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{{Use Australian English|date=November 2023}} {{Use Australian English|date=November 2023}}


The following is a list of events including expected and scheduled events for the year '''] in ]'''. The following is a list of events that occurred in the year '''] in ]'''.
{{horizontal TOC|nonum=yes|align=center}} {{horizontal TOC|nonum=yes|align=center}}
{{Infobox Australian year {{Infobox Australian year
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**53-year-old crocodile expert ] is sentenced in the ] to more than ten years imprisonment, after having earlier pled guilty to 56 charges relating to the ], torture and murder of more than 42 dogs between 2014 and April 2022.<ref name=britton>{{#invoke:cite news||last=Fitzgerald|first=Roxanne|date=8 August 2024|title=NT crocodile expert Adam Britton sentenced to more than 10 years in prison for bestiality and animal cruelty crimes|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-08/adam-britton-sentenced-bestiality-animal-cruelty/104194702|work=ABC News|access-date=11 August 2024}}</ref> He also admitted to four charges of accessing child exploitation material.<ref name=britton/> **53-year-old crocodile expert ] is sentenced in the ] to more than ten years imprisonment, after having earlier pled guilty to 56 charges relating to the ], torture and murder of more than 42 dogs between 2014 and April 2022.<ref name=britton>{{#invoke:cite news||last=Fitzgerald|first=Roxanne|date=8 August 2024|title=NT crocodile expert Adam Britton sentenced to more than 10 years in prison for bestiality and animal cruelty crimes|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-08/adam-britton-sentenced-bestiality-animal-cruelty/104194702|work=ABC News|access-date=11 August 2024}}</ref> He also admitted to four charges of accessing child exploitation material.<ref name=britton/>
**South Australian opposition leader ] resigns from the Liberal Party leadership but will continue to serve in state parliament as the member for ].<ref>{{#invoke:cite news||last=Keane|first=Daniel|date=8 August 2024|title=SA Liberals' David Speirs resigns as opposition leader to give party 'best possible' chance at next election|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-08/opposition-leader-david-speirs-resigns-as-liberal-leader/104200852|work=ABC News|access-date=10 August 2024}}</ref> **South Australian opposition leader ] resigns from the Liberal Party leadership but will continue to serve in state parliament as the member for ].<ref>{{#invoke:cite news||last=Keane|first=Daniel|date=8 August 2024|title=SA Liberals' David Speirs resigns as opposition leader to give party 'best possible' chance at next election|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-08/opposition-leader-david-speirs-resigns-as-liberal-leader/104200852|work=ABC News|access-date=10 August 2024}}</ref>
**Queensland health minister ] announces that the ] will launch an investigation in the ] mental health institution which closed in 2001, after decades of allegations relating to sexual abuse, beatings and chemical restraint which allegedly occurred between the 1950's and 1980's.<ref>{{cite news|last=Gillespie|first=Eden|date=8 August 2025|title=Queensland government announces investigation into Brisbane's Wolston Park|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-08/queensland-government-to-investigate-wolston-park/104200482|work=ABC News|access-date=11 January 2025}}</ref>
**A 48-year-old Australian man dies in Indonesia after hitting his head on a reef while surfing in ], with ] confirming they are providing assistance to the man's family.<ref>{{#invoke:cite news||last=Evans|first=Duncan|date=11 August 2024|title=Australian Jeremy Wann dies on surfing holiday in Indonesia|url=https://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-updates/incidents/australian-jeremy-wann-dies-on-surfing-holiday-in-indonesia/news-story/c93120952b5ad3c6fef84a94fe51d1dd|work=news.com.au|access-date=11 August 2024}}</ref> **A 48-year-old Australian man dies in Indonesia after hitting his head on a reef while surfing in ], with ] confirming they are providing assistance to the man's family.<ref>{{#invoke:cite news||last=Evans|first=Duncan|date=11 August 2024|title=Australian Jeremy Wann dies on surfing holiday in Indonesia|url=https://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-updates/incidents/australian-jeremy-wann-dies-on-surfing-holiday-in-indonesia/news-story/c93120952b5ad3c6fef84a94fe51d1dd|work=news.com.au|access-date=11 August 2024}}</ref>
*9 August – With 107 confirmed cases of Legionnaires' disease in Melbourne, Victoria's chief health officer Clare Looker confirms all cases in the outbreak are linked to a ] in the suburb of ].<ref>{{#invoke:cite news||author=|date=9 August 2024|title=Victorian health authorities confident they've ringfenced legionnaires' disease outbreak|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-09/victorian-health-legionnaires-disease-outbreak-107-cases/104206912|work=ABC News|access-date=11 August 2024}}</ref> *9 August – With 107 confirmed cases of Legionnaires' disease in Melbourne, Victoria's chief health officer Clare Looker confirms all cases in the outbreak are linked to a ] in the suburb of ].<ref>{{#invoke:cite news||author=|date=9 August 2024|title=Victorian health authorities confident they've ringfenced legionnaires' disease outbreak|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-09/victorian-health-legionnaires-disease-outbreak-107-cases/104206912|work=ABC News|access-date=11 August 2024}}</ref>
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**The Albanese Government confirms it has dumped a proposal to including a question about gender identity and sexuality in the ] which draws criticism from the ], lobby groups and politicians.<ref>{{cite news|last=Basford Canales|first=Sarah|date=26 August 2024|title='Invisible and demeaned': proposed census question for LGBTQ+ Australians dumped by Albanese government|url=https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/article/2024/aug/26/australia-census-sexuality-gender-diversity-excluded|work=The Guardian|access-date=1 September 2024}}</ref> **The Albanese Government confirms it has dumped a proposal to including a question about gender identity and sexuality in the ] which draws criticism from the ], lobby groups and politicians.<ref>{{cite news|last=Basford Canales|first=Sarah|date=26 August 2024|title='Invisible and demeaned': proposed census question for LGBTQ+ Australians dumped by Albanese government|url=https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/article/2024/aug/26/australia-census-sexuality-gender-diversity-excluded|work=The Guardian|access-date=1 September 2024}}</ref>
*27 August – *27 August –
**Thousands protest around Australia in support of the ], after the federal government passed legislation to circumvent a court process by enabling an administrator to be appointed to the union.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-27/cfmeu-protest-melbourne-sydney-brisbane-adelaide-perth/104272304 | title=PM warns of 'consequences' as thousands of CFMEU workers march across Australia | newspaper=ABC News }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.afr.com/work-and-careers/workplace/protests-hear-rogue-cfmeu-leaders-vow-absolute-destruction-of-labor-20240827-p5k5qt | title=Rogue CFMEU leaders vow 'absolute destruction' of Labor | date=27 August 2024 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/thousands-of-workers-strike-in-solidarity-with-cfmeu-across-the-country/9dcj9295k | title=Tens of thousands of workers strike in solidarity with CFMEU across the country }}</ref> Federal ] MP ] is criticised for attending the Brisbane rally where signs were held up depicting Anthony Albanese as ].<ref>{{cite news|last=Speers|first=David|date=29 August 2024|title=Max Chandler-Mather's CFMEU rally antics have given Labor a political weapon to wield against the Greens|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-29/chandler-mather-cfmeu-rally-labor-political-weapon-greens/104281726|work=ABC News|access-date=1 September 2024}}</ref> Greens leader ] defends Chandler-Mather's attendance at the rally describing it as "legitimate" but described the signs and the comparisons as "offensive".<ref>{{cite news|last=Crowley|first=Tom|date=28 August 2024|title=Greens leader defends MP's CFMEU rally attendance but says Nazi sign 'offensive'|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-28/greens-leader-defends-mp-cfmeu-rally-attendance/104281238|work=ABC News|access-date=1 September 2024}}</ref> **Thousands protest around Australia in support of the ], after the federal government passed legislation to circumvent a court process by enabling an administrator to be appointed to the union.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-27/cfmeu-protest-melbourne-sydney-brisbane-adelaide-perth/104272304 | title=PM warns of 'consequences' as thousands of CFMEU workers march across Australia | newspaper=ABC News }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.afr.com/work-and-careers/workplace/protests-hear-rogue-cfmeu-leaders-vow-absolute-destruction-of-labor-20240827-p5k5qt | title=Rogue CFMEU leaders vow 'absolute destruction' of Labor | date=27 August 2024 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/thousands-of-workers-strike-in-solidarity-with-cfmeu-across-the-country/9dcj9295k | title=Tens of thousands of workers strike in solidarity with CFMEU across the country | work=SBS News }}</ref> Federal ] MP ] is criticised for attending the Brisbane rally where signs were held up depicting Anthony Albanese as ].<ref>{{cite news|last=Speers|first=David|date=29 August 2024|title=Max Chandler-Mather's CFMEU rally antics have given Labor a political weapon to wield against the Greens|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-29/chandler-mather-cfmeu-rally-labor-political-weapon-greens/104281726|work=ABC News|access-date=1 September 2024}}</ref> Greens leader ] defends Chandler-Mather's attendance at the rally describing it as "legitimate" but described the signs and the comparisons as "offensive".<ref>{{cite news|last=Crowley|first=Tom|date=28 August 2024|title=Greens leader defends MP's CFMEU rally attendance but says Nazi sign 'offensive'|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-28/greens-leader-defends-mp-cfmeu-rally-attendance/104281238|work=ABC News|access-date=1 September 2024}}</ref>
**] and ] announce they have concluded a joint ] operation that resulted in 1,611 arrests and 2,962 charges nationwide. The police also confiscated almost 1,400 kilograms (3,100&nbsp;lb) of illicit drugs and over 2,500 ] plants, worth 93 million ] (US$63 million).<ref>{{Cite web |title=Australian police carry out massive nationwide drug bust |url=https://www.dw.com/en/australian-police-carry-out-massive-nationwide-drug-bust/a-70056881 |access-date=2024-08-28 |website=dw.com |language=en}}</ref> **] and ] announce they have concluded a joint ] operation that resulted in 1,611 arrests and 2,962 charges nationwide. The police also confiscated almost 1,400 kilograms (3,100&nbsp;lb) of illicit drugs and over 2,500 ] plants, worth 93 million ] (US$63 million).<ref>{{Cite web |title=Australian police carry out massive nationwide drug bust |url=https://www.dw.com/en/australian-police-carry-out-massive-nationwide-drug-bust/a-70056881 |access-date=2024-08-28 |website=dw.com |language=en}}</ref>
**A nine-month-old baby boy suffers burns to his face, chest and arms after an unknown man allegedly deliberately poured hot coffee on him in Hanlon Park in the Brisbane suburb of ].<ref>{{cite news|author=|date=29 August 2024|title=New photos released of man wanting for questioning after hot coffee poured on baby at Brisbane's Hanlon Park|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-29/police-search-for-man-after-hot-coffee-poured-on-baby-boy/104283558|work=ABC News|access-date=29 August 2024}}</ref> **A nine-month-old baby boy suffers burns to his face, chest and arms after an unknown man allegedly deliberately poured hot coffee on him in Hanlon Park in the Brisbane suburb of ].<ref>{{cite news|author=|date=29 August 2024|title=New photos released of man wanting for questioning after hot coffee poured on baby at Brisbane's Hanlon Park|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-29/police-search-for-man-after-hot-coffee-poured-on-baby-boy/104283558|work=ABC News|access-date=29 August 2024}}</ref>
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*28 December – A 40-year-old man is killed in a shark attack while spearfishing at Humpy Island about 18 kilometres from the mainland on Queensland's ].<ref>{{cite news|author=|date=28 December 2024|title=Man dies after shark attack off Central Queensland coast|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-12-28/man-attacked-by-shark-off-central-queensland-coast/104768354|work=ABC News|access-date=28 December 2024}}</ref> The man is later identified as a well-known ].<ref>{{cite news|last=Kumar|first=Anugrah|date=30 December 2024|title=Beloved youth pastor killed in shark attack while spearfishing: 'A young man who loved God'|url=https://www.christianpost.com/news/beloved-youth-pastor-killed-in-shark-attack-while-spearfishing.html|work=The Christian Post|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref> *28 December – A 40-year-old man is killed in a shark attack while spearfishing at Humpy Island about 18 kilometres from the mainland on Queensland's ].<ref>{{cite news|author=|date=28 December 2024|title=Man dies after shark attack off Central Queensland coast|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-12-28/man-attacked-by-shark-off-central-queensland-coast/104768354|work=ABC News|access-date=28 December 2024}}</ref> The man is later identified as a well-known ].<ref>{{cite news|last=Kumar|first=Anugrah|date=30 December 2024|title=Beloved youth pastor killed in shark attack while spearfishing: 'A young man who loved God'|url=https://www.christianpost.com/news/beloved-youth-pastor-killed-in-shark-attack-while-spearfishing.html|work=The Christian Post|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref>
*29 December – A 31-year-old man is shot dead in the Sydney suburb of ].<ref name=canley>{{cite news|last=Boscaini|first=Joshua|date=29 December 2024|title=NSW Police charge man after alleged Canley Heights 'organised crime-related murder' shooting in Sydney's west|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-12-30/investigation-after-man-shot-dead-canley-heights/104769950|work=ABC News|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref> A 33-year-old ] man is subsequently arrested and charged with accessory after the fact to murder with police alleging the death was an "]-related murder."<ref name=canley/><ref>{{cite news|last1=Morri|first1=Mark|last2=Bertah|first2=Aymon|date=31 December 2024|title=Canley Heights shooting victim David Khou was member of Bloodline gang|url=https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/police-courts-nsw/man-shot-dead-on-sutherland-st-canley-heights/news-story/72afc41d5582fc7461c266bd0987b147|work=The Daily Telegraph|access-date=1 January 2024}}</ref> *29 December – A 31-year-old man is shot dead in the Sydney suburb of ].<ref name=canley>{{cite news|last=Boscaini|first=Joshua|date=29 December 2024|title=NSW Police charge man after alleged Canley Heights 'organised crime-related murder' shooting in Sydney's west|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-12-30/investigation-after-man-shot-dead-canley-heights/104769950|work=ABC News|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref> A 33-year-old ] man is subsequently arrested and charged with accessory after the fact to murder with police alleging the death was an "]-related murder."<ref name=canley/><ref>{{cite news|last1=Morri|first1=Mark|last2=Bertah|first2=Aymon|date=31 December 2024|title=Canley Heights shooting victim David Khou was member of Bloodline gang|url=https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/truecrimeaustralia/police-courts-nsw/man-shot-dead-on-sutherland-st-canley-heights/news-story/72afc41d5582fc7461c266bd0987b147|work=The Daily Telegraph|access-date=1 January 2024}}</ref>
*30 December –
*30 December – Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese pays tribute to former president of the United States ] following Carter's death at the age of 100.<ref>{{cite news|last=Olbrycht-Palmer|first=Joseph|date=30 December 2024|title=‘True humanitarian’: PM pays tribute to former US president Jimmy Carter after death aged 100|url=https://www.news.com.au/world/north-america/us-politics/pm-pays-tribute-to-former-us-president-jimmy-carter-after-death-aged-100/news-story/3d3292412d79aa346041abd4d9752bb2|work=news.com.au|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref> **Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese pays tribute to former president of the United States ] following Carter's death at the age of 100.<ref>{{cite news|last=Olbrycht-Palmer|first=Joseph|date=30 December 2024|title='True humanitarian': PM pays tribute to former US president Jimmy Carter after death aged 100|url=https://www.news.com.au/world/north-america/us-politics/pm-pays-tribute-to-former-us-president-jimmy-carter-after-death-aged-100/news-story/3d3292412d79aa346041abd4d9752bb2|work=news.com.au|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref>
**Albanese orders the ] remove a ] which mocked the wife of federal opposition leader ].<ref>{{cite news|author=|date=31 December 2024|title=Prime Minister Anthony Albanese orders Victorian Labor to remove Peter Dutton meme|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-12-31/peter-dutton-labor-meme-pm-orders-takedown/104773522|work=ABC News|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last1=White|first1=Alex|last2=Clarke|first2=Mitch|date=31 December 2024|title=Premier Jacinta Allan finally responds to Peter Dutton 'attack' meme by Labor Party|url=https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/premier-jacinta-allan-finally-responds-to-peter-dutton-attack-meme-by-labor-party/news-story/b263b7ee8d6667562df5a00300654408|work=Herald Sun|access-date=1 January 2025|quote=On Monday night the federal government requested the Victorian branch take down the post. At the time a spokesman for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said when the post was drawn to his attention that he “demanded it be taken down”.}}</ref>


