The Guardian Australia

Morning Mail: Australia’s exciting start to World Cup, scientists’ climate warning, problems at The Project

- Martin Farrer

Good morning. The Socceroos faced a daunting World Cup assignment against champions France in Qatar this morning, but they may have taken hope after Saudi Arabia scored one of the greatest upsets in the history of the tournament, beating Argentina earlier in the day. Anything can happen, right? At the time of writing Australia had scored the first goal of the game, but France is up 2-1 at half-time. Head to our live blog for the very latest.

Back home, Australian­s must get used to extreme weather such as floods and searing temperatur­es, experts say, and anxiety about climate is one factor in the country’s wavering social cohesion. Keep reading for more on these and other top stories.

Australia

Weather warning |Extreme weather events including torrential downpours, searing heat and dangerous bushfire conditions are all getting worse across Australia, with even more challengin­g events to come, according to the latest report by the BoM and CSIRO. But in New South Wales’ saturated central region, residents in Deniliquin breathed a sigh of relief as a flood warning was cancelled.

Lowe points |Reserve Bank governor Philip Lowe warned last night that inflation is likely to become more volatile in the future as globalism retreats and climate shocks mount, requiring central banks to adjust interest rates more often.

Project problem |The exodus of talent from Ten’s The Project has continued with the departure of comedian Peter Helliar, who follows Carrie Bickmore and Lisa Wilkinson out the stage door.

Crypto fail |Failed cryptocurr­ency platform FTX bypassed the regular process for obtaining a financial services licence in Australia and the industry regulator did not assess its fitness to hold one in the lead up to the company’s unpreceden­ted collapse.

Story time |Australia’s TV news and current affairs presenters are still mostly white and don’t reflect the country’s diversity, according to a report titled Who Gets to Tell Australian Stories?

World

Monastery mystery |Ukraine’s security service and police have raided a 1,000-year-old Orthodox Christian monastery in Kyiv as part of operations to counter suspected “subversive activities by Russian special services”.

Power cuts | Ukraine’s energy chief has warned its grid has suffered damage on a “colossal” scale.

Iran fears |Iran’s footballer­s face possible reprisals from authoritie­s back home after they refused to sing the national anthem at the World Cup in support of anti-government protesters.

Kosovo clash |A row over car number plates in Kosovo is threatenin­g to erupt into open unrest and one of the most serious regional crises in years as tensions between Serbia and its breakaway former province continue to mount.

Taking back control | Owen Paterson, the former UK MP sacked over a lobbying scandal, is taking his case to the European court of human rights even though the Brexiter once argued Britain should “break free” from the court.

Full Story

Donald Trump re-enters the battlegrou­nd for the presidency

As Donald Trump gears up for another run at the White House, Jonathan Freedland speaks to Politico’s Jonathan Martin and unpacks how the Republican party can finally break away from the former president’s legacy.

In-depth

One fascinatin­g byproduct of the pandemic was that social cohesion in Australia spiked, as mapped by the Scanlon Foundation. But since the threat of the virus faded, the researcher­s have found that we have become less united as fears about growing economic insecurity, the war in Ukraine, geopolitic­al uncertaint­y and the climate crisis all contribute to a changing zeitgeist. Katharine Murphy delves into the data.

Not the news

Dancer and choreograp­her Charmene Yap talks about her favourite things, plumping for a handmade yellow tartan dress, essential parenting hardware in the shape of a set of screwdrive­rs, and why losing her left Airpod was such a blow.

The world of sport

Cricket |Australia thumped England by 221 runs thanks to tons from David Warner and Travis Head, pictured, to complete a whitewash of the old enemy in the ODI series.

‘Messi, where are you?’ |Saudi Arabia pulled off one of the biggest World Cup shocks of all time overnight with a 2-1 win over Argentina in Group C in Qatar. It left Saudi fans to taunt Argentina’s Lionel Messi with a chant of “Where are you?”.

World Cup |After the Saudi shock, Group C remained open after Poland and Mexico drew 0-0. And in Australia’s group, Denmark and Tunisia also ended goalless. And in other big football news, Cristiano Ronaldo has left Manchester United after his public falling out with the club’s management.

Rugby league |Last weekend in Manchester produced three world champions – men’s, women’s and wheelchair – and gave us a glimpse of the future.

Media roundup

The Herald Sun says 25% of Victorians are still unsure how they will vote in Saturday’s state election, while the Age reckons last night’s debate between Daniel Andrews and Matthew Guy was “mild-mannered” save for tetchy exchanges about corruption. The Adelaide Advertiser reports that a mother fears for her daughter’s safety after she was involved in a brawl on a train, in what the paper says is “a spate” of school-related violence. The Central Western Daily leads on the visit of Anthony Albanese to flood-hit Eugowra, while the Goulburn Post says residents are furious about the state of the raindamage­d road to Goulburn. An anticorrup­tion executive involved in the secret recording of a Territory politician has left his job, NT News reports.

What’s happening today

Nurses’ strike |Nurses and midwives in NSW will strike for 24 hours from 7am today in a dispute over pay and conditions.

Press club |film-maker Rachel Perkins and historian Henry Reynolds discuss a new SBS series, The Australian Wars, at the National Press club.

Tasmania inquest |An inquest begins in Hobart into the deaths of four Tasmania police officers – Paul Reynolds, Simon Darke, Robert Cooke and Paul Hunt.

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Brain teaser

And finally, here are the Guardian’s crosswords to keep you entertaine­d throughout the day – with plenty more on the Guardian’s Puzzles app for iOS and Android. Until tomorrow.

Quick crossword

Cryptic crossword

 ?? Photograph: Alessandra Tarantino/AP ?? Australia's Craig Goodwin celebrates after scoring the first goal in the Socceroos’ World Cup match against France.
Photograph: Alessandra Tarantino/AP Australia's Craig Goodwin celebrates after scoring the first goal in the Socceroos’ World Cup match against France.
 ?? Photograph: Murray Mccloskey/AAP ?? Climate scientists say extreme weather events in Australia are getting worse, with more to come.
Photograph: Murray Mccloskey/AAP Climate scientists say extreme weather events in Australia are getting worse, with more to come.

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