Morning Mail: detention company tied up in Trump’s immigration crackdown; ‘gobsmacking’ call centre move; cost of landlord tax breaks revealed

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US president Donald Trump
Management and Training Corporation is closely involved with US president Donald Trump’s hardline immigration programs enforced by ICE. An Australian subsidiary has won major contracts from the Albanese government. Photograph: José Luis Magaña/AP

MTC facing complaints over treatment of detainees; further use of private call centres revealed; cost of tax breaks for landlords laid bare

Good morning. The main company handling Australia’s immigration detention is playing a key role in the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown – and attracting complaints over its treatment of ICE detainees in the US.

And as we continue our investigation into the use of private call centres by government agencies, it’s been revealed the department dealing with workplace standards is set to replace call centre staff with a third-party contractor.

Meanwhile, analysis has shown that the cost of tax breaks for Australia’s landlords vastly outstrips what is spent on social housing, homelessness and rent assistance combined.

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Is Trump waging a war on his own people?

Recent scenes on the streets of Minneapolis have been confronting and terrifying to watch with federal agents shooting two US citizens at near point-blank range, as in the cases of Renee Good and Alex Pretti – all while the White House paints the victims as perpetrators. David Smith speaks with Reged Ahmad about why many are asking if fascism has come to US streets.

In-depth

Police say a device allegedly lobbed into the middle of an Invasion Day rally in Perth had the potential to explode and injure or even kill “many people”. The incident is being investigated as a potential terrorist act. Already alarmed at a rise in white nationalism and racist sentiment, First Nations people say they have been left shocked at the “surreal” lack of an outpouring of anger or concern among the wider Australian population.

Not the news

Graeme Base admits he had no idea what he was doing when he published his wonderfully weird and fiendishly difficult picture books. They became global hits anyway. Both Animalia and The Eleventh Hour have been selected by Guardian readers as among the 50 best Australian picture books ever published – but, he tells Sian Cain, if you pitched either book now “you’d fail – miserably, I suspect”.

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According to the Sydney Morning Herald, 400 people a week in New Zealand are applying for Australian citizenship. Beloved Australian animated series Bluey has topped the US streaming charts for the second year running, ABC News reports. And billionaire publican Arthur Laundy is emerging as a likely buyer for Nine’s radio network, according to the AFR and the Herald Sun.

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