Anthony Albanese meets man who disarmed Sydney shooters
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Anthony Albanese did not raise a six-month old plan on combating anti-Semitism at an emergency post-Bondi massacre national cabinet meeting, with state leaders forced to push the Prime Minister on what tangible steps the nation could take to stop the wave of anti-Jewish hate.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is under intense scrutiny for his handling of antisemitic incidents prior to the Bondi Beach massacre.
The Nationals leader, David Littleproud, claimed: ‘this isn’t a gun problem, it’s an ideology problem’
A day after the deadliest domestic terror attack in Australia’s history, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese faced criticism he didn’t do enough to combat rising attacks on the Jewish community nor swiftly enact recommendations from the nation’s antisemitism envoy released five months ago.
Former Treasurer Josh Frydenberg has called on the Albanese government to finally “take on the hatred” and enforce sufficient sanctions after the Bondi massacre.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has been told he must "fully endorse" a controversial plan to combat antisemitism in the wake of yesterday's "evil" terror attack on the shores of Bondi.
The two men who killed 15 people on Sunday were driven by “Islamic State ideology,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told Australia’s public broadcaster.
Former Liberal prime minister John Howard says Anthony Albanese has bowed to internal Labor party pressures and "let the Jewish community down" by failing to take an "energetic" approach to denouncing anti-Semitism.