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[warm] This is NewsCard Daily for Sunday May 17, 2026 ... the biggest stories from Australia and around the world in just minutes.
[serious] We begin in Canberra where the Albanese government’s 2026 federal budget is igniting a political firestorm over housing and tax.
Treasurer Jim Chalmers unveils sweeping changes to negative gearing and capital gains tax... breaking a key election promise not to touch those settings.
Negative gearing is now restricted to new builds only, effective immediately.
That means investors buying existing properties can no longer offset rental losses against their wage income.
The 50% capital gains tax discount is set to be scrapped from July next year... replaced with a system where profits above inflation are taxed at a minimum of 30%.
The government brands this a once‑in‑a‑generation move to tackle wealth inequality and take heat out of the housing market.
Critics warn it could spook mum‑and‑dad investors and tighten rental supply further.
For Australians already juggling high rents or trying to buy a first home... this budget directly targets how property wealth is built and taxed.
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[serious] Staying in Canberra... the same budget takes an axe to future spending on the NDIS, triggering concern among disability advocates.
The government plans to shift more than 160,000 participants onto state‑run support programs by about 2030.
The change is forecast to save nearly 38 billion dollars and avoid a looming 13 billion dollar blowout.
Canberra argues the scheme must be “sustainable” so it’s there for generations.
Families and disability groups fear people could fall through the cracks between federal and state systems.
States say they’ll need major funding guarantees to cope with the extra demand.
For many Australians with disability... this is not just a budget line.
It’s the difference between getting daily support — or going without.
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[serious] In Melbourne... attention turns to cost‑of‑living relief in the budget and whether it lands fast enough.
The centrepiece is a new 250 dollar “working Australians tax offset” for low and middle income earners.
But it doesn’t arrive until mid‑2028... deliberately delayed to avoid pushing up inflation now.
That timing frustrates households who are feeling the pain today from high mortgages, rents and grocery bills.
Economists say the budget walks a tightrope... offering future tax cuts and targeted payments while trying not to reignite price pressures the Reserve Bank is still fighting.
For workers, the message is mixed... help is coming, but you’ll be waiting years for the full benefit.
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[serious] Elsewhere in Canberra... the government unveils its 2026 National Defence Strategy, reshaping how Australia prepares for conflict in a more dangerous region.
The strategy doubles down on deterrence and self‑reliance... built around stopping any adversary projecting military power towards Australia.
It’s backed by a massive Integrated Investment Program... 53 billion dollars across all warfare domains over the next decade.
Up to 130 billion goes into undersea warfare and AUKUS submarines, 77 billion into new frigates and destroyers, and tens of billions more into long‑range strike, hypersonic missiles, drones and cyber.
Defence officials say the focus is clear — make northern bases stronger, build local defence industry, and deepen ties with partners across the Indo‑Pacific.
For Australians, it means defence spending will shape budgets and politics for years... as the country adapts to a more contested neighbourhood.
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[curious] Now to our region... where tensions in the broader Indo‑Pacific continue to shape Australia’s security outlook.
Beijing’s increased military activity and coast guard patrols across key sea lanes keep pressure on neighbours and trade routes.
Canberra leans on its new defence strategy to reassure allies and signal it’s ready to protect shipping and undersea cables that carry much of our commerce and data.
Regional forums are dominated by talk of deterrence, cyber threats and how to avoid miscalculation at sea or in the air.
For Australian exporters, students and travellers... what happens in these waters affects everything from supply chains to airline routes and insurance costs.
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[urgent] Meanwhile in the United States... the race for the White House and debates over aid to allies continue to reverberate here.
Washington’s budget battles over defence and foreign assistance shape how much support flows to the Indo‑Pacific and Ukraine.
Any shift in US commitment raises questions for Australia about how much more we may need to spend... and how closely we align on technology, intelligence and AUKUS timelines.
Markets watch for signs of political gridlock that could rattle global confidence.
For Australians with super invested overseas, or with family working in the US tech and finance sectors... American politics remains a pocket‑book issue, not just a distant drama.
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