==Arts and entertainment== ==Arts and entertainment==
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===December=== ===December===
*8 December – ''Raygun: The Musical'' created by comedian Steph Broadbridge and inspired by Olympic breaker ] is cancelled ahead of its Sydney premiere on 14 December after Broadbridge receives correspondence from Gunn's lawyers threating legal action if she continues with the show.<ref>{{cite news|last=Hilton|first=Aoife|date=7 December 2024|title=Raygun-inspired musical cancelled over legal threats, Sydney comedian says|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-12-07/raygun-inspired-musical-cancelled-over-alleged-legal-threats/104697998|work=ABC News|access-date=14 December 2024}}</ref> Gunn and her management team both defend the action and claim they took steps to shut down the musical to protect Gunn's personal and professional relationships fearing that people may mistakenly assume they were affiliated with the production.<ref>{{cite news|last=Bennett|first=Emily|date=13 December 2024|title=Raygun explains decision to shut down musical inspired by her Olympic journey|url=https://www.9news.com.au/national/raygun-defends-decision-to-shut-down-musical-inspired-by-her-olympic-journey/b28e38b4-cddd-4631-9815-e2a3b0be27c0|work=Nine News|access-date=14 December 2024}}</ref> The musical's cancellation attracts international media attention.<ref>{{cite news|last=Rossiter|first=Emma|date=8 December 2024|title=Raygun musical cancelled after viral Olympian's legal threat|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c938l80ekejo|work=BBC News|access-date=14 December 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Ronald|first=Issy|date=9 December 2024|title='Raygun: The Musical' pulled after controversial breakdancer calls in lawyers|url=https://edition.cnn.com/2024/12/09/sport/raygun-the-musical-canceled-spt-intl-scli/index.html|work=CNN|access-date=14 December 2024}}</ref> *8 December – ''Raygun: The Musical'' created by comedian Steph Broadbridge and inspired by Olympic breaker ] is cancelled ahead of its Sydney premiere on 14 December after Broadbridge receives correspondence from Gunn's lawyers threatening legal action if she continues with the show.<ref>{{cite news|last=Hilton|first=Aoife|date=7 December 2024|title=Raygun-inspired musical cancelled over legal threats, Sydney comedian says|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-12-07/raygun-inspired-musical-cancelled-over-alleged-legal-threats/104697998|work=ABC News|access-date=14 December 2024}}</ref> Gunn and her management team both defend the action and claim they took steps to shut down the musical to protect Gunn's personal and professional relationships fearing that people may mistakenly assume they were affiliated with the production.<ref>{{cite news|last=Bennett|first=Emily|date=13 December 2024|title=Raygun explains decision to shut down musical inspired by her Olympic journey|url=https://www.9news.com.au/national/raygun-defends-decision-to-shut-down-musical-inspired-by-her-olympic-journey/b28e38b4-cddd-4631-9815-e2a3b0be27c0|work=Nine News|access-date=14 December 2024}}</ref> The musical's cancellation attracts international media attention.<ref>{{cite news|last=Rossiter|first=Emma|date=8 December 2024|title=Raygun musical cancelled after viral Olympian's legal threat|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c938l80ekejo|work=BBC News|access-date=14 December 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Ronald|first=Issy|date=9 December 2024|title='Raygun: The Musical' pulled after controversial breakdancer calls in lawyers|url=https://edition.cnn.com/2024/12/09/sport/raygun-the-musical-canceled-spt-intl-scli/index.html|work=CNN|access-date=14 December 2024}}</ref>
*10 December – The 2024 additions to the ]'s ] registry are announced.<ref name=aussiesounds>{{cite news|last=Groves|first=Emmy|date=11 December 2024|title=Tina Arena's Chains, original Doctor Who theme, Victoria Bitter ad named 2024 Sounds of Australia|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-12-11/act-national-film-and-sound-archive-2024-sounds-of-australia/104708684|work=ABC News|access-date=19 January 2025}}</ref> They are: ]'s 1945 address to the first meeting of the Women's International Radio League on women's status in the ]; the ] voiced by Gordon Gow in 1954; the 1963 '']'' theme composed by ] and ]; the ] advertisement voiced by ] in 1968, the Jimmie Barker Collections from 1972, the earliest ] broadcasts in language from 1975, 1992's Kickin' to the Undersound by ], ]'s 1994 hit "]", the last call of the ] from 2009 and ]' 2013 maiden speech to ].<ref name=aussiesounds/>
*11 Deccember - Tasmania's ] announces the controversial "Ladies Lounge" exhibit will reopen for a "victory lap" from 19 December 2024 until 13 January 2025 following their legal win regarding a discrimination complaint.<ref>{{cite news|author=|date=11 December 2024|title=MONA Ladies' Lounge exhibit to reopen for celebratory 'victory lap' after court win|url=https://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/mona-ladies-lounge-exhibit-to-reopen-for-celebratory-victory-lap-after-court-win/mss045ya1|work=SBS News|agency=Australian Associated Press|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref> *11 Deccember - Tasmania's ] announces the controversial "Ladies Lounge" exhibit will reopen for a "victory lap" from 19 December 2024 until 13 January 2025 following their legal win regarding a discrimination complaint.<ref>{{cite news|author=|date=11 December 2024|title=MONA Ladies' Lounge exhibit to reopen for celebratory 'victory lap' after court win|url=https://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/mona-ladies-lounge-exhibit-to-reopen-for-celebratory-victory-lap-after-court-win/mss045ya1|work=SBS News|agency=Australian Associated Press|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref>
*17 December - Former ] CEO ] is announced as the incoming managing director of the ] and is expected to officially take on the role in March 2025, succeeding ].<ref>{{cite news|last=Clarke|first=Melissa|date=17 December 2024|title=Former Nine Entertainment boss Hugh Marks to take the helm of the ABC|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-12-17/hugh-marks-appointed-new-abc-managing-director/104732406|work=ABC News|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref> *17 December - Former ] CEO ] is announced as the incoming managing director of the ] and is expected to officially take on the role in March 2025, succeeding ].<ref>{{cite news|last=Clarke|first=Melissa|date=17 December 2024|title=Former Nine Entertainment boss Hugh Marks to take the helm of the ABC|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-12-17/hugh-marks-appointed-new-abc-managing-director/104732406|work=ABC News|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref>
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*13 December – ], politician (b. 1955)<ref name="andrews">{{cite news |title=Former minister and member for Menzies Kevin Andrews dies aged 69 |url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-12-14/kevin-andrews-died-minister/104726066 |access-date=14 December 2024 |work=ABC News |date=14 December 2024 |language=en-AU}}</ref> *13 December – ], politician (b. 1955)<ref name="andrews">{{cite news |title=Former minister and member for Menzies Kevin Andrews dies aged 69 |url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-12-14/kevin-andrews-died-minister/104726066 |access-date=14 December 2024 |work=ABC News |date=14 December 2024 |language=en-AU}}</ref>
*14 December – ], judge (b. 1925)<ref>{{cite news|author=|date=19 December 2024|title=WWII RAAF veteren farewelled after passing away at 99|url=https://australianaviation.com.au/2024/12/wwii-raaf-veteran-farewelled-after-passing-away-at-99/|work=Australian Aviation|access-date=21 December 2024|quote=His Honour passed away peacefully at home on Saturday 14 December 2024, aged 99.}}</ref> *14 December – ], judge (b. 1925)<ref>{{cite news|author=|date=19 December 2024|title=WWII RAAF veteren farewelled after passing away at 99|url=https://australianaviation.com.au/2024/12/wwii-raaf-veteran-farewelled-after-passing-away-at-99/|work=Australian Aviation|access-date=21 December 2024|quote=His Honour passed away peacefully at home on Saturday 14 December 2024, aged 99.}}</ref>
*18 December –
*18 December – ], writer (b. 1950)<ref>{{Cite web |date=18 December 2024 |title=John Marsden (1950–2024) |url=https://locusmag.com/2024/12/john-marsden-1950-2024/ |access-date=19 December 2024 |website=]}}</ref> **], writer (b. 1950)<ref>{{Cite web |date=18 December 2024 |title=John Marsden (1950–2024) |url=https://locusmag.com/2024/12/john-marsden-1950-2024/ |access-date=19 December 2024 |website=]}}</ref>
**], paralympic alpine skier (b. 1986)<ref>{{cite news|last=Shand|first=Aslan|date=2 January 2025|title=Vale Marty Mayberry|url=https://www.echo.net.au/2025/01/vale-marty-mayberry/|work=Byron Bay Echo|access-date=3 January 2024|quote=Marty Mayberry, passed away at his home in Brisbane on December 18, 2024.}}</ref>
*19 December – ], cartoonist (b. 1945)<ref>{{cite web|title=Iconic cartoonist Michael Leunig dies aged 79|url=https://7news.com.au/news/iconic-cartoonist-michael-leunig-dies-aged-79-c-17142203|website=7News|date=19 December 2024|access-date=19 December 2024}}</ref> *19 December – ], cartoonist (b. 1945)<ref>{{cite web|title=Iconic cartoonist Michael Leunig dies aged 79|url=https://7news.com.au/news/iconic-cartoonist-michael-leunig-dies-aged-79-c-17142203|website=7News|date=19 December 2024|access-date=19 December 2024}}</ref>
*23 December – ], saltwater crocodile (death announced on this date)<ref>{{cite web|title=Crocodile Dundee croc Burt dies in Australia|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2we313k6ro|website=BBC News|publisher=BBC|date=23 December 2024|access-date=24 December 2024}}</ref> *23 December – ], saltwater crocodile (death announced on this date)<ref>{{cite web|title=Crocodile Dundee croc Burt dies in Australia|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2we313k6ro|website=BBC News|publisher=BBC|date=23 December 2024|access-date=24 December 2024}}</ref>
*29 December – ], filmmaker (b. 1938) (death announced on this date)<ref>{{cite news|last=Quinn|first=Karl|date=29 December 2024|title='A legendary figure': Nigel Buesst, filmmaker and educator, dead at 86|url=https://www.smh.com.au/culture/movies/a-legendary-figure-nigel-buesst-filmmaker-and-educator-dead-at-86-20241229-p5l13m.html|work=The Sydney Morning Herald|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref> *29 December – ], filmmaker (b. 1938) (death announced on this date)<ref>{{cite news|last=Quinn|first=Karl|date=29 December 2024|title='A legendary figure': Nigel Buesst, filmmaker and educator, dead at 86|url=https://www.smh.com.au/culture/movies/a-legendary-figure-nigel-buesst-filmmaker-and-educator-dead-at-86-20241229-p5l13m.html|work=The Sydney Morning Herald|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref>
*30 December – *30 December –
**], Australian rules footballer (b, 1954)<ref>{{cite news|last=Sutton|first=Ben|date=31 December 2024|title=AFL world mourns death of Geelong great Michael Turner, aged 70|url=https://7news.com.au/sport/afl/afl-world-mourns-death-of-geelong-great-michael-turner-aged-70-c-17241864|work=Seven News|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref> **], British-American chemist (b. 1942)<ref name="stoddart">{{cite news |last1=Manso |first1=James |title=Sir Fraser Stoddart, Noble Panacea Founder, Dies at 82|url=https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/other/sir-fraser-stoddart-noble-panacea-founder-dies-at-82/ar-AA1wRsCo |access-date=6 January 2025 |work=MSN |date=3 January 2025}}</ref>
**], Australian rules footballer (b. 1954)<ref>{{cite news|last=Sutton|first=Ben|date=31 December 2024|title=AFL world mourns death of Geelong great Michael Turner, aged 70|url=https://7news.com.au/sport/afl/afl-world-mourns-death-of-geelong-great-michael-turner-aged-70-c-17241864|work=Seven News|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref>
**], jazz musician (b. 1939)<ref>{{cite news|last=Cashmere|first=Paul|date=1 January 2025|title=Australian jazz musician Bob Bertles dies aged 85|url=https://www.noise11.com/news/australian-jazz-musician-bob-bertles-dies-aged-85-20250101|work=Noise11|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref> **], jazz musician (b. 1939)<ref>{{cite news|last=Cashmere|first=Paul|date=1 January 2025|title=Australian jazz musician Bob Bertles dies aged 85|url=https://www.noise11.com/news/australian-jazz-musician-bob-bertles-dies-aged-85-20250101|work=Noise11|access-date=1 January 2025}}</ref>



Latest revision as of 04:37, 19 January 2025

The following is a list of events that occurred in the year 2024 in Australia.

2024 in Australia
MonarchCharles III
Governor-GeneralDavid Hurley, then Sam Mostyn
Prime ministerAnthony Albanese
Population27,122,411 people at 31 March 2024.
Australian of the YearGeorgina Long and Richard Scolyer
ElectionsTasmania, Northern Territory, Australian Capital Territory, Queensland

2024
in
Australia

Decades:
See also:

Incumbents

Further information: Table of precedence for the Commonwealth of Australia

Monarch

Governor-General

Prime Minister

Deputy Prime Minister

Opposition Leader

Chief Justice

State and territory leaders

Governors and administrators

Events

January

  • 1 January –
    • It becomes illegal to import disposable vapes into Australia.
    • As Victoria transitions to clean energy, the state imposes a ban on natural gas connections for new dwellings, apartment buildings and residential subdivisions.
    • Fortnightly Centrelink payments for welfare recipients increase by approximately 6%.
    • Federal Cabinet documents from 2003 are made public for the first time. Controversy arises when it's discovered the Morrison Government failed to hand over some documents relating to Australia's involvement in the 2003 invasion of Iraq to the National Archives in 2020 for public release. Anthony Albanese announces an inquiry will be held to find out whether or not the documents were withheld intentionally.
    • A 76-year-old woman is allegedly sexually assaulted by a 29-year-old intruder at an aged care facility in Coffs Harbour. A 29-year-old man is subsequently arrested and appears in Port Macquarie Local Court on 5 January 2024 charged with aggravated sexual assault and breaking and entering with intent.
  • 2 January –
  • 3 January – A 24-year-old man is arrested by New South Wales Police Force Taskforce Magnus detectives and charged with the murder of major Sydney gangland figure Alen Moradian in an underground carpark on 27 June 2023.
  • 4 January – ADF personnel arrive in South East Queensland after being deployed to help the region in the aftermath of severe weather over the Christmas/New Year period. In Far North Queensland, there are also calls for ADF assistance to help with the clean-up following severe weather caused by Cyclone Jasper.
  • 5 January – Queensland premier Steven Miles announces a $5 million funding agreement between the state and federal government which would see discounted flights and accommodation being offered to tourists to entice them back to Far North Queensland following Cyclone Jasper.
  • 6 January – Eight attendees of the Hardmission Festival at Melbourne's Flemington Racecourse are hospitalised in a critical condition after suspected MDMA overdoses. Seven of those patients are placed in induced comas.
  • 7 January – A 31-year-old man is arrested after allegedly stabbing four strangers at random in Melbourne throughout the previous night. He is charged with 14 assault offences and one of possessing a controlled weapon.
  • 8 January –
    • A light aircraft with ten people onboard flips and crashes on Lizard Island while attempting to land on the island's runway. Despite some of those onboard sustaining injuries, the nine adults and one child survive.
    • The New South Wales Police Force claim to have dismantled a criminal syndicate allegedly attempting to export more than a million dollars of Australian reptiles, including 257 lizards, to Hong Kong.
  • 9 January – Prime minister Anthony Albanese warns Australian supermarkets to pass on savings to consumers stating: "It's not acceptable to see record profits at a time when people are doing it so tough." He announces former Labor minister Craig Emerson will lead a review of the Food and Grocery Code of Conduct while Queensland premier Steven Miles writes to the CEOs of Woolworths, Coles, Aldi and IGA expressing concern about the disparity between retail prices and the amount farmers are paid. The Coalition also call for an ACCC inquiry, accusing the supermarkets of imposing excessive retail markups.
  • 10 January –
  • 14 January – Mary Donaldson becomes the first Australian-born queen consort of a European monarchy when she is proclaimed Queen of Denmark when her husband Frederik X ascends the throne following the abdication of his mother Margrethe II. The decision to mark the occasion by temporarily replacing the Aboriginal flag with the Danish flag at Parliament House in Hobart sparks criticism from some in Tasmania's Aboriginal community.
  • 15 January –
  • 16 January – A 27-year-old mine worker is killed at BMA's Saraji coal mine near Dysart after he is crushed between a B-double and a utility while working in the fuel-bay area of the mine.
  • 17 January –
    • Severe storm activity in the South West region of Western Australia causes widespread and lengthy power outages.
    • A 33-year-old man and a 26 year-old-man are both charged with murder after the fatal shooting of a 34-year-old man whose body was found by a passing motorist on Yeppoon Road near Rockhampton in the early hours of 17 November 2023.
  • 18 January –
    • Workplace Relations minister Tony Burke meets with the Australian Maritime Officers Union and DP World amid an ongoing dispute over pay and conditions which is causing major disruptions at port terminals. Burke refuses to use his ministerial powers to intervene but criticised DP World and accuses the company of acting in bad faith.
    • Two 16-year-old boys are charged with murder following the death of a 33-year-old doctor in the Melbourne suburb of Doncaster after an alleged aggravate burglary on 13 January 2024.
  • 19 January – Queensland premier Steven Miles officially announces a state parliamentary inquiry into grocery prices at the major supermarkets after meeting with executives from Woolworths, Coles and Aldi.
  • 20 January – The MV Bahijah, a live export ship carrying sheep and cattle which departed Fremantle, Western Australia on 5 January is ordered by the Department of Agriculture to return to Australia due to threats against commercial vessels in the Red Sea amid a deteriorating security situation.
  • 21 January – The Victorian Liberal and National opposition announced that they would be withdrawing its support for a state treaty, reversing their previous support for the proposal. This follows the Queensland opposition reversing their support in October 2023.
  • 23 January – Former prime minister Scott Morrison announces his intention to formally resign from parliament, ending his 16-year tenure as the federal Member for Cook. Morrison's departure will trigger a by-election in the safely held Liberal seat of Cook.
  • 24 January –
  • 25 January –
  • 27 January – Queensland state Labor MP Jim Madden resigns from parliament to vie for a position as a local councillor with Ipswich City Council in the 2024 Queensland local elections on 16 March. Madden's resignation triggers the 2024 Ipswich West state by-election which premier Steven Miles recommends to be held on 16 March - the same day as the local elections and the 2024 Inala state by-election.
  • 28 January – Another monument for Captain James Cook is vandalised in Fitzroy North's Edinburgh Gardens in Melbourne. The stone monument is severely damaged, with vandals cutting through the base, disfiguring the bronze effigy, and spraying "Cook the Colony" on the toppled pillar.
  • 29 January – A 29-year-old woman survives an attack by a bull shark in Sydney Harbour.
  • 30 January – Australian retailer Godfreys enters voluntary administration with the company's 54 stores expected to close as a result.
  • 31 January – A 62-year-old Coen man is charged with murder following the disappearance of a Kowanyama woman, who was last seen in February 2013 aged 23. After the man appears in court via videolink, he is remanded in custody due to appear in court again in April 2024.

