Scapegoating migrants is as old as history itself
John Menadue

Scapegoating migrants is as old as history itself

Scapegoating migrants is designed to distract our attention from the truth and real issues – the abuse of corporate and media power and failure to tackle housing shortages for younger generations.

Recent articles in Politics

How the United States built the world’s biggest military machine
Warwick Powell

How the United States built the world’s biggest military machine

Since 1945, one country has carried out a conventional military buildup unmatched in scale, cost and global reach. Claims about recent rivals distract from the historical record of how modern military dominance was built.

Whistleblowers protect the public. Who protects them?
Gabriel Shipton

Whistleblowers protect the public. Who protects them?

A former intelligence officer alleges preventable failures linked to the Bondi attack. His treatment highlights how weak protections silence whistleblowers in national security institutions.

The ceasefire as a weapon: the genocide in Gaza continues in silence
Refaat Ibrahim

The ceasefire as a weapon: the genocide in Gaza continues in silence

Killings, arrests, displacement and aid restrictions have continued under the ceasefire. The violence has not ended – it has been reorganised and made less visible.

What does Albo stand for?
Kym Davey

What does Albo stand for?

With a commanding parliamentary position and no credible opposition, Labor has unprecedented room to lead. Instead, caution, foreign policy timidity and deference to powerful lobbies are defining its moment.

The world is drifting back towards unconstrained nuclear danger
Marianne Hanson

The world is drifting back towards unconstrained nuclear danger

With the expiration of the New START treaty and the erosion of arms control agreements, the safeguards that once limited nuclear danger are rapidly disappearing – despite decades of evidence that restraint reduces catastrophic risk.

Does Takaichi's victory herald a new age for women in Japan's politics?
Emma Dalton

Does Takaichi's victory herald a new age for women in Japan's politics?

Japan’s Liberal Democratic Party has secured its biggest electoral victory in decades under Sanae Takaichi. While her leadership marks a historic first, the result raises questions about whether symbolic change translates into broader political representation and reform.

Will Japan’s remilitarisation drag us into a war?
Eugene Doyle

Will Japan’s remilitarisation drag us into a war?

Japan’s rapid rearmament marks a decisive break with its post-war pacifist stance. As regional tensions sharpen, Australia and New Zealand must decide whether alignment offers security or invites new risks.

Australia is finally building more social housing – but it’s still not enough
Hal Pawson

Australia is finally building more social housing – but it’s still not enough

Public investment will add tens of thousands of new social housing dwellings by 2030, reversing decades of decline. But new research shows the increase will only prevent further erosion of the sector, not reduce unmet need.

US attitude towards Vietnam remains imperialist, not capitalist
James Curran

US attitude towards Vietnam remains imperialist, not capitalist

Vietnam’s Communist Party leader To Lam has consolidated power and set ambitious growth targets for the country’s future. While reforms have unlocked momentum, centralisation, debt, corruption and geopolitical pressure raise questions about sustainability.

The Apology sets the standard
Andrew Hamilton

The Apology sets the standard

The National Apology to the Stolen Generations modelled dignity, responsibility and mutual respect. Its spirit now stands in sharp contrast to the tone of Australian public life.

Muslim women face violence, prejudice, exclusion
Helen McCue

Muslim women face violence, prejudice, exclusion

Reported Islamophobic attacks in Australia have surged dramatically, with Muslim women overwhelmingly targeted. The failure of political leaders and institutions to respond meaningfully is deepening fear, trauma and exclusion.

Judge pushes back on Trump-style ‘Ministry of Truth’
Jessica Corbett

Judge pushes back on Trump-style ‘Ministry of Truth’

A Republican-appointed federal judge has ordered the restoration of slavery exhibits at an historic US site, rejecting claims that the executive can decide what historical truth should be.



More from Politics