming has launched an 11th-hour court challenge against her own party before a meeting to decide her fate after she made an assault allegation against a former leader, AAP reports.

Deeming has lodged a legal action against the Liberal’s Victorian president, Brian Loughnane, which is listed to be heard in the state supreme court this morning. Loughnane and other Liberal executives are planning to meet on Friday evening to determine Deeming’s candidacy after she made a police complaint against Matthew Guy, the opposition’s public transport spokesperson, alleging he put her in a “headlock” at a gala dinner on 23 May.

Victoria police investigated the incident and found “there was no offence detected”. Guy has demanded a public apology from Deeming but she says she misunderstood the meaning of headlock and has refused to apologise.

She has been invited to the state executive meeting to tell her side of the story.

In a statement to AAP, Deeming’s lawyer said his client’s complaint was made “honestly, in good faith and only as a matter of last resort”.

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Victorian MP Moira Deeming has launched an 11th-hour court challenge against her own party before a meeting to decide her fate after she made an assault allegation against a former leader, AAP reports.

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Deeming has lodged a legal action against the Liberal’s Victorian president, Brian Loughnane, which is listed to be heard in the state supreme court this morning. Loughnane and other Liberal executives are planning to meet on Friday evening to determine Deeming’s candidacy after she made a police complaint against Matthew Guy, the opposition’s public transport spokesperson, alleging he put her in a “headlock” at a gala dinner on 23 May.

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Victoria police investigated the incident and found “there was no offence detected”. Guy has demanded a public apology from Deeming but she says she misunderstood the meaning of headlock and has refused to apologise.

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She has been invited to the state executive meeting to tell her side of the story.

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In a statement to AAP, Deeming’s lawyer said his client’s complaint was made “honestly, in good faith and only as a matter of last resort”.

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Good morning, and happy Friday. Nick Visser here to wrap up the week after a busy stretch in parliament. Here’s what’s on deck:

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Liberal MP Moira Deeming has lodged legal action against the party’s Victorian president, Brian Loughnane, which is set to be heard in the state’s supreme court this morning.

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Microsoft has struck a deal with Nine to pay the media company for its content. Under the agreement, Nine’s journalism will play a “crucial role” in AI outputs generated for its Copilot service, the Sydney Morning Herald reports.

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And it’s finally snowed significantly in New South Wales and alpine Victoria, in good news for skiers.

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We’ll bring you more soon.

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Key events

Butler says government takes extended NDIS inquiry ‘seriously’

Mark Butler, the federal health minister, was asked about the recommendations from the inquiry to improve the NDIS.

He told RN Breakfast this morning the government was considering them very carefully, saying there were “good suggestions”, some of which officials were already working on. He went on:

double quotation markWe’re very keen to work on registration schemes for workers across the care economy, not just in the NDIS but also in the aged care sector as well. … Our priority right now is to register providers. It doesn’t make much sense to have workers registered if they’re employed by providers who are not registered and whom we know nothing about. …

We’re moving at a pace really to make sure that the few hundred thousand organisations and companies that are providing services are registered, that they tick a range of boxes around quality, and we have a good line of sight of who they are and what their character is.

Butler said he does think there will be more to learn during an extended inquiry into the NDIS changes, negotiated with the Greens last week.

double quotation markWe’ll take this extended inquiry very seriously and treat it with the respect that all of those inquiries deserve.

Mark Butler. Photograph: Hilary Wardhaugh/Getty Images
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