February

  • 1 February –
  • 3 February –
    • The bodies of a mother and son, a 76-year-old woman and a 55-year-old man, are discovered after they were allegedly murdered in the Adelaide suburb of Rosewater. A 43-year-old man is subsequently charged with two counts of murder.
    • A 70-year-old woman dies after being allegedly stabbed in the chest in front of her six-year-old granddaughter during an alleged robbery at a shopping centre in the Ipswich suburb of Redbank Plains. A 16-year-old boy is subsequently charged with murder.
  • 4 February –
    • 51-year-old Samantha Murphy disappears after leaving her home in Ballarat to go for her regular morning run. Her disappearance triggers a widespread search and appeal from police for CCTV or dashcam vision from the day she disappeared.
    • The body of a 74-year-old man is found in a backyard near Wollongong. The man's 48-year-old son is subsequently arrested and charged with murder.
  • 5 February – Australian writer Yang Hengjun receives a suspended death sentence in Beijing, five years after being charged with spying and imprisoned in China.
  • 6 February – The Australian Parliament returns for the first sitting day of 2024.
  • 7 February – Nationals MP Barnaby Joyce is filmed late at night engaged in a conversation on his phone while lying on his back on a footpath in the Canberra suburb of Braddon. Joyce said he had fallen to the ground from a plant box he had been sitting on while talking to his wife on the phone while on his way back to his accommodation.
  • 8 February – Labor's Right to Disconnect bill passes the Senate but they are forced into an attempt to introduce additional legislation to reverse an amendment which allows for criminal penalties for employers who breach a Fair Work Commission order to stop contacting workers.
  • 9 February – Reserve Bank of Australia governor Michele Bullock appears before a parliamentary hearing for the first time where she says she doesn't agree with the International Monetary Fund that Australia should be lifting interest rates higher.
  • 10 February – Sitting Liberal MP David Honey loses preselection for the next Australian federal election, being defeated by Sandra Brewer.
  • 12 February –
  • 14 February –
  • 15 February – Anthony Albanese releases a joint statement with Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau and New Zealand prime minister Christopher Luxon to express their concerns over Israel's plan for a ground offensive in Rafah. The joint statement is issued after Australian foreign minister Penny Wong expresses her own concerns, describing any ground invasion of Rafah as "unjustifiable".
  • 16 February –
    • The Sydney asbestos crisis worsens as the New South Wales Environment Protection Authority confirms bonded asbestos has been discovered in mulch at a Woolworths supermarket in Kellyville, the St John of God Hospital in North Richmond and a park in Wiley Park. The list of contaminated sites now totals more than twenty sites. In each case, the contaminated mulch is traced back to a waste facility in Bringelly.
    • Tropical Cyclone Lincoln crosses the Northern Territory coast between Port McArthur and the Queensland border as a Category 1 system, bringing heavy rain to communities near the Gulf of Carpentaria.
    • Two groups of approximately 25 foreign nationals are discovered in Beagle Bay, Western Australia after they are believed to have travelled from Indonesia by boat, prompting Australian Border Force officials to travel to the coastal town to question the men. The arrival of the men prompts federal opposition leader Peter Dutton to accuse Anthony Albanese's government of weakening Australia's border protection arrangements. In turn, Albanese accused Dutton of politicising the incident and undermining the country's border protection regime. Another group of foreign nationals are discovered at a remote campsite north of Beagle Bay the following day.
    • 42-year-old mother of five Rebecca Young is allegedly stabbed to death by her husband who then kills himself in an apparent murder-suicide in the Ballarat suburb of Sebastopol.
  • 17 February – Sitting Liberal MP Ian Goodenough loses preselection for the next Australian federal election, being defeated by Vince Connelly.
  • 19 February –
    • Northern Territory Country Liberal MP Joshua Burgoyne is charged by NT Police with careless driving causing serious harm after a two-vehicle accident in Alice Springs on 26 August 2023, and will face court for the first mention of the alleged offence on 4 March 2024.
    • Former Australian Greens leader Bob Brown is arrested for trespassing at an anti-logging protest in Tasmania.
    • Asbestos-contaminated mulch is found at another seven locations in Sydney, bringing the total to 41 separate sites.
  • 20 February –
    • The bodies of a 39-year-old man, his 41-year-old wife and their 7-year-old son are discovered in two separate locations in Sydney. A 49-year-old taekwondo instructor is subsequently charged with murder.
    • Queensland Police Service commissioner Katarina Carroll announces she is stepping down from her position on 1 March 2024, five months before her contract expires.
    • Virgin Australia chief executive officer Jayne Hrdlicka announces she is leaving the company but will continue to serve as CEO until a replacement is appointed.
    • Labor senator for Western Australia Louise Pratt announces she will step down at the 2025 Australian federal election citing health reasons.
  • 21 February –
    • Woolworths chief executive officer Brad Banducci announces his intention to retire in September 2024, with Amanda Bardwell to succeed him in the role.
    • Qantas appoints John Mullen as chairman to succeed Richard Goyder from July 2024.
    • Christopher Saunders, the former Catholic Bishop of Broome, is arrested in Broome by the WA Police Child Abuse Squad and taken into custody. He is subsequently charged with 19 offences dating back to 2008. Saunders' arrest comes after police raided a Broome property on 15 January 2024.
  • 26 February –
    • Vandals saw through the ankles of a statue of Captain Cook in East Melbourne, toppling it.
    • The Board of the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras withdraws their invitation to the NSW Police Force to march in the 2024 Mardi Gras amid the investigation into the alleged murders of television presenter Jesse Baird and his partner Luke Davies. The Australian Federal Police confirm the following day that they have made the decision to also withdraw from marching in the Mardi Gras parade.
  • 27 February –
  • 28 February – An agreement is reached between the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras Board and the NSW Police Force, which sees gay and lesbian liaison police officers permitted to march in the annual parade, but without their uniforms or weapons.
  • 29 February –

March

  • 1 March – An outage occurs at the national Triple Zero centre which is believed to have contributed to the death of a person who suffered a cardiac arrest after their emergency call was unable to be forwarded to paramedics, prompting Telstra to issue an apology. An investigation concludes the incident was caused by a technical fault, a failure in the backup process and a communication error.
  • 2 March –
  • 4 March – Simon Kennedy is selected by the Liberal Party to run as their candidate in the 2024 Cook by-election following the resignation of Scott Morrison.
  • 5 March –
    • A large fire occurs on Jemena's gas pipeline near Bauhinia in Central Queensland which impacts gas supplies to the city of Gladstone.
    • It is reported in the media that soccer player Sam Kerr was charged with "racially aggravated harassment" of a police officer, which allegedly took place in Twickenham on 30 January 2023. She pleads not guilty to the charge. The case is due for trial in February 2025. It is later reported that Kerr is alleged to have called the police officer a "stupid white bastard".
  • 6 March –
  • 7 March –
  • 11 March – Fifty people are injured aboard LATAM Airlines Flight 800 after the aircraft suddenly dropped altitude after departing Sydney causing passengers and crew to be thrown to the roof in what LATAM Airlines described as a "technical fault".
  • 13 March:
    • Seven people are found alive in Western Australia after a three-day search, after they became stranded in the outback due to widespread flooding caused by a stationary trough. Police had previously stated they had urgent welfare concerns for the family members when they failed to arrive home in the remote community of Tjuntjuntjara, having departed Kalgoorlie-Boulder on 10 March.
    • A 37-year-old miner is killed while another is critically injured following a rockfall inside the Ballarat Gold Mine in Victoria.
  • 14 March – An Australian woman is one of two foreign tourists killed in Bali when a landslide sweeps away the villa they were staying in.
  • 16 March –
  • 18 March –
  • 19 March – Ahead of the 2024 Tasmanian state election, American actor Leonardo DiCaprio makes an appeal on Instagram for logging in Tasmania to come to an end.
  • 20 March –
    • In an interview with Nigel Farage on GB News, former United States president Donald Trump threatens to oust Australian ambassador Kevin Rudd from his position if he shows any hostility should Trump again become president.
    • Foreign minister Penny Wong meets her Chinese counterpart Wang Yi in Canberra for the Australia-China Foreign and Strategic Dialogue. Prior to Wang's meeting with former prime minister Paul Keating the following day, Wong warns that Keating is "entitled to his views" but that "he does not speak for the government nor the country."
  • 21 March – Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi hosts former Australian prime minister Paul Keating at the China consulate in Sydney.
  • 23 March –
  • 25 March –
    • A British national dies after jumping from the Noosa Sound Bridge in Queensland in an apparent accident.
    • Federal Liberal MP Rowan Ramsey announces he will not be recontesting the next Australian federal election.
  • 26 March –
    • Violence and unrest breaks out in Alice Springs which leads to Northern Territory chief minister Eva Lawler declaring a state of emergency and the introduction of a two-week curfew for under 18's. There are also calls for federal intervention.
    • It is revealed a wild magpie which had been visiting a Gold Coast couple and bonding with their English staffy since they rescued it as a chick in 2020 had been "voluntarily surrendered" to DESI who accused the couple of taking the magpie from the wild and keeping it unlawfully. The magpie's seizure draws widespread condemnation with Queensland premier Steven Miles stating that common sense needed to prevail in this instance and that he would support the authorities to work with the couple so they could obtain the appropriate permits.
  • 28 March –
  • 30 March –
  • 31 March –
    • Five people are rescued in a major operation after 26 people became stranded by rapidly rising flooding at a campground at East Leichhardt Dam near Mount Isa.
    • A 38-year-old man and a 65-year-old man drown in a hotel pool on the Gold Coast after going to the aid of their two-year-old daughter and granddaughter who had slipped into the pool.

April

  • 2 April – Foreign minister Penny Wong confirms an Australian World Central Kitchen aid worker has been killed in an apparent Israeli air strike in Gaza.
  • 3 April – Sam Mostyn is announced as Australia's next Governor-General, succeeding David Hurley. Some right-wing commentators such as Sky News Australia host Chris Kenny and former executive director of the libertarian think tank Institute of Public Affairs, John Roskam, politician Pauline Hanson, and conservative lobby group Advance Australia, criticised the appointment owing to her past activism, which included having referred to Australia Day as "Invasion Day" and support for Australia to become a republic.
  • 4 April – The state member of the Northern Tablelands Adam Marshall announces he will leave the New South Wales Parliament in May to pursue employment in the private sector. Marshall's impending resignation will trigger the 2024 Northern Tablelands state by-election.
  • 4–6 April – Intense torrential rainfall affects parts of New South Wales and Queensland, with the Greater Sydney region, the Mid North Coast and the Illawarra being among the areas worst affected. More than 150 flood rescues are carried out, and two bodies are found in floodwaters in Brisbane and Sydney respectively. The Warragamba Dam spills over with authorities also expecting the Woronora Dam, Cataract Dam and Nepean Dam to overflow.
  • 9 April –
    • A 21-year-old man appears in the Magistrates Court in Ballarat, Victoria charged with the murder of his 23-year-old ex-partner Hannah McGuire whose body was found in a burnt out car in Scarsdale on 5 April. McGuire's death is the third such death in the Ballarat area allegedly caused by a male perpetrator following the alleged murders of Rebecca Young and Samantha Murphy, which sparks a national conversation about the prevention of violence against women, and the organisation of a snap rally to protest against men's violence.
    • Foreign minister Penny Wong uses a speech at the Australian National University in Canberra to announce that the Australian Government is considering recognising Palestinian statehood, and repeats that the international recognition of Palestine as a state could assist in building momentum towards a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine. Her comments provoke widespread debate and criticism.
    • The Tasmania Civil and Administrative Tribunal finds the Museum of Old and New Art in Hobart had engaged in direct discrimination after refusing a man entry into the "Ladies Lounge" exhibit during his visit in April 2023. The museum is ordered to stop refusing entry to people who do not identify as "ladies" within 28 days.
  • 13 April –
    • Six people are killed in a mass stabbing at Westfield Bondi Junction shopping centre in Sydney. The offender is shot dead by police inspector Amy Scott who is praised for her actions. John Singleton's daughter Dawn and Kerry Good's daughter Ashlee are among the victims who were fatally stabbed. A security officer who was working at the centre is also stabbed to death.
    • The 2024 Cook by-election is held, which is easily won by Liberal candidate Simon Kennedy who achieves 62.61% of the first preference vote, defeating his nearest rival Greens candidate Martin Moore who attracts 16.68% of the first preference vote.
  • 15 April –
  • 16 April –
    • Australia's e-safety commissioner Julie Inman Grant orders X and Meta to remove footage of the stabbing of Mar Mari Emmanuel. The order is met with resistance from Elon Musk and prompts a protracted debate about free speech, with Musk refusing to delete the videos although it had blocked the content in Australia. A two-day injunction to compel X to hide posts that include the footage of the attack was later extended to 10 May 2024.
    • Outgoing Woolworths Group CEO Brad Banducci is threatened with jail time after failing to answer a question put to him by Greens senator Nick McKim during a Senate inquiry into supermarket pricing.
    • Authorities report the worst mass coral bleaching incident on the Great Barrier Reef on record.
  • 17 April – New research released by The Australia Institute finds that red imported fire ants will likely cost Australians more than $22 billion by the 2040s if eradications efforts are unsuccessful.
  • 22 April –
  • 23 April – 49-year-old Emma Bates is found dead at a property in Cobram, Victoria. A 39-year-old man is subsequently charged with her alleged murder.
  • 25 April –
  • 26 April –
    • 30-year-old Erica Hay is found dead in a fire-damaged property in Perth. A 35-year-old man is subsequently charged with her alleged murder.
    • Weekend rallies against gender-based violence commence being held across Australia organised by advocacy group What Were You Wearing, as part of a nationwide campaign to end violence against women. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's appearance at the rally in Canberra on 28 April ends in controversy when his claims that his requests to speak at the rally had been declined were described by organiser Sarah Williams as a "full out lie" who then breaks down in tears.
  • 29 April – A 10-year-old girl is allegedly stabbed to death by her 17-year-old sister in Boolaroo, New South Wales. The older sibling is subsequently arrested and charged with murder.
  • 30 April –

May

  • 1 May – Qantas issues an apology after a data breach allowed customers using the app to see information of other passengers including their names and their upcoming flights.
  • 2 May –
    • A jury takes just 30 minutes to find 36-year-old Portmorseby Cecil guilty of the violent murder of his 71-year-old mother-in-law Sue Duffy, whom he stabbed 15 times with a hunting knife during a fit of rage in Rockhampton on 21 August 2022.
    • A 21-year-old man dies after allegedly being stabbed in a beach carpark in Coffs Harbour. A 36-year-old man is subsequently arrested on 3 June 2024 and charged with the alleged murder.
  • 3 May – Mexican authorities in Ensenada, Baja California confirm three bodies have been discovered near where Australian brothers Jake and Callum Robinson and their American friend went missing on 27 April.
  • 4 May –
    • Queensland's assistant minister for health Brittany Lauga alleges she was drugged and then sexually assaulted on 28 April 2024 during a night out in Yeppoon, with the alleged incident filmed by bystanders who then post the video on Snapchat.
    • A 16-year-old boy armed with a knife is shot dead by Western Australia Police with a single shot in a Bunnings carpark in the Perth suburb of Willetton after two tasers "didn't have the full desired effect". He was subsequently found to have stabbed another man a short time earlier nearby. Premier Roger Cook later described the boy as having been radicalised online.
  • 5 May – The triennial week-long Beef Australia expo gets underway in Queensland.
  • 6 May –
    • The body of a man is discovered off the coast of Sydney after he is earlier reported missing when he goes overboard on the P&O Cruises ship Pacific Adventure.
    • In a settlement with the ACCC, Qantas agrees to pay a $100 million fine and to repay $20 million in compensation to customers after allegedly selling tickets for more than 8,000 flights which had already been cancelled.
    • Queensland premier Steven Miles uses Labour Day to announce that the state's public servants will soon be entitled to ten days paid leave to access reproductive health care at a cost of $80 million each year. A pro-Palestine protestor is later arrested for allegedly throwing eggs at Miles during the annual Labour Day March in Brisbane.
  • 7 May –
    • Melbourne school Yarra Valley Grammar confirms two of its male students have been expelled following the discovery of an offensive spreadsheet in which female students were ranked on their appearance. A number of other students are also suspended over the dossier which included references to sexual violence and used the term "unrapeable". Victorian premier Jacinta Allan describes the behaviour of the students as "misogynist, disgraceful, disgusting and utterly unacceptable".
    • The Reserve Bank of Australia announces it will leave the interest rate steady at 4.35%.
  • 8 May –
  • 9 May – Hunter Valley Grammar School attracts criticism and prompts a national debate after their decision to rename their annual Mother's Day stall to "Family Gift Stall".
  • 10 May –
    • Bruce Lehrmann is ordered by the Federal Court of Australia to pay most of Network 10's legal fees following his failed defamation case against the network and journalist Lisa Wilkinson.
    • A tornado hits the Western Australian city of Bunbury causing extensive damage, and causing at least two people to be admitted to hospital.
    • Norio Nagata, the vice-speaker of Minokama city assembly in Gifu Prefecture in central Japan resigns after an alleged incident involving the daughter of Dubbo mayor Mathew Dickerson in which Nagata allegedly sexually harassed her at a karaoke afterparty following a welcome reception on 3 April. Minokamo's mayor Hiroto Fujii had earlier issued an apology to its sister city, which Dickerson accepted.
  • 11 May –
  • 13 May –
    • A 19-year-old man is sentenced to 14 years in jail after pleading guilty to the murder of 41-year-old Emma Lovell during a break-in at her Brisbane home on 26 December 2022, where the man fatally stabbed Lovell.
    • A 53-year-old pilot successfully completes a belly landing at Newcastle Airport after his plane's landing gear fails.
    • An autonomous driverless train loaded with iron ore derails after the train, operated by Rio Tinto, collides with a set of stationery wagons near Karratha prompting the Office of the National Rail Safety Regulator to investigate.
  • 14 May –
  • 15 May –
    • The Tasmanian Civil and Administrative Tribunal dismisses an appeal against Hobart City Council's decision to remove a statue of Tasmanian premier William Crowther. However before the decision was delivered, vandals had cut the statue down and sprayed graffiti on the plinth.
    • Labor senator Fatima Payman accuses Israel of genocide and calls on her own party to cease trade with Israel. Her comments, particularly her use of the controversial phrase "From the river to the sea" draw widespread condemnation.
  • 16 May –
    • The Federal Court of Australia rules that federal environment minister Tanya Plibersek does not need to consider environmental impacts of emissions when she gives approvals for gas or coal projects.
    • Australians are urged to reconsider their need to travel to New Caledonia after violent riots break out in the French territory. Foreign minister Penny Wong later states that Australia is working with authorities to assess options to ensure the safe return of Australians who are stranded in New Caledonia.
  • 18 May –
  • 19 May –
    • It's revealed that six soldiers serving at RAAF Base Richmond tested positive to illicit drugs just days before special forces soldier Jack Fitzgibbon was killed during parachute training on 6 March 2024.
    • A New South Wales police officer on traffic duty near Sydney's Hyde Park is allegedly stabbed in the head by a 34-year-old man. The officer is treated for non-life threatening injuries at the scene before being taken to St Vincent's Hospital.
    • Six people are arrested in Melbourne after pro-Palestinian protestors descend on the pro-Israel "Stop the Hate, Mate" rally held on the steps of Parliament House and organised by a Christian group called Never Again is Now.
    • The bodies of a 38-year-old man and a two-year-old boy are discovered in Lismore, New South Wales after a suspected murder-suicide.
  • 21 May –
    • Telstra confirms it plans to sack 2,800 people in a cost-cutting measure, with most of the jobs to be axed at the end of 2024.
    • Eight Australians are among the 18 passengers hospitalised after sustaining injuries aboard Singapore Airlines Flight 321 when the aircraft hit severe clear-air turbulence en route from London to Singapore, killing a 73-year-old British passenger. Among the 211 passengers, there were 56 Australians on board the aircraft during the incident.
    • The first group Australians stranded in New Caledonia are successfully evacuated by the Royal Australian Air Force.
  • 22 May –
    • Supreme Court judge Elizabeth Hollingworth sentences 52-year-old Sven Linderman to 31 years in jail for killing his girlfriend Monique Lezsak in front of her 10-year-old-daughter in May 2023.
    • Agriculture Victoria confirms the H7N3 strain of avian influenza has been detected at an egg farm in Victoria, forcing hundreds of thousands of chickens to be euthanased. The Victorian Department of Health also confirm there had previously been a human case of the H5N1 strain of avian influenza after a child returning from overseas tested positive in March, but who has since recovered.
  • 23 May – An earthquake with a magnitude of 3.9 occurs in the Southern Tablelands of New South Wales.
  • 24 May – 59-year-old Jennifer Petelczyc and her 18-year-old daughter Gretl are murdered by 63-year-old Mark James Bombara who then shoots himself dead in the Perth suburb of Floreat. Bombara's daughter subsequently accuses WAPOL of repeatedly ignoring her requests for help with her father. Federal social services minister Amanda Rishworth also describes the response from WAPOL prior to the murders as "inadequate."
  • 30 May – The "Keep the Sheep" campaign is launched by Western Australia's agricultural sector, protesting the Federal Government's decision to end live sheep exports. The campaign's launch is preceded by a large protest rally in Perth the following day in which trucks and farm vehicles were used to bring traffic to a crawl in the Perth CBD.

