Pearlcast EP 1

Launching Pearlcasts

The 50th Anniversary of the Dismissal of the Whitlam Government

We kick off with a topic close to our hearts, the 50th anniversary of the Dismissal of the Whitlam Government. We have three of the best sources in the nation taking part: our editor-in-chief John Menadue – the living link to the scandal and the nation’s top public servant at the time; Jenny Hocking, author of The Palace Letters and Australia’s pre-eminent Dismissal historian; and Brian Toohey, the journalist who has dug deepest into the darkest elements of the events.

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The Prince and the Dismissal
John Menadue

THE DISMISSAL AT 50

The Prince and the Dismissal

Anthony Albanese recently told us with bated breath from Balmoral Castle that Charles is someone who is very interested in Australia”. “Interested “would be an understatement.

OFFICIAL – Israel’s proposed death-penalty law is a war crime
Greg Barns

OFFICIAL – Israel’s proposed death-penalty law is a war crime

Not satisfied it seems with the continued genocide of Palestinians, Israel is now looking to execute Palestinian prisoners by introducing a death penalty law.

'We don't do that in this country': judge slams DPP
Andrew Fraser

'We don't do that in this country': judge slams DPP

An appeal by ACT director of Public Prosecutions, Victoria Engel, SC, has been dismissed by a Full Bench of the ACT Court of Appeal after only three minutes of deliberation.


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When in doubt, blame China (every News Corp headline needs a villain)
Fred Zhang

ANTI-CHINA MEDIA WATCH

When in doubt, blame China (every News Corp headline needs a villain)

If you only skimmed the headlines from News Corp, you’d be forgiven for thinking China was launching a krill-powered naval strike from Antarctica, staging an electric vehicle blitzkrieg across the outback and forcing Hyundai into some humiliating act of surrender.

The press and the Dismissal – Part III
Patricia Edgar

THE DISMISSAL AT 50

The press and the Dismissal – Part III

Television had come to the fore in elections during the Whitlam campaign of 1972 when increased funds were spent on advertising with slogans (It’s time was backed by a catchy jingle) and mainly short television grabs for the news.

When truth can no longer be silenced
Joseph Camilleri

When truth can no longer be silenced

In Australia, secretive and remote institutions armed with increasingly restrictive laws are seriously eroding civic freedoms.

‘New York, this city belongs to you’: Zohran Mamdani’s victory speech
Zohran Mamdani

‘New York, this city belongs to you’: Zohran Mamdani’s victory speech

Thank you, my friends. The sun may have set over our city this evening, but as Eugene Debs once said, “I can see the dawn of a better day for humanity.”

The new political economy of innovation: Why Australian policymakers need better tools
John Howard,  Dr Rajesh Gopalakrishnan Nair

The new political economy of innovation: Why Australian policymakers need better tools

When the Commonwealth Government reorganised its innovation responsibilities for the fourth time in a decade, public servants made jokes about updating their email signatures again.

Focusing on the EPBC but dropping the ball on protection
David Lindenmayer,  Chris Taylor

Focusing on the EPBC but dropping the ball on protection

While national environmental attention is fixed on EPBC Act reforms in Canberra, some Australian states have dropped the ball on forest protection – and this is seriously undermining Australia’s target of protecting 30% of the continent by 2030.

Australia’s fragile multicultural consensus under threat
Wanning Sun

Australia’s fragile multicultural consensus under threat

Anti-immigration rallies around Australia in late August and mid-October exposed public divides over migration, social cohesion and national identity.

The Queen’s implausible denial
John Menadue

THE DISMISSAL AT 50

The Queen’s implausible denial

It beggars belief that the Queen did not know that John Kerr was planning to sack Gough Whitlam. She may not have known the detail of the coup in progress, but she knew the substance. But like Lord Nelson she pretended she did not see anything. Nonsense.

Latest on Palestine and Israel

OFFICIAL – Israel’s proposed death-penalty law is a war crime
Greg Barns

OFFICIAL – Israel’s proposed death-penalty law is a war crime

Not satisfied it seems with the continued genocide of Palestinians, Israel is now looking to execute Palestinian prisoners by introducing a death penalty law.

Lancet study shows more than 3m years of human life lost in Israeli assault on Gaza
Jessica Corbett

Lancet study shows more than 3m years of human life lost in Israeli assault on Gaza

“To speak of three million years of human life erased is to confront the true scale of this atrocity – generations of children, parents, and families wiped out,” said the head of a US advocacy group.

Palestine’s future: Australians are outraged
Margaret Reynolds,  Stuart Rees

Palestine’s future: Australians are outraged

At an Australia-wide webinar on 31 October, David Spratt paid tribute to the late Ali Kazak, Palestine’s first ambassador to Australia.

