Bring these Australian children home, PM. They did not make their own beds
Fionnuala Ni Aolain,  Ben Saul

Bring these Australian children home, PM. They did not make their own beds

Dozens of Australian women and children remain trapped in dangerous detention camps in north-east Syria, despite Australia’s legal obligations, available security powers, and repeated international requests for repatriation.

Recent articles in Politics

Message from the Editor
Catriona Jackson

Message from the Editor

I gasped in disbelief when I heard our Prime Minster invoke his beloved mother, when blocking the return of family members of ISIS fighters to Australia this week.  He said: “My mother would have said, ‘If you make your bed, you lie in it’. And he doubled down the next day, saying of the 11 women and 23 children: “I have nothing but contempt for these people.”

Prince Andrew arrested – why not King Trump?
Robert Reich

Prince Andrew arrested – why not King Trump?

If no one is above the law in the UK, not even royalty, presumably no one is above the law in the US, not even a president.

Let’s not turn back the clock on immigration
Peter Hughes

Let’s not turn back the clock on immigration

Australia needs a forward-looking, evidence-based immigration policy from the Liberal Party. They should drop the slogans, fear mongering and backward-looking thinking.

Australia’s renewable surge leaves energy politics behind
Rachel Williamson

Australia’s renewable surge leaves energy politics behind

New data shows Australia’s renewable energy transition has passed a tipping point – with wind, solar and batteries now supplying half the national grid and rapidly expanding.

Board of Peace plans 5,000-person military base in southern Gaza
Julia Conley

Board of Peace plans 5,000-person military base in southern Gaza

Leaked contracting documents detail plans by the Board of Peace to build a large military base in southern Gaza, including armoured towers, bunkers and a “Human Remains Protocol”.

With more restrictive laws across the country, how can we protect the right to protest?
Maria O'Sullivan

With more restrictive laws across the country, how can we protect the right to protest?

Recent state laws passed in the name of public safety are expanding police powers and narrowing the right to protest, with uneven safeguards for human rights across Australia.

The three big challenges facing Angus Taylor
David Solomon

The three big challenges facing Angus Taylor

Angus Taylor has assembled his shadow ministry, but unresolved tensions with the Nationals, policy baggage from the last election and doubts about his own authority leave his leadership exposed.

AI, productivity and the long stall in living standards
Michael Keating

AI, productivity and the long stall in living standards

Artificial intelligence may offer the best chance to lift stagnant productivity and living standards – but without deliberate policy choices, its benefits will be uneven and limited.

Reverend Jesse Jackson's legacy on the Middle East
Washington Report on Middle East Affairs

Reverend Jesse Jackson's legacy on the Middle East

Tributes to Reverend Jesse Jackson rightly honour his civil rights leadership. Far fewer acknowledge his long, consistent support for Palestinian self-determination – and the political costs he paid for it.

Shame hasn’t vanished. Care has
John Frew

Shame hasn’t vanished. Care has

Public outrage fixates on the absence of shame among elites. But the deeper problem is cultural and structural – a political economy that has pushed care to the margins of public life.

Universities expose racism’s scale – and the dangers of unequal responses
Raghid Nahhas

Universities expose racism’s scale – and the dangers of unequal responses

New national data shows racism is widespread across Australian universities. The challenge is responding fairly, without elevating one community’s suffering over another’s.

Dual nationals in Israel’s military face growing legal scrutiny over Gaza
Yashraj Sharma

Dual nationals in Israel’s military face growing legal scrutiny over Gaza

Newly released data shows that tens of thousands of Israeli soldiers hold foreign citizenship, placing Western nationals directly within the scope of international war crimes law over Gaza.



More from Politics