June

  • 1 June –
    • Deputy prime minister Richard Marles is confronted by officers from China's People's Liberation Army at the Shangri-La Dialogue conference in Singapore after they took issue with Marles' speech.
    • An explosion destroys a townhouse in the Western Sydney suburb of Whalan, trapping a woman and causing injuries to five others. The woman's body is eventually found by rescue crews in the early hours of 3 June.
    • The body of a 28-year-old hiker is discovered in Tasmania, having been last seen on 29 May 2024 while hiking at Frenchmans Cap.
    • Three teenagers whose vehicle became bogged are rescued from a remote beach on Western Australia's Mid West Coast after a pilot spots a distress message they had written in the sand prompting him to contact the authorities, with a second pilot also spotting the message.
    • A severe storm hits Bunbury in Western Australia causing extensive damage to the city.
  • 2 June –
    • The body of a 78-year-old woman is discovered at a Canberra townhouse with police treating her death as a domestic violence incident.
    • The body of Natasha Ryan is discovered on a golf course in Rockhampton. Police say there are no suspicious circumstances.
    • The body of a 64-year-old man is discovered in the Northern Territory, after he went missing while hiking along the Larapinta Trail.
    • Human remains discovered by police during an unrelated operation in the Blue Mountains on 30 April 2024 and 27 May 2024 are identified as belonging to Geelong woman Kellie Ann Carmichael who disappeared on 29 April 2001.
    • The bodies of a woman and a man are discovered at a property at Albany Creek near Brisbane in a suspected murder-suicide.
    • A man is killed when the e-scooter he was riding collides with a ute near Newcastle.
    • The body of a 61-year-old woman is discovered in the Perth suburb of Byford. Her 33-year-old son is subsequently arrested approximately 200 kilometres away in Bindi Bindi.
  • 3 June –
  • 4 June –
  • 6 June –
    • The National Anti-Corruption Commission announces it will not pursue new corruption investigations into six public officials associated with the Robodebt scheme, despite receiving referrals from Catherine Holmes following the Royal Commission into the Robodebt Scheme.
    • Queensland deputy coroner Stephanie Gallagher finds that the 2017 death of Constance Watcho was "suspicious" but there was insufficient evidence to identify anyone involved in her death.
    • A 16-year-old girl who tortured a 13-year-old girl for four hours on 11 March 2023 in Tewantin while filming it and then uploading it to social media is sentenced in the Maroochydore District Court to two years' detention, wholly suspended with a conditional release order, and ordered to do 160 hours of community service but without a conviction being recorded.
  • 7 June –
  • 9 June –
  • 10 June – The United States Consulate General in Sydney is vandalised by a pro-Palestinian activist.
  • 11 June –
    • Victoria Police confirm a teenage boy had been arrested and then released pending further inquiries during their investigation into the circulation of obscene deepfake photographs depicting approximately 50 female students in years 9 to 12 from Bacchus Marsh Grammar School. Victorian premier Jacinta Allan condemns the actions of the alleged perpetrators.
    • Federal Liberal MP Gavin Pearce announces he will not be recontesting the next Australian federal election.
  • 12 June –
  • 13 June –
    • 35-year-old Tobias Sahlstorfer is sentenced to life imprisonment for murdering 36-year-old Mark Boyce in the Adelaide suburb of Elizabeth South in January 2017. Sahlstorfer is the second person to be sentenced for Boyce's murder, with Joshua Roy Grant also sentenced to life imprisonment in November 2019 with a non-parole period of 20 years.
    • The New South Wales Court of Criminal Appeal dismisses an appeal by former teacher Chris Dawson who appealed against his conviction for murdering Lynette Simms.
    • It's announced an independent inquiry will be held into the National Anti-Corruption Commission's decision not to pursue new investigations into public officials associated with the Robodebt scheme despite receiving referrals from Catherine Holmes following the Royal Commission.
  • 15 June – It's reported approximately 300 executive positions from Transport for NSW are expected to be abolished over a period of three years.
  • 16 June – Several hundred protestors gather outside Adelaide Zoo during a visit by Chinese premier Li Qiang who announces two new pandas will be loaned to the zoo when Wang Wang and Fu Ni return to China.
  • 17 June –
  • 18 June – Former treasurer of New South Wales Matt Kean announces his resignation from politics. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese subsequently announces Kean as the new chair of the Climate Change Authority.
  • 19 June –
    • The Melbourne office of Labor MP Josh Burns is extensively damaged by pro-Palestinian protestors who vandalise the office by smashing windows, pouring paint and starting fires. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese condemns the attack and said the targeting of a Jewish MP was "very distressing".
    • Leader of the Opposition Peter Dutton and the Liberal party reveal seven sites for their proposed nuclear power plants.
    • A delegation of Australian senior ministers including Richard Marles, Penny Wong and Pat Conroy arrive in Papua New Guinea at attend the 30th Ministerial Forum in Port Moresby. During the visit, Australia announces a range of initiatives under a bilateral security agreement with Papua New Guinea.
    • A jury finds 33-year-old Justin Laurens Stein guilty of murdering 9-year-old Charlise Mutten in January 2022.
    • A 34-year-old woman is allegedly shot and killed as she sat in her own vehicle with her two children in her driveway in the Queensland city of Mackay. A 31-year-old man is subsequently charged with her murder, and the attempted murder of neighbour who attempted to render assistance.
  • 20 June –
  • 21 June – The bodies of a man and a woman with gunshot wounds are discovered on an isolated walking track near Wreck Beach in Victoria but police say there are not treating the deaths as suspicious.
  • 23 June – Adelaide's Westfield Marion shopping centre in Adelaide is sent into a lockdown when two group of teenage boys allegedly start brawling in the food court, with some armed with extendable batons and a machete. Two teenage boys are later arrested and charged with assault, affray and aggravated robbery.
  • 24 June – South Australia's so-called "bicycle bandit", 73-year-old former police officer and firefighter Kym Allen Parsons is sentenced in the Supreme Court to 35 years imprisonment with a non-parole period of 28 years after admitting to carrying out eleven armed robberies across the state between 2004 and 2014, stealing nearly $359,000. However, he dies two days later on 26 June 2024 after having been granted access to voluntary assisted dying.
  • 25 June –
    • WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is freed from HM Prison Belmarsh in the United Kingdom after agreeing to plead guilty to one charge of breaching the espionage law in the United States in a deal which allows him to return home to Australia.
    • The bodies of two men, a woman and a teenage boy are discovered at a property in the Melbourne suburb of Broadmeadows. Police say they don't believe the deaths to be suspicious.
    • 57-year-old former Jetstar pilot Greg Lynn is found guilty by a jury of murdering 73-year-old Carol Clay in Victoria's Wonnangatta Valley in 2020. However, the jury acquits him of murdering 74-year-old Russell Hill.
    • Labor senator Fatima Payman risks expulsion from her party when she crosses the floor to vote against Labor when the Australian Greens move a motion calling for the senate to recognise the State of Palestine. Payman later reveals she had been rebuked by Anthony Albanese during a "stern but fair" conversation, who also bars her from Labor caucus meetings during the current parliamentary sitting as punishment.
  • 26 June – Julian Assange arrives back in Australia, with his plane touching down in Canberra just after 7:30pm, after which Prime Minister Anthony Albanese phones Assange to welcome him home.
  • 27 June – Two teenagers who attacked former rugby union player Toutai Kefu, his wife and their two adult children during a home invasion in August 2021 are sentenced to seven years and eight years in custody respectively.
  • 28 June –
    • A large street brawl erupts in Halls Creek, Western Australia with police alleging up to 60 people were involved in the "out of control gathering" prompting extra officers to be flown into the town to assist. Police allege up to 40 of the people involved in the brawl were armed with sticks, stones, bricks, knives and metal bars. By Sunday morning, nine people had been charged for offences relating to being armed and the failure to follow orders from police.
    • A woman aged in her 50's dies in Mighell, Queensland after an alleged domestic violence related stabbing. Her 51-year-old de facto partner is subsequently charged with murder.
  • 29 June –
  • 30 June –
    • At least three people are killed when a Greyhound Australia coach carrying 33 people collides with a car towing a caravan on the Bruce Highway near the town of Gumlu.
    • Labor senator Fatima Payman confirms she has now been indefinitely suspended from the Labor caucus following an interview on ABC TV's Insiders program where she said she would cross the floor again if need be. A Labor spokesperson confirms that Payman had been suspended because she had "placed herself outside the privilege" of participating in the caucus but would be permitted to return when she decides to respect the caucus and her colleagues.

July

  • 1 July –
  • 2 July –
    • Australia issues statements to several social media and search engine websites commanding them to draft and enforce guidelines to prevent minors from seeing inappropriate material by 3 October, or else the companies will face national restrictions.
    • A man who stole Nick Kyrgios' car after holding Kyrgios' mother at gunpoint is sentenced in the ACT Supreme Court to more than four years jail after earlier pleading guilty to offences including robbery with an offensive weapon.
    • A 12-year-old girl goes missing near Palumpa, Northern Territory after reportedly being attacked by a crocodile. The human remains belonging to the girl are located by Northern Territory Police on 4 July 2024.
  • 3 July –
    • A woman's body is discovered at a tip in the Melbourne suburb of Epping, triggering a homicide investigation.
    • Australian online bookseller Booktopia enters voluntary administration.
  • 4 July –
  • 5 July – A 24-year-old man dies in a workplace accident at a joinery business in Roma, Queensland.
  • 6 July –
    • Papua New Guinea petroleum minister Jimmy Maladina is arrested in Sydney and charged with an alleged domestic assault offence following an alleged altercation with a 31-year-old woman in Bondi.
    • A man is shot dead by police after allegedly approaching officers with a knife at a police station in Townsville.
    • The annual NAIDOC Awards are held in Adelaide, where Muriel Bamblett is named NAIDOC Person of the Year and Dulcie Flower receives the Lifetime Achievement Award.
  • 7 July –
    • A 10-month-old girl and two boys, aged 2 and 4, die in a house fire in the Sydney suburb of Lalor Park. Four other children aged between 6 and 11 as well as a 29-year-old woman are taken to hospital. A 28-year-old man is subsequently arrested and placed into custody and under police guard in hospital.
    • Four off-duty NT police officers are allegedly assaulted by a group of approximately 20 youths in Alice Springs. This incident coupled with several other violent incidents in the town prompt the Northern Territory's police commissioner to implement a three-night curfew for both children and adults.
    • A 24-year-old man serving as an infantry team leader for the Ukrainian Foreign Legion becomes the seventh Australian killed while fighting in the Russo-Ukrainian War following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.
    • During an appearance on ABC TV's Insiders, deputy leader of the Greens Mehreen Faruqi repeatedly refuses to answer a question about whether terrorist organisation Hamas should be dismantled.
    • Bill Shorten confirms sex work will no longer be funded through the NDIS under planned reforms.
    • During an appearance on Network 10's The Project, former Liberal prime minister Malcolm Turnbull describes current Liberal leader Peter Dutton as a "thug", having also described Dutton as a "thug" in the 2024 ABC series Nemesis.
  • 10 July –
    • The three bodies of an Australian couple and a family member are discovered dead at a luxury resort at Tagaytay in the Philippines in a suspected murder.
    • Violence continues in Alice Springs with approximately 50 people being involved in an afternoon brawl outside a Coles supermarket. Three men and two teenage females are arrested and a number of weapons seized including spears, nulla nullas, a baseball bat and a machete.
    • A Fraser Coast Regional Council staff member threatens to call the police on One Nation leader Pauline Hanson for doing a live interview with Sky News Australia while standing next to a statue of Mary Poppins in the Queensland city of Maryborough. Fraser Coast deputy mayor Paul Truscott and CEO Ken Diehm both apologise to Hanson the following day with Truscott describing the request as "unfounded" due to the fact that the statue is located in a public place.
  • 11 July –
  • 12 July –
  • 13 July –
  • 14 July –
    • Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese, federal opposition leader Peter Dutton, ambassador to the United States Kevin Rudd, and former prime ministers Scott Morrison and Tony Abbott are among current and former Australian leaders who condemn the attempted assassination former president Donald Trump at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania.
    • The bodies of a man and a woman are discovered in Melbourne's Maribyrnong River but Victoria Police don't believe the deaths are linked. While police believe the woman's death to be suspicious and is being investigated by the Homicide Squad, the man's death is believed to be non-suspicious. Despite the bodies being found within 90 minutes of each other approximately 1.7 kilometres apart, police say there is nothing to link the two deaths.
  • 15 July –
    • Victorian premier Jacinta Allan says she has asked Labor's national executive to suspend the construction division of the CFMEU from the Victorian Labor Party following allegations of serious misconduct. Allan describes the allegations as "thuggish and appalling" and which she says have been referred to Victoria Police and the IBAC. National CFMEU secretary Zach Smith also confirms the Victorian branch would be placed into administration as he establishes an independent process to investigate the allegations, which will be overseen by a "leading legal figure".
    • Queensland police discover the body of a 28-year-old woman with multiple stab wounds at a home in the Ipswich suburb of Leichhardt. A 36-year-old man is subsequently charged with the woman's murder.
    • After a four-week trial in Sydney's Downing Centre District Court, three men are found guilty of multiple charges relating to the gang rape of three young women at an Airbnb apartment in Newcastle during a bucks party weekend in 2022.
    • The Australian Government confirms King Charles III and Queen Camilla will visit Australia in October 2024.
    • During his weekly spot on local radio station 4RO, Queensland Labor MP Barry O'Rourke admits he uses the electoral roll to obtain addresses of people who leave negative comments on his Facebook page so he can visit them in person, which prompts accusations of intimidation from federal LNP MP Michelle Landry and One Nation's James Ashby. However, premier Steven Miles defends O'Rourke, describing it as "a entirely appropriate use of the electoral roll."
  • 17 July –
    • The allegations of serious misconduct within the CFMEU continues to have repercussions with federal workplace minister Tony Burke asking the Australian Federal Police to investigation the allegations, describing the alleged conduct as "abhorrent" and "intolerable." The ACTU also suspends the construction and general division of the CFMEU as it calls on its members to support the appointment of an independent administrator. New South Wales premier Chris Minns also moves to suspend the union from the NSW Labor Party and seeks to stop the party receiving donations from the union. Anthony Albanese also confirms the Queensland branch will also be affected by the decision to appoint an administrator.
    • A memorial service is held near Amsterdam to commemorate the 10th anniversary of when Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 was shot down over Ukraine, killing 298 people including 38 Australians.
    • Fortescue Mining announces that approximately 700 of its staff are to be made redundant.
  • 18 July –
    • The Australian Labor Party's national executive cuts ties with the CFMEU's construction division, suspending the affiliation with the New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia and Tasmanian branches of the ALP.
    • Electronic prescription provider MediSecure confirms the personal data of 12.9 million Australians were stolen in the large scale data breach earlier in the year.
    • The ATSB releases its final report into the collision of two Viper S-211 Marchetti planes above Port Phillip Bay in November 2023 in which pilot Stephen Gale and camera operator James Rose were killed.
  • 19 July –
    • A major IT network outage occurs in Australia and globally affecting a large number of companies and services.
    • Former New South Wales premier Dominic Perrottet announces he is leaving parliament to take up a position as BHP's United States head of corporate and external affairs.
    • A 23-year-old woman dies after allegedly being deliberately struck by a four-wheel-drive in Daisy Hill, south of Brisbane. A 24-year-old woman is subsequently charged with murder.
  • 21 July – A 40-year-old man and one of his twin two-year-old daughters are killed at Sydney's Carlton railway station after the pram carrying the twin girls rolled onto the tracks and into the path of an oncoming train. New South Wales premier Chris Minns describes it as "a very confronting and sad day."
  • 22 July – Two Australian broadcast technicians in France for the Nine Network's Olympics coverage are allegedly assaulted in Le Bourget.
  • 23 July –
    • French police confirm they are investigating allegations that a 25-year-old Australian woman was allegedly gang raped by five men in Paris in the early hours of 20 July.
    • A 23-year-old surfer has his leg severed in a shark attack on the New South Wales Mid North Coast near Port Macquarie. He is flown to John Hunter Hospital in Newcastle in a stable but critical condition.
  • 24 July –
    • Four teenagers are sentenced to between 17 and 19.5 years imprisonment for the 2022 murder of 16-year-old Declan Cutler in the Melbourne suburb of Reservoir after they were all found guilty following a judge-only trial in February 2024.
    • The body of a 27-year-old bushwalker is discovered by search crews near one of the approaches to Tasmania's Federation Peak. Police confirm the man appears to have died after an apparent significant fall, with the body unable to be retrieved until windy conditions ease.
    • Queensland Attorney-General Yvette D'Ath lodges an appeal over the sentences handed down to two teenagers who attacked Toutai Kefu and his family in 2021, with D'Ath stating that it is being lodged "on the grounds the sentences imposed were manifestly inadequate."
    • The wreckage of the MV Noongah, which sank in 1969 with the loss of 21 lives, is discovered off the coast of South West Rocks, New South Wales.
  • 25 July –
  • 28 July –
    • Prime Minister Anthony Albanese reshuffles his cabinet due to the impending retirements of Linda Burney and Brendan O'Connor, which sees senator Malarndirri McCarthy succeed Burney as the minister for Indigenous affairs while Andrew Giles is moved to the skills and training portfolio. Clare O'Neil also moves to the housing portfolio.
    • Roughly 40 members of the Victorian chapter of the far-right National Socialist Network hold a flash rally, where they marched from Melbourne's Fed Square to Flinders Street Station, clad in all black and carrying a large "Mass Deportations Now" banner. One person was "arrested at the scene and was interviewed for grossly offensive public conduct," a spokesperson for Victoria Police said.
  • 29 July –
    • Sakina Muhammad Jan becomes the first person to be jailed under Australia's forced marriage laws, after ordering her 21-year-old daughter to wed a man who later murdered her.
    • Rex Airlines enters a trading halt, with speculation that the company is seeking voluntary administration. This sparked comparisons with Bonza, who was collapsed and wound up later in the year. Rex later suspended ticket sales, with plans to exit back out of the metropolitan market and/or appoint EY as administrators.
    • Twenty Carls Jr. restaurants in Australia close immediately after the company's Australian licensee entered voluntary administration.
  • 30 July –
    • Victoria's health department confirms 33 people have been diagnosed with Legionnaires' disease within an outbreak affecting the northern and western suburbs of Melbourne.
    • A woman in her 90's is the first person to die in the Legionnaires' disease outbreak in Melbourne.
  • 31 July – Billson's Brewery enters administration. Thirty staff at the company are made redundant.