Israel, lies and videotape
Alison Broinowski

Israel, lies and videotape

We have heard a lot in the last two years and one month about Jewish Australians feeling unsafe or intimidated.

108 years since the Balfour Declaration – a promise written in ink, fulfilled in blood
Refaat Ibrahim

108 years since the Balfour Declaration – a promise written in ink, fulfilled in blood

On 2 November 1917, Britain wrote with the ink of politics what it had no right to write with the ink of history.

The West’s double game on Gaza
Scott Burchill

The West’s double game on Gaza

In the aftermath of the attacks of 7 October 2023 and for months afterwards, Western governments that have been long-standing supporters of Israel — including the Australian Government — invoked “self-defence” to justify the severity of Israel’s response.

Australia can't get away with genocide
Alison Broinowski

Australia can't get away with genocide

Australia repeatedly fights as the deputy sheriff in our ally’s wars. Afterwards, our contributions are forgotten and we continue to dodge blame for the disastrous results, including war crimes. Can we get away with this over Gaza?

Israel’s repeated ceasefire violations are part of its strategy to keep waging war on Gaza
Tareq S. Hajjaj

Israel’s repeated ceasefire violations are part of its strategy to keep waging war on Gaza

Here’s Israel's strategy to continue the war on Gaza: find a pretext, no matter how baseless, use it to kill dozens of civilians and fighters, stop fire and claim you’re honouring the ceasefire. Then do it again.


John Menadue's book on Israel's war against Gaza

Israel's war against Gaza

Media coverage of the war in Gaza since October 2023 has spread a series of lies propagated by Israel and the United States. This publication presents information, analysis, clarification, views and perspectives largely unavailable in mainstream media in Australia and elsewhere.

Download the PDF

Latest on China

Trump turns the tables on Taiwan
Geoff Raby

Trump turns the tables on Taiwan

china politics usa world

When the razzle dazzle of the prime minister’s first face-to-face meeting with the mercurial US president is forgotten and the huge sigh of relief that nothing went wrong subsides, questions will be asked about what all the puffery achieved.

‘Stabilising’ relations with China while differences widen
Andrew Podger

‘Stabilising’ relations with China while differences widen

The Albanese Government’s stabilised China policy faces the test of deepening ideological and strategic divides.

Understanding Australia-China research mobility
Elena Collinson,  James Laurenceson,  Wanning Sun,  Marina Zhang,  Xunpeng Shi

Understanding Australia-China research mobility

Australia’s research partnership with China is a significant component of its scientific output, particularly in engineering, technology and applied sciences.


John Menadue

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Latest letters to the editor

The private sector embedded in government

Bob Pearce — Adelaide SA

It is not just developers with too much influence in the government sector, it is the lack of separation of capitalism and state that is the source of our problems. The fox is in control of the hen house. That's not to say that there isn't a role for both, but their roles have been entwined to the point where the tail is wagging the dog. Contractors and consultants have influence in the employment of public servants and their appointments which leads to poor and biased decision-making. The current housing crisis is a case in point....
Waking from beguilement

Janet Grevillea — Lake Macquarie

In 1945, my grandmother gave me The Two Princesses: The Story of the King's Daughters. I cherished the photos of those two special girls. Fed a solid diet of royalism by every one of society's institutions, I admired Princess, then Queen, Elizabeth. I was one of millions of Australians who saluted the flag, stood for God Save the Queen and pledged to serve her. When, in 1954, Elizabeth visited Australia for the first time, we flocked to see her, as many times as possible. On 11 November 1975, I heard radio news of the Dismissal. I remember the...
Ley's abject capitulation on mass migration

Stephen Saunders — O'Connor

As Jane O'Sullivan points out, it's still just possible for democratic nations to defer to voters, to reverse absurdly unsustainable levels of immigration that voters don't want. In New Zealand, it took a change of government. Not so in Canada. In Australia, however, Liberal and Labor only have eyes for each other, voters are out of luck. Check what happened, when Sussan Ley's new Home Affairs spokesman Jonno Duniam (Jonno who?) finally surfaced, with a tame interview for Nine Media. Did he call out Labor's racist and neo-Nazi smears of voters? Did he roast Albanese’s permanent elevation of...
Thank you, David

Rex Williams — Springwood NSW

I would like to thank David Spratt for his article on Ali Kazak. My interaction with Ali was over 45 years. I learnt what advocacy meant and how justice in all things was the major point in writing on any subject involving people, wherever they may be. I was in truth, a Palestinian and all that meant. My efforts were constant over all those years, gradually learning the history of Palestine, the injustices over decades, the devious nature of those who sought to bring that country down and the hypocrisy of others who sought to gain materially from...



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