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Morrison Still Preferred PM After JobKeeper Extension

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‘Worst Fears’: Arrest of Hong Kong Media Mogul Jimmy Lai Draws International Condemnation

Hong Kong police’s arrest of media tycoon Jimmy Lai under the city’s new national security law has drawn condemnation from officials and activists around the world, who say the move was an attack on press freedom and snuffed out the territory’s dwindling autonomy. Lai, a strident critic of the Chinese communist regime, was arrested on Aug. 10, along with his two sons, on allegations of collusion with foreign forces. Later that day, more than 200 police officers raided the newsroom of Lai’s newspaper Apple Daily, the largest pro-democracy outlet in the city. Several other media and pro-democracy figures were also arrested Monday, including prominent activist Agnes Chow. Police later said 10 people—nine men and one woman—were arrested, without naming them. Lai’s arrest “bears out the worst fears that Hong Kong’s…

Morrison Still Preferred PM After JobKeeper Extension

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has continued his rise in popularity with the latest Newspoll results showing record-high support for him as the preferred prime minister.

Data from the poll, which was released by the Australian newspaper on Aug. 9, showed that Morrison had extended his lead over Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese as preferred prime minister with 60 percent of those polled believing that Morrison is the “better” prime minister.

Twenty-five percent of those polled believed that Albanese would be a better prime minister.

This is the seventh month in a row that Morrison has been declared the preferred prime minister.

Notably, the Coalition party lost one point in the two-party preferred poll going from a 5 percent lead in July with 53 percent supporting the Coalition to a 4 point lead in August with 52 percent supporting the Coalition over 48 percent who support the Australian Labor Party (ALP).

This is the lowest percentage point rating in the two-party preferred poll for the ALP since July 2019.

The poll was taken between Aug. 5 to Aug. 8 and surveyed 1,509 voters from capital cities and the regions around the country.

Support for the Government Steady After JobKeeper Extension

The figures come after the Coalition government announced a significant extension of the financial support program “JobKeeper” on Aug. 7 with the Prime Minister calling the extension a “lifeline.”

“JobKeeper has been a lifeline to people’s livelihoods. It’s been a lifeline to businesses. It’s been a lifeline for the certainty and assurance that it’s provided Australians that I know they’ve been relying upon on these very difficult months and as we’ve seen at the outbreak of the Victorian wave and the impact that’s had specifically on Victoria,” said Morrison at a press conference on Aug. 7.

The extension to JobKeeper will provide an estimated $13 billion to the Victorians with the treasurer Josh Frydenberg calculating that around 1.5 million Victorians, will be on JobKeeper during the September quarter.

“That’s nearly half their private-sector workforce,” Frydenberg noted on Channel Nine on Aug. 7.

Greens Primary Support Rises As Major Parties Fall in Latest Poll

Both major parties also experienced a drop in their primary vote.

Support for the Labor Party fell to 33 percent, which is below the percentage received by the ALP at the 2019 election.

While the Coalition primary vote fell to 43 percent but unlike the ALP remained above the 41.4 percent the Coalition recorded at the 2019 election.

The drop coincided with a rise in the primary voter support for the Greens who saw their primary vote rise to 11 percent.

However, One Nation remained steady, getting just 4 percent of the primary vote in the latest poll.

Focus News: Morrison Still Preferred PM After JobKeeper Extension

ByteDance Takes Step Toward Entering Online Stock Brokering in Hong Kong

BEIJING/SHANGHAI—Beijing-based ByteDance, the owner of popular short video app TikTok, is taking steps to move into the online stock brokerage and wealth management business in Hong Kong, trademark registration documents show. ByteDance applied last December to register a trademark called Songshu Zhengquan, which translates to Squirrel Securities, in Hong Kong, the city’s online intellectual property database shows. The trademark application is being “examined,” according to the database, and areas of business it applied for include “computerized financial information services, stock trading, brokerage services, and stock exchange quotations.” The business is still in its infancy, and ByteDance currently has just one full-time employee assigned to it, according to a person familiar with the situation. The company has obtained a license, but any official launch of the online stockbroker business is not…