August

  • 1 August –
    • A man aged in his 60's becomes the second person to die in Melbourne's Legionnaires' disease outbreak.
    • Foreign minister Penny Wong advises Australians in Lebanon to leave immediately as tensions increase between Israel and Hezbollah following the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Iran.
    • Controversy arises when it emerges an Officeworks employee in the Melbourne suburb of Elsternwick had denied service to a Jewish man in March 2024, refusing to laminate an article from The Australian Jewish News because she was "pro-Palestine." Officeworks apologises, stating their polices were incorrectly applied and that the staff member had undergone education regarding discrimination which included resources from the Melbourne Holocaust Museum.
    • The Queensland Government's ban on new gas exploration throughout the Channel Country comes into effect, stopping any new fracking projects after amendments were made to the Regional Planning Interest Regulation Act 2014.
  • 2 August –
  • 3 August –
    • Northern Territory police commissioner Michael Murphy uses a speech at the Garma Festival to publicly apologise to "Aboriginal Territorians for the past harms and the injustices caused by members of the Northern Territory police."
    • A 40-year-old Newcastle man falls into the Annan River near Cooktown, Queensland while walking along the riverbank and fails to resurface. Human remains are later found in a crocodile which had been euthanased by wildlife officers.
  • 5 August – Prime minister Anthony Albanese announces that the government has elevated Australia's terrorism threat from "possible" to "probable" but that it did not mean a terrorist attack was "inevitable."
  • 6 August –
  • 7 August –
    • A 4.1 magnitude earthquake occurs at Woods Point, Victoria just before 4:00am, with seismologists concluding that it was an aftershock from the 2021 Mansfield earthquake.
    • The water temperature around the Great Barrier Reef is reported to have reached a 400-year record high, which is causing more mass bleaching events.
    • QantasLink announces it will cut a total of 51 jobs at its maintenance facility in the New South Wales city of Tamworth, as it ends heavy maintenance operations due to the phasing out of Q200 and Q300 aircraft which are being replaced by additional and Q400 aircraft. The announcement angers federal member for New England Barnaby Joyce.
    • The Department of Industry, Science and Resources is charged in the ACT Magistrates Court with one count of breaching work, health and safety laws after an alleged incident in July 2022 involving a 9-year-old child who allegedly received burns when their hands caught fire upon touching a plasma globe in a Questacon gallery after using alcohol-based hand sanitiser, with the matter scheduled to be mentioned on 12 September.
  • 8 August –
    • 53-year-old crocodile expert Adam Britton is sentenced in the Northern Territory Supreme Court to more than ten years imprisonment, after having earlier pled guilty to 56 charges relating to the rape, torture and murder of more than 42 dogs between 2014 and April 2022. He also admitted to four charges of accessing child exploitation material.
    • South Australian opposition leader David Speirs resigns from the Liberal Party leadership but will continue to serve in state parliament as the member for Black.
    • Queensland health minister Shannon Fentiman announces that the National Mental Health Commission will launch an investigation in the Wolston Park mental health institution which closed in 2001, after decades of allegations relating to sexual abuse, beatings and chemical restraint which allegedly occurred between the 1950's and 1980's.
    • A 48-year-old Australian man dies in Indonesia after hitting his head on a reef while surfing in North Sumatra, with DFAT confirming they are providing assistance to the man's family.
  • 9 August – With 107 confirmed cases of Legionnaires' disease in Melbourne, Victoria's chief health officer Clare Looker confirms all cases in the outbreak are linked to a cooling tower in the suburb of Laverton North.
  • 10 August – A 24-year-old man is allegedly stabbed at a caravan park in Hervey Bay on Queensland's Fraser Coast, and later dies from his injuries. A 14-year-old girl is subsequently charged with his alleged murder.
  • 12 August – A pilot dies when the helicopter he was flying on an "unauthorised" flight crashes into a hotel in the Queensland city of Cairns shortly before 2:00am prompting the evacuation of approximately 400 people.
  • 13 August – A 10-year-old girl is found dead on the Gold Coast. A 46-year-old woman is subsequently charged with her murder.
  • 14 August – DFAT confirms an 11-year-old Australian girl was allegedly stabbed eight times in a random attack while she was sightseeing with her mother in London's Leicester Square on 12 August. A 32-year-old man is subsequently charged with attempted murder.
  • 15 August –
  • 19 August – Phase one of the Sydney Metro City & Southwest rapid transit line opens up between the suburbs of Chatswood and Sydenham in Sydney, New South Wales.
  • 22 August –
    • A 56-year-old man is killed when two vehicles collide at a coal mine near Glenden, Queensland. It's the second fatality recorded at the same mine in less than three weeks.
    • Federal Labor MP Graham Perrett announces he will retire at the next federal election after almost 20 years in parliament.
  • 23 August – A magnitude 4.7 earthquake occurs in the New South Wales Hunter Valley with the epicentre recorded near Muswellbrook, which causes minor infrastructure damage and power outages.
  • 24 August –
  • 25 August –
  • 26 August –
  • 27 August –
    • Thousands protest around Australia in support of the CFMEU, after the federal government passed legislation to circumvent a court process by enabling an administrator to be appointed to the union. Federal Greens MP Max Chandler-Mather is criticised for attending the Brisbane rally where signs were held up depicting Anthony Albanese as Adolf Hitler. Greens leader Adam Bandt defends Chandler-Mather's attendance at the rally describing it as "legitimate" but described the signs and the comparisons as "offensive".
    • Australian Police and New Zealand Police announce they have concluded a joint illicit drug operation that resulted in 1,611 arrests and 2,962 charges nationwide. The police also confiscated almost 1,400 kilograms (3,100 lb) of illicit drugs and over 2,500 cannabis plants, worth 93 million AUD (US$63 million).
    • A nine-month-old baby boy suffers burns to his face, chest and arms after an unknown man allegedly deliberately poured hot coffee on him in Hanlon Park in the Brisbane suburb of Stones Corner.
    • A major traffic accident occurs on Queensland's Bruce Highway in the early hours amid foggy and smoky conditions, between Bundaberg and Gladstone, in which five heavy vehicles collide. Two ambulances also collide en route to the accident. One of the truck drivers later dies in hospital.
  • 28 August – Former high profile swim coach Dick Caine is found by a judge to have committed 39 acts of sexual assault, including rape and indecent assault on six underage young athletes who he trained in the 1970s and 1980s. Inducted into the Australian Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame in 2022, Caine had trained a number of Olympic and Commonwealth Games athletes throughout his career including Michelle Ford, Janelle Elford, Karen Phillips, Stacey Gartrell and Michellie Jones.
  • 29 August – The new Neville Bonner Bridge in Brisbane opens to the public as does the new Queen's Wharf precinct which includes Brisbane's new Star casino.
  • 30 August –
    • Western Australian premier Roger Cook confirms a 17-year-old boy died by suicide at the Banksia Hill Juvenile Detention Centre the previous night.
    • New South Wales state Liberal MP Rory Amon resigns from the party and parliament after police charge him with five counts of sexual intercourse with a person over 10 and under 14. In a statement, Amon confirms he had been charged with events alleged to have occurred in 2017 but denies all charges and says he will make his case in the courts.
    • Another major traffic accident occurs on Queensland's Bruce Highway between Bundaberg and Gladstone when a truck carrying 42 tonnes of ammonium nitrate and a utility collide, killing the ute driver. An exclusion zone is established before the ammonium nitrate triggers a major explosion, prompting authorities to warn the highway would be closed for an extended amount of time.
    • A 41-year-old man is sentenced to six years imprisonment in Townsville District Court after pleading guilty to dangerous driving causing death after a crash on the Bruce Highway near Ayr in August 2022, in which former Latrobe councillor John Perkins from Tasmania was killed.
    • In what is described as a "backflip", Anthony Albanese confirms in a radio interview that they would be a question regarding sexuality and gender identity in the 2026 Australian census despite his government earlier confirming they had dumped their proposal to include such a question.
  • 31 August – Anthony Albanese denies the federal government had changed its policy regarding the inclusion of a question relating to gender identity and sexuality in the 2026 Australian census.

September

  • 1 September –
    • It's confirmed a 63-year-old woman has died after a tree strikes her cabin in a holiday park in Moama, as days of extreme weather occurs across Tasmania, Victoria and New South Wales.
    • Queensland premier Steven Miles uses a government jet to fly 74 kilometres from Hervey Bay to Bundaberg to present a birthday cake to local MP Tom Smith and announce funding for a school fence. His decision to fly the short distance is condemned by his critics but is defended by Miles who says it was just one leg of a multi-city trip, describing it as "an entirely appropriate use of travel resources."
  • 2 September –
    • An animal handler receives multiple lacerations to her arm after being mauled by a tiger at Dreamworld on the Gold Coast.
    • 46-year-old Ashley Paul Griffith pleads guilty to 307 sexual offences against children while working at childcare centres in Queensland and Italy between 2007 and 2022.
    • After the company puts itself into a voluntary trading halt on 29 August, Star Entertainment Group is temporarily suspended from the Australian Stock Exchange after failing to report annual results by deadline.
  • 3 September –
  • 5 September –
    • Federal NDIS minister and former Labor leader Bill Shorten announces he will retire from politics in February 2025 to take up the position as vice-chancellor of the University of Canberra.
    • Saputo Inc. announces that 120-year-old Australian dairy company King Island Dairy will close in mid-2025 because a buyer could not be found for the business, impacting 58 employees. Tasmanian premier Jeremy Rockliff confirms the Tasmamian government is providing support to the workers, farmers and the wider community who will be impacted by the closure.
  • 6 September –
    • 27-year-old Cody James Edwards is sentenced in Mount Gambier to at least 11 years imprisonment for the manslaughter of Synamin Bell in March 2022. Edwards was originally charged and stood trial for Bell's murder but part way through was re-arraigned after which he pled guilty to the lesser charge of manslaughter. The sentence angers Bell's family and prompts the South Australian Government to attempt to introduce legislation preventing delusions caused by drugs being used as a defence.
    • Former high profile Sydney real estate agent Matthew Brian Ramsay is sentenced to an overall jail term of six years and eight months for stabbing a woman in the chest with a 25 cm kitchen knife in Dover Heights on 8 August 2022.
  • 7 September – A 4.5 magnitude earthquake occurs near Muswellbrook, New South Wales causing minor damage and power outages. It is the third earthquake to occur in the area within three weeks.
  • 8 September – Federal treasurer Jim Chalmers confirms the 2026 Australian census will include questions about sexual orientation and gender with the Australian Bureau of Statistics to determine the questions.
  • 9 September –
    • The Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide hands down the final report, making 122 recommendations which includes establishing a new support body to assist defence personnel transition into civilian life.
    • Just Group confirms they have terminated the employment of Smiggle managing director John Cheston which they said was because of "serious misconduct" and a breach of the terms of his employment.
    • According to Queensland Police, a 33-year-old foreign national who allegedly attacked a nine-month-old baby in a Brisbane park on 27 August by pouring scalding hot coffee over him flew out of Sydney Airport on 31 August.
    • Former Queensland One Nation MP Stephen Andrew announces he has joined Katter's Australian Party, increasing the number of KAP representatives in the Queensland parliament to four.
    • The federal government announces it would introduce new legislation before the end of 2024 to ban children from accessing social media.
    • Adelaide newspaper The Advertiser publishes a video and photos which allegedly depict former South Australian Liberal leader David Speirs snorting a white substance. Speirs strenuously denies any wrongdoing, describing the video as a deepfake or an elaborate hoax.
  • 10 September –
    • The bodies of a 9-year-old boy and an 11-year-old boy are discovered at a property in the Blue Mountains village of Faulconbridge. The 42-year-old mother of the boys is subsequently charged with two counts of domestic violence-related murder.
    • Thousands of protestors attend a national farmer rally in Canberra where the agricultural sector accuses the federal government of initiating numerous anti-farming policies.
  • 11 September –
    • Thousands of protestors descend on Melbourne's CBD to rally against the biennial Land Forces International Expo at the MECC, with violent clashes erupting between the protestors and Victoria Police who describe their operation as the most significant since the S11 protests at the World Economic Forum in 2000. (Main article: 2024 Melbourne Land Forces Expo protests)
    • Victorian Greens MP Gabrielle de Vietri is condemned by both premier Jacinta Allan and manager of opposition business James Newbury for missing parliament to attend the violent anti-war protests in Melbourne.
    • Brett Andrew Button is sentenced to 32 years in jail with a non-parole period of 24 years for dangerous driving occasioning death following the Hunter Valley bus crash on 11 June 2023. Button also pleaded guilty to charges relating to dangerous driving occasioning grievous bodily harm, driving furiously, and causing bodily harm.
    • Independent New South Wales MP Alex Greenwich wins his defamation case against Mark Latham, with Latham ordered to pay $160,000 in damages after a tweet about Greenwich published in March 2023 was determined by Justice David O'Callaghan to be defamatory.
    • Former SA Liberal leader David Speirs takes medical leave from his position as the Member for Black following the publication of a video which purports to show him snorting a white substance. Speirs strenuously denies any wrongdoing having described the video as a deepfake and states he has engaged legal counsel.
  • 12 September –
  • 14 September – The 2024 New South Wales local elections are held which sees Clover Moore re-elected to a record sixth term as Lord Mayor of Sydney.
  • 19 September –
    • Following a three-day committal hearing in Ballarat, a magistrate discharges the entire case against a 66-year-old diabetic driver who was driving a vehicle which crashed into the Royal Daylesford Hotel on 5 November 2023 killing five people including two children. The magistrate finds there is not enough evidence to support a conviction by a jury with all fourteen charges against the man struck out. The decision is condemned by the families of the victims.
    • A 65-year-old male dual citizen of Australia and Greece was arrested at an airport in Rome, Italy, in connection with the January 1977 Easey Street murders in Collingwood, Victoria.
    • Alleged Ghost developer and administrator Jay Je Yoon Jung is arrested in Sydney, on five charges related to the encrypted communication network's development and operation.
  • 20 September –
    • The Mining and Energy Union and five union officials are fined a total of $657,105 after having been found to have breached the Fair Work Act 190 times after targeting strikebreakers during a 2017 industrial dispute at Oakey Creek North coal mine with conduct "designed to intimidate". The MEU was further ordered to pay $10,000 to a worker who was targeted. Among the five union officials to be fined was the MEU's current national vice-president Stephen Smyth who receives an $85,680 fine.
    • At a senate inquiry into antisemitism on university campuses, the University of Sydney's vice-chancellor Mark Scott issues an apology to Jewish students and staff after reading testimonials detailing their experiences during the eight-week Students for Palestine protest, stating "I have failed them and the university has failed them."
    • Prime Minister Anthony Albanese meets with outgoing United States president Joe Biden ahead of the annual Quadrilateral Security Dialogue meeting in Wilmington, Delaware.
  • 23 September –
    • Queensland's new sexual consent laws come into effect with the state moving to an affirmative consent model, while stealthing becomes criminalised.
    • The ACCC launches legal action against Woolworths and Coles, alleging they breached consumer law by deriving revenue with "illusionary" discounts on hundreds of products.
  • 24 September – Twelve Singapore Armed Forces servicemen sustain minor injuries when an armoured vehicle rear-ends another during Exercise Wallaby in the Shoalwater Bay Military Training Area near Rockhampton, Queensland.
  • 25 September – Dick Caine dies from cancer before he can be sentenced for his sexual assault conviction.
  • 27 September –
    • Public figures from the Department of Health and Aged Care show that cases of mpox in Australia have increased by 570% since July 2024, and show that there were 616 new cases of mpox recorded in Australia, bringing the total amount of confirmed cases to 724.
    • The Victorian Government confirms former premier Dan Andrews will be immortalised with a bronze statue, having become the fifth Victorian premier to serve over 3000 days in office, joining John Cain, Rupert Hamer, Henry Bolte and Albert Dunstan.

