⚙️ Political Gadgets News | Friday, 3 July 2026
Today’s Political Gadgets digest covers: Register of Interests: Sarah Henderson (VIC) — interests updated; Federal contracts: $634,285,277 awarded; largest to GlaxoSmithKline Australia Pty Ltd ($415,000,000); Parliament: not sitting; MP expenses: Jim Chalmers (Rankin, Lab) — $1,678,606 over 4 quarters.
Today’s digest includes:
- Register of Interests: Sarah Henderson (VIC) — interests updated
- Federal contracts: $634,285,277 awarded; largest to GlaxoSmithKline Australia Pty Ltd ($415,000,000)
- Parliament: not sitting
- MP expenses: Jim Chalmers (Rankin, Lab) — $1,678,606 over 4 quarters
- Political advertising: Google $3,150 (YTD $2,863,050); Facebook $93,552 (YTD $642,607)
Bluesky says Labor’s gambling reforms draw cross-bench fire as divisive week ends in parliamentary acrimony.
BlueSky #auspol · 03 July 2026, 05:29 AEST · 588 posts · AI-generated
Andrew Wilkie’s blunt declaration that the government’s gambling reforms are “useless” crystallised frustration with Labor’s weakness on an issue affecting millions. The final sitting week before winter break descended into partisan theatre, with a Liberal MP booted from question time and heated exchanges over historical interpretations of Robert Menzies and contemporary policy failures. The dominant tension: a Labor majority apparently captured by industry lobbies, unwilling to match rhetoric with action on harm reduction.
Key Issues: Gambling advertising remains largely unregulated despite cross-bench pressure and public support for a ban, with Labor accused of prioritising donations and industry relationships over vulnerable Australians. A parliamentary row erupted over Pat Conroy’s description of Menzies as a Nazi appeaser, sparking a censure motion that exposed deeper tribal divisions. The Royal Commission on antisemitism heard testimony from Jewish human rights lawyer Sarah Schwartz, targeted by pro-Israel and neo-Nazi groups alike, raising questions about whether the inquiry will address media complicity in online harassment campaigns.
The week’s standout moment was Schwartz’s dignified account of sustained abuse and her statement that “no government or institution can or should decide the boundaries of Jewish identity.” The overall tone reflected exhaustion—multiple posts documented widening disconnects between government promises and outcomes on NDIS, climate, aged care, and housing, with both major parties now viewed as inadequate by significant portions of the electorate.
Top topics: Gambling Reforms · Cross-Bench Criticism · Antisemitism Inquiry · Labor Industry Influence · Parliamentary Acrimony
AI-generated from BlueSky #auspol posts.
Register of Interests Update — Henderson, Sarah
Victoria
Liberal Party of Australia
Additions
| Person | Item | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Self | Gifts | One ticket to the Mid Winter Ball event provided by Commercial Radio and Audio Limited, held at Parliament House Canberra on 1 July 2026. |
Deletions
None
Register of Interests Update — Susan Templeman
Macquarie, New South Wales
Australian Labor Party
Additions
| Person | Item | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Self | 11. Gifts | Guest on the Foxtel Group table at the Federal Parliament Press Gallery Midwinter Ball. Held on Wednesday 1 July in the Great Hall at Parliament House, Canberra. |
Deletions
None
What they’re talking about
Most used words in parliament on 02 Jul 2026: PEOPLE (288) HOUSE (244) TIME (230) ALP (196) … [link]

GSK Australia Secures $415 Million National Immunisation Program Contract
GlaxoSmithKline Australia has been awarded a $415 million contract to supply essential vaccines to the National Immunisation Program for the 2026-27 financial year. The British pharmaceutical giant's Australian subsidiary, which has operated in the country since 1964, generated over $1 billion in revenue in 2024 with 561 employees. GSK is the tenth-largest pharmaceutical company globally with $42.4 billion in revenues.
The company operates as the primary supplier of childhood vaccines to Australia's National Immunisation Program, providing protection against diseases including polio, measles, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, hepatitis B, and Haemophilus influenzae b. GSK's Infanrix Hexa combination vaccine has been used in Australian childhood immunisation since 2009. The company also supplies meningococcal B vaccines and recently added its RSV vaccine Arexvy to the program for older Australians.
The National Immunisation Program provides free vaccines to eligible Australians across all age groups, from infants through to adults and high-risk populations. The program was established in 1997 by Commonwealth and state governments to increase immunisation coverage and reduce vaccine-preventable diseases. GSK Australia operates manufacturing and research facilities in Melbourne, including a pilot vaccine facility developing blow-fill-seal technology in collaboration with Monash University.
Sources: ibisworld.com; au.gsk.com; gskpro.com; health.gov.au; ncbi.nlm.nih.gov [link]
All tenders
Fed govt contracts given today came to $634,285,277. The winner is GlaxoSmithKline Australia Pty Ltd ($415,000,000) [link]

Consultant Tenders
$199,679,147 in Federal contracts to the big consultants in 2026. $0 yesterday. {905} [link]

Flights
The VIP fleet flew at least 709 km in the last few days. That’s 1 plane doing 3 flights over 1 hrs and 29 mins and costing around $6,809. [link]

Fed Govt Outsourced labour costs
Government Temporary Staff Tenders in the last day: $506,660 [link]

How does the tender money flow…
YTD tenders for Attorney-General’s Department: $47,734,022 {721} [link]

Politician Expenses
Jim Chalmers (Reps, Rankin, Lab) claimed $1,678,606 in expenses over the last 4 reported quarters for major categories such as travel, offices and cars. That is $882,557 more than the average. #auspol [link]

Double Donors
Seven West Media donated $23,700 in 2023-24. That was $11,500 to Labor and $12,200 to the Coalition. {7521} #auspol [link]

Parliamentary attendance
Michelle Rowland (representatives, Greenway, Australian Labor Party) attended 80.9% of possible votes. [link]

Political advertising on Google
Political advertising spend with Google in last 24 hours: $3,150. (YTD: $2,863,050) [link]

Political advertising on Facebook
Political advertising on Facebook yesterday: $93,552. (YTD: $642,607) [link]

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