October

  • 1 October –
    • After people gathered at several Shiite Muslim mosques in Sydney to commemorate the death of leader of terrorist group Hezbollah Hassan Nasrallah, prime minister Anthony Albanese declares that nobody in Australia should be mourning Nasrallah's death while opposition leader Peter Dutton calls for memorial services for him to be cancelled.
    • Federal police commissioner Reece Kershaw warns that action would be taken if Hezbollah or Hamas flags were displayed at national pro-Palestinian rallies on 6 October - the eve of the first anniversary of the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel.
  • 2 October – A mine worker aged in his 30's is killed and another seriously injured in an incident at Glencore's Oaky Creek coal mine near Tieri, Queensland.
  • 3 October – A 35-year-old man originally from the Irish village of Kilcar is killed in a workplace accident on the Mitchell Freeway in Perth's northern suburbs with DFAT stating they are willing to provide assistance to his family.
  • 4 October –
    • Federal opposition leader Peter Dutton calls on the expulsion of Iran's ambassador to Australia Ahmad Sadeghi after Sadeghi describes assassinated terrorist leader Hassan Nasrallah as an "unparalleled leader" and a "martyr". Prime minister Anthony Albanese also condemns Sadeghi's comments.
    • A 19-year-old man and 20-year-old Tye William Porter are sentenced in the Brisbane Supreme Court for killing Uber driver and hit 101.9 Fraser Coast radio presenter Scott Cabrie in February 2023. The 19-year-old man is sentenced to 15 years in jail after having pleaded guilty to one count of murder, while Porter is sentenced to 9½ years in jail after having pleaded guilty to one count of manslaughter. The length of the sentences are condemned by Cabrie's family and friends, who take issue with the judge's order that the 19-year-old be released after serving 60% of the sentence.
  • 5 October –
    • South Australia Police confirm former South Australian opposition leader David Speirs has been charged with two counts of supplying a controlled substance. Spiers says he intends to fight to clear his name and plans to resign from parliament during the next sitting week.
    • The Australian Republic Movement's former chair Craig Foster publicly rebukes New South Wales premier Chris Minns and his wife Anna for sending him an invitation to a community barbecue to be attended by Charles III and Queen Camilla during their visit to Australia, posting a photo of the invitation on X and writing: "Thanks Anna and @ChrisMinnsMP, But, no thanks. I look forward to being ‘in the presence of’ our first Aussie Head of State. When we put our big pants on, as a country.”
  • 6 October –
    • Thousands of pro-Palestinian protestors rally in capital cities on the eve of the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel. Although there is a heightened police presence, authorities praise the overall behaviour of the demonstrators.
    • An 8-year-old girl and her 31-year-old babysitter are killed in a townhouse fire in the Redlands suburb of Thorneside.
    • A 25-year-old man is killed in a water skiing incident on the Hawkesbury River at Lower Portland.
  • 7 October – The first of two repatriation flights organised by the federal government for Australians fleeing the 2024 Israeli invasion of Lebanon touches down in Sydney, with 349 Australians and their immediate family members arriving at Sydney Airport.
  • 8 October –
    • Jacob Hersant of the National Socialist Network becomes the first Victorian to be found guilty of performing a Nazi salute.
    • Federal opposition leader Peter Dutton accuses prime minister Anthony Albanese of using a motion to mark the first anniversary of the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel for personal political gain, with the Coalition refusing the support the motion as they believe it went beyond paying tribute to the 1,200 lives lost.
    • Prime minister Anthony Albanese apologises after asking shadow treasurer Angus Taylor if he had Tourette syndrome during Question Time. The remark drew criticism from the Coalition, Greens senator Jordon Steele-John and Tourette syndrome Association of Australia president Mandy Maysey.
  • 9 October –
    • Former Labor senator Fatima Payman launches the Australia's Voice political party. However, concerns are raised about potential confusion with the Indigenous Voice to Parliament and the 2023 Australian Indigenous Voice referendum with Tom Calma stating that it should be made clear the new party's purpose is not to represent the Voice to Parliament.
    • 36-year-old Adam John Charles Evans is sentenced in the Brisbane Supreme Court to 18 years in jail and is automatically declared a serious violent offender for killing a 61-year-old man Kym Mitchell in November 2018. Evans was originally charged with Mitchell's murder but pleaded guilty to the lesser charge of manslaughter in 2021. He also pleaded guilty to four counts of rape.
  • 10 October –
    • Following an ongoing investigation into the death of a 49-year-old woman who died in an apparent incident with a ride-on mower in Queensland's Lockyer Valley in July 2024, police charge a 47-year-old Royal Australian Air Force squadron leader with murder (domestic violence offence) and misconduct with a corpse by interfering.
    • The ATSB hands down its final report into the fatal helicopter crash in Cairns on 12 August 2024. The investigation finds 23-year-old pilot Blake Wilson was affected by alcohol when he flew into a no-fly zone and crashed the helicopter into a hotel on the Cairns esplanade in the early hours, with a toxicology report showing "high levels of blood alcohol concentration", which chief commissioner Angus Mitchell said posed "significant risk to others in the Cairns area."
    • A sexual abuse survivor who was one of many to be abused by convicted paedophile Darrell Ray at Melbourne's Beaumaris Primary School in the 1960s and 1970s reveals that he has reached a record $8 million settlement with the Victorian Government with the man's lawyer describing it as "the biggest publicly known payment to an abuse survivor in Australia."
    • Victorian premier Jacinta Allan formally apologises to the state's Stolen Generations at a private event on behalf of the Victorian Government.
    • Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck, the King of Bhutan, arrives in Australia for an eight-day trip where he will visit Sydney, Canberra and Perth.
  • 11 October – A 34-year-old woman loses an arm when she is mauled by her own dog in Townsville, Queensland. She is taken to Townsville University Hospital in a critical condition, but is later reported to be in a serious but stable condition. Her dog is shot dead by police.
  • 12 October – A group of approximately 50 neo-Nazis hold a white supremist rally in the New South Wales town of Corowa which draws condemnation from community leaders including premier Chris Minns.
  • 16 October –
    • The South Australian Legislative Council narrowly votes down 10 to 9, a bill that would ban late-term abortions.
    • Canberra Liberals leader Elizabeth Lee apologises after being caught on camera giving the finger to local journalist Ian Bushnell following the leaders debate. During the campaign Lee and Bushnell have had a number of tense exchanges, and by Lee's own admission they share a "history" but concedes it was "unprofessional" and "poor behaviour".
  • 17 October –
  • 18 October –
    • King Charles III and Queen Camilla arrive in Australia for a five-day visit.
    • 58-year-old former Jetstar pilot Greg Lynn is sentenced to 32 years in prison for murdering 73-year-old camper Carol Clay in the Wonnangatta Valley in Victoria's high country in March 2020. Lynn must serve at least 24 years of his sentence before he is eligible for parole.
    • 21-year-old Brisbane Broncos player Ezra Mam is involved in a head-on collision with an Uber while driving without a licence and while under the influence of drugs including cocaine. A woman and her four-year-old daughter who were travelling in the Uber suffer minor injuries.
    • The ACT Labor Party is found to have breached electoral laws for running advertisements that were inaccurate and misleading with the ACT Electoral Commission determining an advertisement targeting shadow health minister Leanne Castley contained "a statement purporting to be a statement of fact that is inaccurate and misleading to a material extent".
  • 19 October –
  • 21 October – Senator Lidia Thorpe draws widespread condemnation for screaming obscenities at King Charles III and accusing him of genocide during an event at Parliament House in Canberra before she is escorted from the building by security. Criticism of Thorpe comes from all quarters including from prominent Indigenous Australians such academic Marcia Langton, former senator Nova Peris and Ngunnawal elder Aunty Violet Sheridan. However, Thorpe's conduct is condoned by others including the ACT's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and young people commissioner Vanessa Turnbull-Roberts.
  • 23 October – A five-year legal case concludes on country, where Parks Australia is found guilty of damaging a sacred site in Kakadu National Park and is ordered to pay at $200,000 fine.
  • 26 October –
    • The 2024 Queensland state election is held, with the Liberal National Party of Queensland attaining the majority of seats, defeating the Queensland Labor Party, which had been the state's leadership party since 2015. David Crisafulli is sworn in as Premier of Queensland on 28 October.
    • The 2024 Victorian local elections are held. No actual voting occurs on this day as the election is conducted via postal ballot throughout October. However, vote counting commences with the results announced by 15 November.
    • A scandal begins to envelope prime minister Anthony Albanese when journalist Joe Aston claims in his book The Chairman's Lounge: The inside story of how Qantas sold us out that Albanese sought upgrades for himself and his family on Qantas flights by directly contacting Alan Joyce. Albanese denies the accusations, refuting the claims that he had ever contacted anyone at Qantas seeking upgrades and maintains there was always transparency around any perceived flight perks he may have received.
    • Two light aircraft collide southwest of Sydney, killing all three people aboard both planes.
  • 27 October – A five-year-old boy his 15-year-old sister are killed in a three-vehicle car crash on the Riddoch Highway near Nangwarry, South Australia when one of the vehicles collided with an emu. A 22-year-old man is subsequently charged with two counts of causing death by dangerous driving and four counts of causing harm by dangerous driving.
  • 28 October –
    • Australia's 3G mobile phone network shuts down.
    • Despite an attempt at restructuring its operations, Mosaic Brands (the parent company of retailers Rivers, Katies, Noni B, Rockmans, Autograph, Crossroads, W. Lane and Beme) enters voluntary administration.
  • 29 October –
    • A car crashes through a fence into the Auburn South Primary School in Melbourne, killing an 11-year-old boy and injuring four other children who were sitting on a bench.
    • It's confirmed six student have been expelled and an additional 21 students suspended following an incident the previous week which involved the "serious humiliation" of a student at the St Paul's residential college at the University of Sydney.
  • 30 October –
    • Students record themselves tearing up The Red Zone report into sexual violence at a University of Sydney Students' Representative Council meeting, prompting the university to launch an immediate investigation.
    • NSW Police confirm they have recovered 40,000 limited edition Bluey coins which were allegedly stolen from a Sydney warehouse facility in July 2024. The discovery is made after a third person allegedly involved in the theft, a 27-year-old woman, is arrested and charged with breaking and entering and disposing of stolen property.
  • 31 October – Amid the ongoing free flight upgrade scandal, opposition leader Peter Dutton admits he had requested whether he could use Gina Rinehart's private jet to fly from Rockhampton to Sydney for a Bali bombings memorial service before travelling back up to Mackay. Dutton claims he had asked to use the jet to save taxpayers the $40,000 it would have cost to use an RAAF aircraft.

November

  • 1 November –
    • A Federal Court judge rules that One Nation leader Pauline Hanson racially discriminated against Greens deputy leader Mehreen Faruqi when Hanson told Faruiqi to "piss off back to Pakistan" on X after Faruiqi had described Queen Elizabeth II in a post as "a leader of a racist empire" following her death in 2022. The judge orders Hanson to delete the tweet and to pay Faruqui's legal costs. Hanson vows to appeal the judgement.
    • Co-deputy leader of the Victorian Greens Sam Hibbins resigns from the party to sit as an independent after being suspended from the party room following his admission to breaching party rules by having a relationship with a staff member.
    • Amid the ongoing flight upgrade scandal, Coalition frontbencher Bridget McKenzie concedes she was wrong to initially be so "emphatic" in her denial of never having received any free flight upgrades.
    • An emperor penguin is discovered on a beach in Denmark, Western Australia, marking the first reported sighting of the species in Australia.
  • 3 November – Amid the ongoing flight upgrade scandal, federal education minister Jason Clare admits to asking for and receiving a free flight upgrade on an international Qantas flight for personal reasons in 2019.
  • 6 November –
  • 7 November –
    • The ACMA announces Optus had paid a $12 million fine over its 2023 network outage with the ACMA ruling Optus had breached emergency call rules and had failed to conduct welfare checks on 369 people who had attempted to call Triple Zero during the outage.
    • Prime Minister Albanese confirms that the federal government will introduce legislation later in the month to ban young people under the age of 16 from using social media.
    • A 69-year-old woman is killed when an allegedly stolen car collides with her vehicle at Murrumba Downs, Queensland. A 16-year-old Caboolture boy is subsequently charged with manslaughter, armed robbery, unlawful use of a motor vehicle and two counts of assault occasioning bodily harm.
    • British sex worker and OnlyFans content creator Bonnie Blue has her 12-month tourist visa revoked by the Department of Home Affairs on the grounds of allegedly planning to contravene the conditions by working, after earlier stating plans to travel to the Gold Coast to film explicit content with male high school graduates during Schoolies Week.
  • 8 November –
    • Qantas Flight QF520 flying from Sydney to Brisbane makes an emergency landing at Sydney Airport due to a contained engine failure. No injuries are reported.
    • It is revealed that Queensland's chief health officer John Gerrard had tendered his resignation the previous month, with his final day in the role scheduled to be on 12 December 2024.
    • The body of a 15-year-old boy is found dead in bushland near Wilton, New South Wales. A 32-year-old man is subsequently charged with allegedly murdering the boy.
  • 10 November – Federal health minister Mark Butler announces that under the National Immunisation Program, pregnant women and newborn babies will have access free respiratory syncytial virus vaccines before winter in 2025, with national access to monoclonal antibody for young babies also to become available.
  • 11 November –
  • 14 November – Myer announces it has cancelled the traditional unveiling of its Christmas windows in Melbourne's Bourke Street Mall on 17 November to ensure the safety of its customers and employees due to the threat posed by a pro-Palestinian group called Disrupt Wars which had planned to disrupt the event. The planned disruption of the annual event which is largely attended by children and families is widely condemned. Following Myer's decision to cancel the event, Disrupt Wars cancels their planned demonstration but threatens to reinstate it, prompting Myer to confirm the event will remain cancelled.
  • 15 November –
    • The body of Launceston Cup-winning jockey, 81-year-old Keith Banks is found near Scone in the Hunter Valley after he was reported missing on 11 November 2024.
    • Researchers from the CSIRO encourage Australians to use a Chart Your Fart app to track their personal flatulence so scientists can use the data to garner a better understanding of gut health.
  • 16 November – The 2024 Black state by-election is held in South Australia, which was triggered by the resignation of Liberal MP David Speirs who had previously served as the Opposition Leader. The Liberals lose the seat, with their candidate defeated by Labor's Alex Dighton.
  • 17 November –
    • The Albanese Government reveals it plans to mandate that businesses be required to accept cash payments for essential items from 2026 to ensure that Australians who rely on cash including during natural disasters or digital outages can continue to make purchases.
    • Australian Privacy Commissioner Carly Kind rules that Bunnings had breached the privacy of possibly hundreds of thousands of customers by trialing facial recognition technology in 63 stores between 2018 and 2021, finding the company had collected sensitive information without consent and had failed to take reasonable steps to inform people about the technology. Bunnings responds by releasing CCTV footage of staff members being allegedly threatened and assaulted, with managing director Mike Schneider defending the use of the technology stating that its sole intent was to keep team members and customers safe.
  • 18 November –
    • 83-year-old former radio host Alan Jones is arrested at his Circular Quay apartment in Sydney and later charged by New South Wales Police with a total of 24 historical indecent assault and sexual touching offences involving eight alleged victims which allegedly occurred between 2001 and 2019. Jones is granted bail to appear before Downing Centre Local Court on 18 December, with his lawyer Chris Murphy confirming that Jones denies any misconduct and that he will "assert his innocence appropriately in the courtroom."
    • The Senate votes 46-12 to censure independent senator Lidia Thorpe for "disrespectful and disruptive" behaviour when she heckled King Charles III in October.
    • The Senate also votes to censure United Australia Party senator Ralph Babet for using "inflammatory use of hate speech, designed to drive division for his own political benefit" after posting remarks on X following the 2024 United States election.
  • 21 November –
    • Prime minister Anthony Albanese confirms a 19-year-old Australian woman has died in a Thailand hospital a week after a suspected case of methanol poisoning in Laos.
    • Six months after an investigation was launched into whether Townsville mayor Troy Thompson misled voters about his military history, Queensland local government minister Ann Leahy confirms that he is being suspended on full pay for 12 months after Queensland premier David Crisafulli made it clear to Thompson that his position was untenable.
    • Multiple incidents of antisemitic vandalism occur in Sydney which police describe as a hate crime, and which Anthony Albanese calls "deeply troubling".
    • The United Workers Union confirms more than 1,500 of its members employed at four Woolworths distribution centres in Victoria and New South Wales are stopping work indefinitely as they demand the company negotiate improved workplace agreements regarding safer conditions and better pay.
  • 22 November – The family of a second 19-year-old Australian woman confirms she has died following the mass methanol poisoning event in Laos.
  • 24 November – The government withdraws a bill that would have allowed the Australian Communications and Media Authority to impose a code of conduct or standards for social media companies amid criticism over its effects on free speech.
  • 25 November – The Queensland Supreme Court revokes a special carer's licence which was granted to a Gold Coast couple in April 2024 so they could continue caring for a magpie named Molly, a bird which gained worldwide fame for its friendship with the couple's dog Peggy but which was seized by DESI officers in March 2024 following complaints by local wildlife carers.
  • 27 November – 34-year-old New South Wales police officer Kristian White is found guilty by a jury of the manslaughter of 95-year-old Clare Nowland at the Yallambee Lodge aged care facility in Cooma, New South Wales on 17 May 2023, whom he tasered causing her to sustain injuries which she died from a week later.
  • 29 November –
    • Former childcare worker, paedophile Ashley Paul Griffin is sentenced in the Brisbane District Court to life imprisonment after pleading guilty to more than 300 charges relating to the rape and sexual abuse of 69 children at early learning centres in Queensland and in Italy.
    • Federal parliament passes a law banning people under 16 years of age from holding social media accounts.
    • Following a lengthy legal battle, police officer Ben Besant wins the right to have a suppression order and finally be named as the officer who killed Man Haron Monis in the Lindt Cafe siege, just weeks before the 10th anniversary of the siege is commemorated.

December

  • 2 December –
    • It emerges that Australian Venue Co had informed its local managers that Australia Day would not be acknowledged at any of its venues in 2025 reasoning that because the day causes sadness and hurt for some of their patrons, the day should not be celebrated. After the decision prompts widespread debate, the company apologises, conceding that it wasn't for them to "tell anyone whether or how to celebrate Australia Day" and that their purpose was to reinforce community not to divide it.
    • Authorities announce the seizure of 2.3 tons of cocaine valued at AUD760 million ($494,000) from a boat that broke down off the coast of Queensland as part of a smuggling operation blamed on the Comanchero Motorcycle Club.
    • Boxer Harry Garside's 36-year-old ex-girlfriend pleads guilty in Sydney's Downing Centre Local Court to a domestic violence-related assault and stalking or intimidation with intent to cause fear, following an incident with Garside in Bellevue Hill in March 2023. She is placed on conditional release order without being convicted and subject to a two-year apprehended domestic violence order.
    • The University of Canberra's interim vice-chancellor Stephen Parker resigns from the role, citing lost confidence in the university council. Parker becomes the third vice-chancellor to leave the role in less than a year following the departure of Paddy Nixon in December 2023 which was following by Lucy Johnston's tenure as interim vice-chancellor being cut short in September 2024. Deputy vice-chancellor Michelle Lincoln will perform the role until the university's new vice-chancellor Bill Shorten commences in February 2024.
  • 3 December – The Commonwealth Bank announces it intends to charge its customers a $3 fee to withdraw their own money at bank branches and post offices from January 2025 by migrating them from a "Complete Access" account to a "Smart Access" account. Following widespread criticism, the bank announces the following day that they will "pause" its plans to charge the fee to its customers for six months and will contact affected customers to discuss their options.
  • 4 December –
    • After being found guilty of assaulting a pregnant South Australian police officer in the Adelaide CBD in 2021, 41-year-old Raina Cruise, an Informed Medical Options Party senate candidate in the 2022 Australian federal election is sentenced to three years and eight months in jail with a non-parole period of two years, but which was suspended in favour of Cruise being placed on a three-year good behaviour bond. The sentence is criticised by both sides of politics and prompts South Australia's Director of Public Prosecutions to launch an appeal on the grounds the sentence was "manifestly inadequate."
    • A 58-year-old Perth grandmother is sentenced in a Japanese court to six years jail for importing two kilograms of methamphetamine into the country in January 2023. The woman who has always maintained her innocence alleged she was tricked into carrying a suitcase at Narita Airport in Tokyo which had drugs concealed inside.
  • 5 December –
    • A 14-year-old boy is sentenced in the Queensland Children's Court to six years in youth detention to be released after serving 60% of his sentence, after he caused a three-car collision near the Queensland city of Maryborough while driving a stolen car on 30 April 2024, killing a 52-year-old woman, a 29-year-old woman and a 17-year old girl. The length of the sentence is criticised by the families of the victims.
    • Victoria Police confirm that they are increasing patrols around some Melbourne schools in the wake of four separate attempted abduction attempts involving men driving white vans trying to lure children into their vehicles.
  • 6 December – The Adass Israel synagogue in Melbourne catches fire in a suspected arson attack.
  • 7 December – The United Workers Union confirms Woolworths warehouse workers at four distribution centres will return to work after accepting a deal offered by the company which promises to increase wages and not to discipline employees for their speed of work. The 17-day strike had disrupted the supply chain resulting in stock shortages at Woolworths Supermarkets, particularly in Victoria which prompts an apology to customers from company CEO Amanda Bardwell.
  • 9 December – Queensland health minister Tim Nicholls confirms an investigation has been launched after 323 live virus samples went missing in a major breach of biosecurity protocol at Virology Laboratory in 2021 in which vials of Hendra virus, lyssavirus and hantavirus went missing after a freezer broke down.
  • 10 December –
  • 11 December –
    • In what authorities describe as an "antisemitic attack", multiple properties and vehicles in the Sydney suburb of Woollahra are vandalised with anti-Israel graffiti.
    • After a three-day trial in the Brisbane District Court, a jury finds pilot Leslie Ronald Woodall guilty of dangerous operation of a motor vehicle causing death and grievous bodily harm after the plane he was piloting crash landed on a beach at Bustard Head during a flight between Agnes Water and Middle Island in January 2017, killing one of his passengers, a 29-year-old British tourist while also injuring a 21 year-old Irish woman and a 13-year-old boy. Woodall was subsequently sentenced to a wholly suspended two-year jail term.
  • 12 December – Federal Court judge David O'Callaghan rules that Victorian Liberal Party leader John Pesutto defamed former colleague Moira Deeming by conveying an imputation she knowingly associated with white supremacists and neo-Nazis after she attended a "Let Women Speak" rally hosted by Posie Parker on the steps of Parliament House which was gatecrashed by neo-Nazis. Deeming was awarded $300,000 in damages. Harry Potter author J. K. Rowling publicly praised the ruling.
  • 13 December –
    • South Australian Liberal Party deputy leader John Gardner confirms he is planning to step down as deputy opposition leader and is intending to quit politics at the 2026 South Australian state election, citing health and family reasons.
    • Victorian stone fruit grower Cutri Fruit Pty Ltd is fined $750,000 after pleading guilty in the Mildura County Court to failing to ensure persons other than employees were not exposed to health and safety risks following the death of a 70-year-old labour hire worker from Afghanistan in January 2022.
  • 15 December –
  • 16 December –
    • Victoria's longest serving treasurer Tim Pallas announces he is resigning from the position and leaving politics.
    • Brisbane Broncos player Ezra Mam pleads guilty in the Brisbane Magistrates Court to one count of driving while relevant drug is present in blood, and driving without a licence following his collision with an Uber on 18 October. He is fined $850 and had his drivers licence disqualified for at least six months but no conviction is recorded. The sentence is widely criticised for its apparent leniency.
    • Western Australia's Wilman Wadandi Highway opens to traffic for the first time.
  • 19 December –
    • Jaclyn Symes becomes the first female Treasurer of Victoria in a cabinet reshuffle following the departure of Tim Pallas.
    • 47-year-old Dinush Kurera is sentenced to 37 years' jail for the murder of his estranged wife in the Melbourne suburb of Sandhurst on 3 December 2022.
  • 20 December –
    • The Victorian Liberal Party votes on a motion calling for Moira Deeming to be re-admitted to the party after winning her defamation case against leader John Pesutto. Deadlocked at 14-14, the vote fails to reach the absolute majority of 16 votes for it to be successful.
    • Former Uniting Church childcare manager Yolanda Borucki is found not guilty of computer hacking, with the charge being dismissed by magistrate Kerrie O'Callaghan who said the prosecution had failed to prove essential element of the allegation beyond a reasonable doubt. Borucki's home was raided by police in August 2023 and was charged just days appearing on A Current Affair to detail allegations against former childcare worker Ashley Paul Griffith and to also claim that Queensland police and the childcare centre had rejected allegations against Griffith when she helped report him to authorities in 2021.
    • The Coca-Cola Company announces is has entered an agreement to acquire Billson's Brewery's alcoholic ready-to-drink product range, after Billson's went into voluntary administration in July 2024.
    • Approximately 20 men gather on the steps of Parliament House in Melbourne and allegedly display an antisemitic banner which draws widespread condemnation.
  • 21 December – A bus driver is killed and 13 passengers injured after a collision between a Greyhound Australia coach and a truck on the Hume Highway near Kyeamba, New South Wales at approximately 3:35am.
  • 22 December – A 23-year-old woman is shot dead in Caboolture, Queensland after allegedly being chased down and assaulted by two men. The alleged offenders escape prompting a manhunt and for the Queensland Police Service to appeal to the public for information.
  • 23 December – The Federal Government confirms it is working to locate 32-year-old Australian man Oscar Jenkins after a video circulates on pro-Kremlin social media accounts purportedly showing him being detained and questioned by Russian soldiers in Ukraine.
  • 25 December – The 50th anniversary of Cyclone Tracy is commemorated in Darwin.
  • 26 December – A 17-year-old boy is injured after being allegedly stabbed during an argument with a group of young people at the Westfield Parramatta shopping centre in Sydney.
  • 27 December – The Victorian Liberal Party votes in the 2024 Victorian Liberal Party leadership spill. Brad Battin replaces John Pesutto as Liberal leader and leader of the opposition while Sam Groth is appointed deputy leader. Moira Deeming is readmitted to the parliamentary Liberal Party.
  • 28 December – A 40-year-old man is killed in a shark attack while spearfishing at Humpy Island about 18 kilometres from the mainland on Queensland's Capricorn Coast. The man is later identified as a well-known youth pastor.
  • 29 December – A 31-year-old man is shot dead in the Sydney suburb of Canley Heights. A 33-year-old Bossley Park man is subsequently arrested and charged with accessory after the fact to murder with police alleging the death was an "organised crime-related murder."
  • 30 December –
    • Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese pays tribute to former president of the United States Jimmy Carter following Carter's death at the age of 100.
    • Albanese orders the Victorian Labor Party remove a meme which mocked the wife of federal opposition leader Peter Dutton.

Arts and entertainment

January

February

March

April

May

June

  • 3 June – The Fair Work Commission finds that journalist Antoinette Lattouf was sacked by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation when she was taken off air while she was a fill-in host on ABC Radio Sydney's Mornings program in December 2023. The Fair Work Commission rejected the ABC's claim that Lattouf wasn't sacked as she had been paid for the full week.
  • 7 June –
  • 8 June – Attendees of Vivid Sydney's Love is in the Air drone show claim they felt trapped after a larger than expected amount of spectators gathered at Circular Quay to watch.
  • 12 June – It's reported News Corp Australia will be making up to 40% of its sales staff redundant amidst a corporate restructure of the company.
  • 15 June – American comedian Jerry Seinfeld commences a national tour, with the first of his seven Australian stand up shows held in Perth. At some of his Australian shows, Seinfeld encounters pro-Palestine protestors.
  • 16 June – Through his lawyers, Robert Irwin threatens production company StepMates Studios with legal action if a two-minute cartoon they produced for Pauline Hanson's One Nation's YouTube Channel is not taken down. Depicting Irwin guiding Bluey on a mock tour of Queensland, Irwin's lawyers claim the cartoon is defamatory and features the unauthorised and deceptive use of Irwin's image. However, Pauline Hanson defends the cartoon and indicates that it won't be taken down.

July

August

September

  • 2 September – Model and actress Elle MacPherson reveals that after being diagnosed with breast cancer in 2017, she refused chemotherapy and opted for "an intuitive, heart-led, holistic approach". Her comments draw widespread condemnation.
  • 6-15 September - SWELL Sculpture Festival is held at Currumbin Beach, Queensland.
  • 8 September – Nicole Kidman is awarded the Volpi Cup for Best Actress at the 81st Venice International Film Festival but leaves Venice before accepting the award upon learning her mother Janelle Kidman had died.
  • 15 September – Elizabeth Debicki wins the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series at the 76th Primetime Emmy Awards.
  • 20 September – The Australian Broadcasting Corporation's managing director David Anderson orders an independent review into how audio featured in a September 2022 online article and 7.30 story came to be "incorrectly edited", after the Seven Network airs allegations claiming the ABC added additional gunshots to incorrectly illustrate former special forces major Heston Russell had committed war crimes. In 2023, Russell won a defamation case against the ABC which was ordered to pay Russell $390,000 after they failed to prove its reporting was in the public interest.
  • 27 September –
    • A tribunal decision which would have allowed men to enter a space designated as "women only" at the Museum of Old and New Art in Hobart is quashed and sent back to the tribunal for consideration. The decision comes after a New South Wales man originally won the anti-discrimination case against MONA in March after having been denied entry to the women's only "Ladies Lounge" area.
    • As the station prepares to "take a new direction", Laurel Edwards, Gary Clare and Mark Hine sign off from 4BC's breakfast program in Brisbane for the final time, two years after they moved to the station upon the closure of 4KQ.

October

November

December

Deaths

January

Stephen Laybutt

February

Lowitja O'Donoghue

March

Ian Heads

April

Noel Ratcliffe

May

Mike Nugent
Cam McCarthy

June

John Blackman

July

Kevan Gosper
Robin Warren

August

Terry Snow

September

Lex Marinos

October

George Negus

November

Tom Hughes

December

Maggie Tabberer

See also

Country overviews

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  930. Hillier, Michael (27 February 2024). "Vale Darryl Van de Velde". Queensland Rugby League. Retrieved 28 February 2024.
  931. Gillespie, Tom (15 March 2024). "Former Toowoomba North MP and GP John Flynn passes away aged 70". The Chronicle. Retrieved 17 March 2024. ...died in Brisbane on February 27 at the age of 70
  932. "'Our hearts are broken': Victorian Labor senator Linda White dies". ABC News. 29 February 2024. Retrieved 1 March 2024.
  933. Sun, Michael (7 March 2024). "Michael Jenkins: Heartbreak High, Scales of Justice and Blue Murder creator dies aged 77". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 March 2024. Jenkins died on Monday afternoon...
  934. Jones, Peter (5 March 2024). "Obituary: RADM Guy Griffiths". The Australian Naval Institute. Retrieved 5 March 2024.
  935. Quartermain, Glen (5 March 2024). "WA, South Fremantle great Steve Marsh dies at 99". The West Australian. Perth: Seven West Media. Retrieved 5 March 2024. ...passed away in the early hours of Tuesday at age 99.
  936. "Convicted drug trafficker and Port Adelaide player David 'Grave Danger' Granger dies". Nine's Wide World of Sports. 8 March 2024. Retrieved 8 March 2024. ...passed away yesterday at the age of 69
  937. "Vale Steve Maxwell". Football Australia. 12 March 2024. Retrieved 13 March 2023.
  938. Sirianos, Athos (12 March 2024). "Legendary comedy writer Mike McColl Jones penned 'thank you' letter before his death". Herald Sun. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
  939. Knox, David (17 March 2024). "Vale: Grant Page". TV Tonight. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
  940. Lansdown, Sarah (14 March 2024). "'Man of the people': Archbishop Francis Carroll dies aged 93". The Canberra Times. Canberra: Australian Community Media. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
  941. Williams, Luke (16 March 2024). "Tributes for former Mareeba mayor Tom Gilmore". Cairns Post. Retrieved 29 March 2024. Mr Gilmore died at his home in Mareeba on March 14 aged 77.
  942. Chadwick, Justin (25 March 2024). "'Save our Saints' president Andrew Plympton dies at 74". The Canberra Times. Canberra: Australian Community Media. Retrieved 27 March 2024. passed away in a Melbourne hospital on Sunday after a battle with lung cancer.
  943. Ritchie, Dean (25 March 2024). "Vale Ian Heads: Legendary writer dead, having helped shape Australian sports landscape". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 27 March 2024. ...Ian Heads, who died on Monday, aged 81.
  944. "The incredible legacy of Les Twentyman will live on through his Foundation". Les Twentyman Foundation. 2 April 2024. Retrieved 8 April 2024.
  945. Green, Stephen (1 April 2024). "Industry legend Michael McMartin passes away". The Music. Retrieved 3 April 2024.
  946. "Prof. John Ross TURTLE AO Death Notice – Sydney, New South Wales". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 18 April 2024.
  947. "Jockey Stefano Cherchi, 23, dies after fall at Canberra racetrack last month". The Guardian. 3 April 2024. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 4 April 2024.
  948. "Vale Bob Lanigan". NRL.com. National Rugby League. 4 April 2024. Retrieved 6 April 2024. ...passed away on Thursday morning.
  949. Doyle, Michael (8 April 2024). "Keith Barnes, Australia Kangaroos captain and Balmain Tigers legend, dies aged 89". ABC News. Retrieved 8 April 2024. His death was announced on Monday morning.
  950. Werner, Greg (9 April 2024). "Australia's oldest Olyroo, the "Prince of Keepers" has made his last save & seen his last game". Football Australia. Retrieved 12 April 2024. passed away yesterday...
  951. Graham, Ben (10 April 2024). "Sunrise reporter Nathan Templeton found dead in Geelong". news.com.au. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
  952. "Parmenter, Ian". The West Australian. Retrieved 20 May 2024.
  953. Webeck, Tony (15 April 2024). "Noel Ratcliffe passes away, aged 79". PGA Australia. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  954. Stocks, Gary (16 April 2024). "Vale Peter Davidson". West Coast Eagles. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  955. "The Masters Apprentices bassist and founding member, Gavin Webb, dies after cancer battle". ABC News. 17 April 2024. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  956. "Vale Neil Rogers". Swimming Australia. 17 April 2024. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  957. "Tribute: Remembering Transformational Tennis Leader Brian Tobin". Tennis Australia. 24 April 2024. Retrieved 28 April 2024.
  958. Fordham, Ben (25 April 2024). "'Bloody legend' – Footy Show boss pays tribute to Terry Hill". 2GB. Retrieved 25 April 2024. ...Terry Hill, who died of a heart attack on Wednesday at the age of 52.
  959. "Death notice: Barry Mildren OAM". The Age. 27 April 2024. Retrieved 27 April 2024. On April 25, 2024, peacefully at Nazareth House, aged 91 years.
  960. Valencich, Glenn (27 April 2024). "Ross Thornton dies aged 67 as Brisbane Lions mourn club director and former Fitzroy player". Seven News. Retrieved 30 April 2024. The 67-year-old died on Thursday following a battle with cancer.
  961. Rodriques, Marilyn (27 April 2024). "Bishop Peter Ingham remembered as a "humble" and faithful servant following his death at age 83". The Catholic Weekly. Retrieved 30 April 2024. ...following his death on 26 April.
  962. "Vale Graham Webb". radioinfo. 27 April 2024. Retrieved 30 April 2024. Webb died on Friday April 26 aged 88...
  963. "Vale Adrian Horridge, A Man of Many Accomplishments" (PDF). Research School of Biology Newsletter. Australian National University. Retrieved 23 June 2024.
  964. "Lyndall Ryan Death Notice". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 20 May 2024.
  965. "Ian Hayden: key facts". Australian Football. 2024. Retrieved 4 May 2024. Died 2 May 2024 (aged 83)
  966. "Vale Ian Michael Hayden". Victorian Bar. 3 May 2024. Retrieved 4 May 2024.
  967. Koziol, Michael (3 May 2024). "Mayor of Sydney's biggest council dies on flight home from China". The Sydney Morning Herald. Sydney: Nine Entertainment. Retrieved 4 May 2024.
  968. "Michael Alwyn "Mike" Nugent – Death Notice". Courier Mail. 25 May 2024. Retrieved 29 May 2024.
  969. O'Brien, Garry (6 May 2024). "Vale: Johnny Walker". Speedcafe. Retrieved 12 May 2024. He passed away early on Monday May 6 at age 79.
  970. Kearney, Georgie (6 May 2024). "A Country Practice star Brian Wenzel dead at 94". Seven News. Seven West Media. Retrieved 6 May 2024.
  971. Morris, Linda (8 May 2024). "Aussie rock legend and Jimmy and the Boys frontman, Ignatius Jones, dies". The Sydney Morning Herald. Sydney: Nine Entertainment. Retrieved 8 May 2024.
  972. Chadwick, Justin (11 May 2024). "Grieving Dockers players rocked by McCarthy's death". The West Australian. Perth: Seven West Media. Australian Associated Press. Archived from the original on 11 May 2024. Retrieved 11 May 2024. ...McCarthy died at the age of 29 on Thursday night.
  973. "NILAN, Patrick Joseph". My Tributes. 18 May 2024. Retrieved 18 May 2024. Patrick Nilan (OAM) passed away peacefully on Friday 10 May 2024...
  974. Quekett, Malcolm (11 May 2024). "Hugh Edwards was a shipwreck hunter, author and maritime history expert". The West Australian. Retrieved 12 May 2024. Mr Edwards died on Friday after a fall, aged 90.
  975. "Vale: Ron Lynch". Parramatta Eels. 13 May 2024. Retrieved 18 May 2024. Ron passed away on Sunday, 12 May 2024.
  976. De Bolfo, Tony (14 May 2024). "Blues mourn passing of Berkley Cox". Spirit of Carlton. Retrieved 18 May 2024. died in Launceston General Hospital on Monday 13 May...
  977. "Vale Reg Burgess". The Mighty Bombers. 16 May 2024. Retrieved 30 May 2024. ...passing of former player and club Hall of Fame member Reg Burgess on Monday night.
  978. "June Mendoza, portraitist who painted the Queen, Princess Diana and Margaret Thatcher – obituary". The Telegraph. 21 May 2024. Retrieved 30 May 2024.
  979. Baker, Glenn A. (20 May 2024). "Australian music icon Frank Ifield dies aged 86". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 20 May 2024.
  980. "Vale Bill Serong". Collingwood Football Club. 22 May 2024. Retrieved 30 May 2024.
  981. "William Michael Serong". The Age. 22 May 2024. Retrieved 30 May 2024. 5/05/1936 - 20/05/2024
  982. Dampney, James (23 May 2024). "'One of the greats of the VFL': Footy world mourns loss of two-club champion Barry Davis". Fox Sports. Retrieved 30 May 2024. ...died at the age of 80 on Wednesday evening.
  983. Morris, Linda (26 May 2024). "'Embedded in our psyche': Art world mourns leading Australian photographer". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 3 June 2024.
  984. Knowles, Rachael (24 May 2024). "Esteemed Blak artist Destiny Deacon has died". NITV News. Retrieved 25 May 2024.
  985. "Vale: Steve Blyth". Wests Tigers. 29 May 2024. Retrieved 30 May 2024.
  986. Hyland, Jesse (29 May 2024). "Australia's longest serving DJ Bob Rogers, who had a 78-year broadcasting career, dies aged 97". ABC News. Retrieved 30 May 2024. ...died at his Mosman home Wednesday morning.
  987. Henry, Lauren (5 June 2024). "Farewell to an Ararat icon Henry Gunstone". The Weekly Advertiser. Retrieved 23 June 2024. Ararat's Henry Gunstone, nicknamed 'Bradman of the Bush' died on Saturday...
  988. "'Well respected' Gary Nairn dies in Queensland". CBR City News. 3 June 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024. ...died in Queensland on Saturday night, June 1
  989. Schmidt, Nathan; Brennan, Aisling (5 June 2024). "Hey Hey It's Saturday star John Blackman dead at 76 after cancer battle". news.com.au. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  990. Johnston, Greig (4 June 2024). "John Todd, WA football legend and former West Coast Eagles coach, dies aged 86". ABC News. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  991. Noakes, Cameron (5 June 2024). "Beloved football commentator Ross Booth dies, aged 72". 7NEWS. Archived from the original on 5 June 2024.
  992. "Vale Dr. Siri Kannangara". Football Australia. 9 June 2024. Retrieved 23 June 2024.
  993. Mills, Vanessa (7 June 2024). "Broome astronomer, tour guide and TV star Greg Quicke, known as 'Space Gandalf', dies aged 62". ABC News. Retrieved 7 July 2024.
  994. Olle, Emily (19 June 2024). "Jennifer Cashmore, Liberal Party trailblazer and Governor Frances Adamson's mother, dies aged 86". The Advertiser. Retrieved 23 June 2024. Jennifer Cashmore passed away peacefully at her home on Monday...
  995. Bermingham, Kathryn (11 June 2024). "Former South Australian premier Steele Hall dies aged 95". The Advertiser. Retrieved 23 June 2024. Mr Hall, who died on Monday morning...
  996. "Vale Dianne Burge OAM OLY". Athletics Australia. 14 June 2024. Retrieved 30 June 2024. ...until her passing on 11 June 2024
  997. Strathearn, Peri (24 June 2024). "Former MP Bill Nankivell dies". Murray Bridge News. Retrieved 30 June 2024. He died on June 11
  998. Pitt, Helen (14 June 2024). "Australia's oldest working artist Guy Warren dies, aged 103". The Sydney Morning Herald. Nine Entertainment Co. Retrieved 15 June 2024.
  999. De Bolfo, Tony (19 June 2024). "Blues' former midfielder Berner passes away". Carlton Football Club. Retrieved 23 June 2024. Berner died at Rowville Manor after a short illness on Monday.
  1000. "Alan Gold service details". Sydney Chevra Kadisha. 19 June 2024. Archived from the original on 25 June 2024. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
  1001. "Vale Fred Smith and Keith Bromage". Collingwood Football Club. 27 June 2024. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
  1002. "SMITH, Frederick Laurence". The Advertiser. 29 June 2024. Retrieved 30 June 2024. Passed away peacefully with his family by his side on June 21st, 2024.
  1003. Cuneo, Clementine (23 June 2024). "Mass murderer Malcolm George Baker dies behind bars in palliative care, aged 76". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
  1004. Charlton, Anne. "Vale The Honourable Paul Leon Stein AM KC". NSW Council for Civil Liberties. Retrieved 10 July 2024.
  1005. "Remembering UWA's master of music: vale Emeritus Professor David Tunley (1930 - 2024)". University of Western Australia. Retrieved 26 June 2024.
  1006. "Vale Keith "Brom" Bromage". Brisbane Lions. 28 June 2024. Retrieved 30 June 2024. ...passed away on Wednesday 26 June
  1007. Kapetopoulos, Fotis (27 June 2024). "Farewell to Stefan Romaniw OAM". Neos Kosmos. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
  1008. "WHELAN, Judith Joan". The Sydney Morning Herald. 29 June 2024. Retrieved 30 June 2024. Died 26 June after a long illness...mentor and friend to many at The Sydney Morning Herald and the ABC.
  1009. Convery, Stephanie (27 June 2024). "Judith Whelan, respected and loved editor at Sydney Morning Herald and ABC, dies from cancer aged 63". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
  1010. Ferri, Lauren (2 July 2024). "Melbourne Football Club mourns death of legend Clyde Laidlaw". news.com.au. Retrieved 4 July 2024.
  1011. "Bulldogs cult hero who invented controversial move dies after cancer battle". Nine's Wide World of Sport. 3 July 2024. Retrieved 4 July 2024. Robinson, who died on Wednesday...
  1012. Shannon, Greg (12 July 2024). "Vale Bob Banks". Queensland Rugby League. Retrieved 13 July 2024. Bob Banks, who passed away on Wednesday...
  1013. Hanson, Ian (15 July 2024). "Frank O'Neill, the first Australian to break 60 seconds for 110 yards, dies aged 97". Swimming World Magazine. Retrieved 19 July 2024. Frank O'Neill (Born September 30, 1926-Died July 10, 1924)
  1014. "STEEDMAN, Alan Peter "Pete"". The Age. 15 July 2024. Retrieved 19 July 2024. 7/12/1943-10/7/2024
  1015. Hook, Chris (13 July 2024). "Legendary Sydney radio star Ron E Sparks dies aged 72". Seven News. Retrieved 13 July 2024.
  1016. "Vale, Sir Roderick Carnegie AC – Rio Tinto statement". Rio Tinto. 15 July 2024. Retrieved 19 July 2024. ...who passed away on 14 July 2024 in Melbourne, aged 91.
  1017. "Bishops pay tribute to former Parramatta Bishop Kevin Manning following his death aged 90". The Canberra Times. 15 July 2024. Retrieved 19 July 2024. ...following his death on 15 July.
  1018. "NRL Hall of Fame inductee and former ABC sports broadcaster David Morrow dies at 71". ABC News. 17 July 2024. Retrieved 17 July 2024.
  1019. O'Flaherty, Antonia; Feeney, Katherine (17 July 2024). "Former Queensland police commissioner Jim O'Sullivan AC dies aged 85". ABC News. Retrieved 17 July 2024.
  1020. "Australian Olympic powerbroker Kevan Gosper dies, aged 90". ABC News. Australian Associated Press. 19 July 2024. Retrieved 19 July 2024.
  1021. "Remembering Nobel Laureate Professor Robin Warren AC". Mirage News. Retrieved 30 July 2024.
  1022. Cuthbertson, Debbie (26 July 2024). "Summer of the Seventeenth Doll playwright Ray Lawler dies aged 103". WAtoday. Retrieved 26 July 2024.
  1023. Deery, Shannon; Clarke, Mitch (26 July 2024). "Former Liberal MP Inga Peulich has died, aged 67". Herald Sun. Retrieved 4 August 2024. ...long time politician died on Thursday in a shock...
  1024. Knox, David (28 July 2024). "Vale: Janet Andrewartha". TV Tonight. TV Tonight. Retrieved 28 July 2024.
  1025. "John George CONOMOS Death Notice". Sydney Morning Herald. 3 August 2024. Retrieved 3 August 2024.
  1026. "John David Rickard (1935–2024)". Monash University. 1 August 2024. Retrieved 6 August 2024.
  1027. "One of Australia's richest men, billionaire Canberra developer Terry Snow, dies aged 80". ABC News. 5 August 2024.
  1028. Allison, Charmayne; Pillarisetty, Anish (5 August 2024). "Elliot McAdam AM remembered as a 'fierce advocate' for Barkly community and NT Labor minister". ABC News. Retrieved 17 August 2024.
  1029. Mitchell, Thomas (7 August 2024). "Jane Hansen, former A Current Affair reporter and co-author of Boned, dies". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 11 August 2024.
  1030. Mardon, Cyonee (8 August 2024). "Kathleen Folbigg pays tribute to Sunday Telegraph journalist Jane Hansen who helped set her free". Retrieved 11 August 2024.
  1031. Hinchcliffe, Joe (8 August 2024). "Jack Karlson, who shot to fame after 'succulent Chinese meal' arrest, dies aged 82". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 August 2024.
  1032. O'Flaherty, Antonia (8 August 2024). "Jack Karlson, man behind 'succulent Chinese meal' viral meme, dies aged 82". ABC News. Retrieved 8 August 2024. ...the 82-year-old passed away on Wednesday
  1033. Blake, Jason (13 August 2024). "Vale Stev Davislim, tenor". Limelight Magazine. Retrieved 17 August 2024.
  1034. Tam, Adrienne (13 August 2024). "'Greatly missed': Aussie Olympics advocate dies at 93". Herald Sun. Retrieved 17 August 2024.
  1035. "'Please keep the memory alive': Holocaust survivor Olga Horak passes away". The Australian Jewish News. 15 August 2024. Retrieved 17 August 2024.
  1036. O'Flaherty, Antonia (21 August 2024). "Merle Thornton AM, a renowned Queensland feminist activist, author and academic, dies aged 93". ABC News (Australia). Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  1037. "Champion racehorse Black Caviar dies a day before her 18th birthday following laminitis disease". ABC News. 17 August 2024. Retrieved 17 August 2024.
  1038. "Football journalist Sam Landsberger killed in collision at Melbourne intersection". ABC News. 20 August 2024.
  1039. Keane, James T. (27 August 2024). "'If we don't get Jesus right, we won't get the church right': The life and teaching of Gerald O'Collins, S.J." America Magazine. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
  1040. "'Was not the same guy we knew': Former league hard man John Bilbija dies after 'sad' decline". Nine's Wide World of Sports. 26 August 2024. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
  1041. Swain, Madeleine (2 September 2024). "Vale Jack Hibberd – great Australian playwright and author of Dimboola". Arts Hub. Retrieved 6 September 2024.
  1042. "Tim Bowden". ABC. 3 September 2024. Retrieved 3 September 2024.
  1043. Brenning, Aisling (1 September 2024). "Western Bulldogs pays tribute to AFL legend John Schultz". news.com.au. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
  1044. Knox, David (9 November 2024). "Vale: Maret Archer". TV Tonight. Retrieved 10 November 2024.
  1045. "Maret Therese Archer". The Sydney Morning Herald. 14 September 2024. Retrieved 10 November 2024. Died peacefully surrounded by love on 2nd September, 2024...
  1046. Fogarty, Karen (10 September 2024). "Vale Sr Margaret Manion ibvm". Loreto. Retrieved 14 September 2024.
  1047. Knox, David (8 September 2024). "Vale: Marty Morton". TV Tonight. Retrieved 8 September 2024. A message by friend Rebbell Barnes was posted on Facebook (on Thursday), "Our dear friend Marty Morton passed away this morning.
  1048. Jenkins, Jeff (6 September 2024). "Vale Mark Moffatt: From '(I'm) Stranded' To Nashville- A Remarkable Musical Journey". The Music. Retrieved 7 September 2024.
  1049. "INALL, Dr Neil James OAM". The Sydney Morning Herald. 11 September 2024. Retrieved 15 September 2024. 23.08.33 – 06.09.24
  1050. Robinson, Harry (12 September 1989). "Agribusiness finds its match". Australian Financial Review. Retrieved 15 September 2024. The presenter (of Cross Country) is Neil Inall, veteran of ABC Rural Radio programmes and ABC TV's Countrywide. Viewers protested loudly when he was dropped as Countrywide presenter five years ago in one of the ABC's crashing blunders...
  1051. Tarek Goodwin, Sean (7 September 2024). "Paedophile Michael Guider who killed Bondi schoolgirl Samantha Knight dies". ABC News. Retrieved 7 September 2024.
  1052. Walsh, Fia (9 September 2024). "Former Northern Territory politician Nick Dondas AM dies aged 84". NT News. Retrieved 22 September 2024.
  1053. Kazlauskas, Jasmine (18 September 2024). "Mum claims she raised bulling issue with school '20 times' before 12-year-old's suicide". news.com.au. Retrieved 17 November 2024. ...tragically died by suicide on September 9.
  1054. "Former Australia fast bowler Frank Misson dies aged 85". ESPNcricinfo. 13 September 2024. Retrieved 15 September 2024.
  1055. "Cricketer: Frank Misson". ESPNcricinfo. September 2024. Retrieved 15 September 2024. Died September 11, 2024
  1056. Thomas, Ray (12 September 2024). "'We have lost a beautiful soul': Sport and racing media icon Graham McNeice dies after short illness". Herald Sun. Retrieved 15 September 2024. passed away after a short battle with illness on Thursday.
  1057. "Former Cabinet minister Aussie Malcolm dies". RNZ. 12 September 2024. Retrieved 15 September 2024.
  1058. Beatty, Liam (14 September 2024). "Australian actor Lex Marinos dies 'surrounded by family' aged 75". news.com.au. Retrieved 14 September 2024. Lex passed away peacefully on Friday morning
  1059. Gossling, Bronte (24 September 2024). "'Helped shape the sound of a generation': Legendary The Easybeats guitarist Dick Diamonde dies aged 76". Nine Entertainment. Retrieved 29 September 2024.
  1060. Kearney, Georgie (20 September 2024). "ARIA award-winning singer Zulya Kamalova dead at 55 after battle with cancer". Seven News. Retrieved 22 September 2024.
  1061. Kennelly, Hannah (21 September 2024). "Tributes roll in for Melbourne culinary 'giant' Greg Malouf". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 21 September 2024.
  1062. "Sydney swim coach dies weeks after being found guilty of raping and sexually assaulting young girls". ABC News. 25 September 2024.
  1063. Valentish, Jenny (5 October 2024). "Remembering Jack Colwell: an astonishing musical talent, and a generous and loyal friend". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 October 2024. his friends and his family were devastated on Thursday...
  1064. "Former children's TV host Fiona MacDonald announces own passing on social media after tough journey with disease". ABC News. 3 October 2024.
  1065. Kennelly, Hannah (5 October 2024). "Australian writer Barbara Blackman, who 'lived the poetry of life', dies at 95". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 5 October 2024. ...died peacefully on Friday
  1066. "John Lawrence O'Meally". The Sydney Morning Herald. 12 October 2024. Retrieved 19 October 2024.
  1067. "State Theatre Company South Australia would like to acknowledge the passing of a stage and screen legend". State Theatre Company South Australia. 10 October 2024. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
  1068. "Donald Cummins Obituary". The Age. 26 November 2024. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
  1069. Buttler, Mark (14 October 2024). "Former Supreme Court judge George Hampel dies, age 91". Herald Sun. Retrieved 19 October 2024.
  1070. Lane, Oliver; Lilley, Amber (9 October 2024). "Vale Joe Haydar: Bunbury pizza king and Olympic weightlifter". South Western Times. Retrieved 19 October 2024.
  1071. Stolz, Greg (11 October 2024). "Qld tourism legend Sir Frank Moore dies". The Courier-Mail. Retrieved 31 October 2024. Sir Frank passed away on Thursday, aged 93.
  1072. McLean, Hamish (14 October 2024). "Dame Elizabeth remembered for getting 'stuff done'". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 19 October 2024.
  1073. "George Negus, founding presenter of 60 Minutes, dies aged 82". 9News. 15 October 2024.
  1074. "Ollie Olsen, influential Australian post-punk and electronic musician, dies aged 66". ABC News. 16 October 2024.
  1075. "Vale Hugh Mitchell". Essendon Football Club. 28 October 2024. Retrieved 31 October 2024.
  1076. King, Tom (30 October 2024). "Farewell, 'Dizzy'". K Rock 95.5. Retrieved 31 October 2024. 'Dizzy', Lynch died yesterday (Tuesday) after a battle with Parkinson's disease at the age of 70.
  1077. Grasswill, Helen; Dempster, Helen (1 November 2024). "The enduring legacy of Matt Peacock (1952–2024)". ABC Alumni. Retrieved 15 November 2024.
  1078. "Victorian feminist Fay Marles dies aged 98, leaving legacy for women's rights and social justice". ABC News. 4 November 2024. Retrieved 9 November 2024. ...Marles died aged 98 in Melbourne on Friday.
  1079. Jack Burgess (2 November 2024). "World's largest crocodile in captivity dies". BBC News. Retrieved 2 November 2024.
  1080. Mesner, Kerri-Anne. "Former Rockhampton mayor, businessman Jim Webber dies peacefully in home". The Morning Bulletin. Retrieved 17 November 2024. ...died peacefully at home with his family on Monday morning
  1081. "Dave Stephens, 11 November 1928 – 5 November 2024". Athletics Australia. 14 November 2024. Retrieved 17 November 2024.
  1082. Fox, Crystal (6 November 2024). "First women's world surfing champion Phyllis O'Donnell passes away". Gold Coast Bulletin. Retrieved 9 November 2024. O'Donnell passed away "peacefully in her sleep" at the age of 87 on Wednesday morning...
  1083. "Vale Rex Blundell". South Australian Cricket Association. 27 November 2024. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
  1084. "Tribute notice for: BAXTER, Ray". Sunday Herald Sun. 17 November 2024. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
  1085. Knox, David (13 November 2024). "Vale: Ken Shorter". TV Tonight. Retrieved 17 November 2024.
  1086. "Dance 'trailblazer', believed to be the oldest woman in NSW, dies aged 110". ABC News. 15 November 2024.
  1087. "Global star Elvstroem dies at 24". Bloodhorse. 20 November 2024. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
  1088. Davis, William (19 November 2024). "Former Bee Gees drummer dies days after another had passed". Brisbane Times. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
  1089. Cowe, Roger (4 December 2024). "Sir Kit McMahon obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
  1090. Everitt, Corey (12 December 2024). "Community mourns local MP, councillor and chemist". Retrieved 14 December 2024.
  1091. Whitbourn, Michaela (28 November 2024). "Legendary Australian barrister and politician Tom Hughes dies aged 101". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 29 November 2024.
  1092. Schriever, Jordanna; Blandis, Eva (28 November 2024). "Murderer and rapist James Beauregard-Smith dies in Yatala Health Centre, parole board confirms". ABC News. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
  1093. "Former Australia batter Ian Redpath passes away aged 83". Cricket.com. 1 December 2024.
  1094. "Tribute: Remembering Neale Fraser". Tennis Australia. 3 December 2024.
  1095. "TV and fashion personality Maggie Tabberer dies aged 87". ABC News. 6 December 2024. Retrieved 6 December 2024.
  1096. "LEEDMAN, JAMES WILLOUGHBY". The Canberra Times. 11 December 2024. Archived from the original on 20 December 2024. Retrieved 20 December 2024.
  1097. "Terry Nicoll". Funeral Announcement. December 2024. Retrieved 1 January 2025.
  1098. Kirk, Emma (12 December 2024). "Australian author Brenda Walker has been killed in a horrific incident at Kings Park in Perth". news.com.au. Retrieved 21 December 2024.
  1099. "Queensland's first TV star, Hugh Cornish, dies aged 90". The Sydney Morning Herald. 12 December 2024. Retrieved 13 December 2024.
  1100. "ABC's 'one-off' broadcaster Clive Robertson dies aged 78". ABC News. 12 December 2024. Retrieved 12 December 2024.
  1101. "Vale Barry Cheatley". North Melbourne Football Club. 13 December 2024. Retrieved 1 January 2025.
  1102. "Former minister and member for Menzies Kevin Andrews dies aged 69". ABC News. 14 December 2024. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
  1103. "WWII RAAF veteren farewelled after passing away at 99". Australian Aviation. 19 December 2024. Retrieved 21 December 2024. His Honour passed away peacefully at home on Saturday 14 December 2024, aged 99.
  1104. "John Marsden (1950–2024)". Locus. 18 December 2024. Retrieved 19 December 2024.
  1105. Shand, Aslan (2 January 2025). "Vale Marty Mayberry". Byron Bay Echo. Retrieved 3 January 2024. Marty Mayberry, passed away at his home in Brisbane on December 18, 2024.
  1106. "Iconic cartoonist Michael Leunig dies aged 79". 7News. 19 December 2024. Retrieved 19 December 2024.
  1107. "Crocodile Dundee croc Burt dies in Australia". BBC News. BBC. 23 December 2024. Retrieved 24 December 2024.
  1108. Quinn, Karl (29 December 2024). "'A legendary figure': Nigel Buesst, filmmaker and educator, dead at 86". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 1 January 2025.
  1109. Manso, James (3 January 2025). "Sir Fraser Stoddart, Noble Panacea Founder, Dies at 82". MSN. Retrieved 6 January 2025.
  1110. Sutton, Ben (31 December 2024). "AFL world mourns death of Geelong great Michael Turner, aged 70". Seven News. Retrieved 1 January 2025.
  1111. Cashmere, Paul (1 January 2025). "Australian jazz musician Bob Bertles dies aged 85". Noise11. Retrieved 1 January 2025.

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