Bondi demands answers – and a Royal Commission
Greg Barns,  Kym Davey

Bondi demands answers – and a Royal Commission

Revelations about overseas training, intelligence failures and police responses raise urgent questions that cannot be left to internal reviews.

Recent articles in Politics

China has neither the intent nor the capability to attack us
John Menadue

China has neither the intent nor the capability to attack us

Australia faces no credible military threat from China. The real danger lies in uncritical alignment with US strategy, fear-driven rhetoric and the steady erosion of national sovereignty.

Beijing makes domestic spending its top priority – Asian Media Report
David Armstrong

Beijing makes domestic spending its top priority – Asian Media Report

From China’s new investing in people strategy to Thailand’s threat to continue border fighting, revelations about Korea’s martial law bid, South Asia’s climate emergencies, the restoration of democracy in Bangladesh, and Seoul’s imaginative food waste scheme, the latest Asian media coverage highlights our region’s pressures, problems and opportunities.

Choosing hope in an uncertain world
Stewart Sweeney

Choosing hope in an uncertain world

In an age of political, ecological and social strain, hope is often mistaken for denial. But real hope is neither passive nor naïve – it is a choice to keep acting, even without guarantees.

What the Bondi Beach tragedy reveals about Australia’s political faultlines
Raghid Nahhas

What the Bondi Beach tragedy reveals about Australia’s political faultlines

In the aftermath of the Bondi Beach attack, grief was quickly accompanied by political demands that blurred the line between combating antisemitism and suppressing dissent, with troubling consequences for social cohesion and civil liberties.

Why did Trump send his warships to Venezuela?
Vijay Prashad

Why did Trump send his warships to Venezuela?

As US pressure on Venezuela intensifies, Washington is reviving an openly interventionist approach to Latin America. The targets extend beyond Caracas to the region as a whole.

Why are you still using Microsoft Windows?
Dan Wild

Why are you still using Microsoft Windows?

The ACCC’s case against Microsoft raises questions about market power and consumer transparency – but it also highlights how dependence on bundled software limits real choice for users.

Shrinking East Asia needs a safety net
Arvid Lukauskas,  Yumiko Shimabukuro

Shrinking East Asia needs a safety net

East Asia has led the global recovery since the pandemic, but deep welfare imbalances are now threatening the sustainability of its growth model.

Bondi raises questions about ASIO’s community intelligence reach
Bernard Collaery

Bondi raises questions about ASIO’s community intelligence reach

The Bondi attack has renewed scrutiny of whether Australia’s domestic intelligence agencies have sufficient cultural reach and human intelligence within the communities they monitor.

Chile swerves to the right and into the past
Ariel Dorfman

Chile swerves to the right and into the past

José Antonio Kast’s election marks the first time since Chile’s return to democracy that an admirer of the dictatorship has reached the presidency. The implications run deep.

A better symbol
Sara Dowse

A better symbol

After the Bondi massacre, grief was swiftly overtaken by politics. Public mourning and the misuse of symbols raise hard questions about solidarity, power and what genuinely brings light.

Pearlcast: a year that overturned the old certainties
Catriona Jackson

A year in review

Pearlcast: a year that overturned the old certainties

As 2025 draws to a close, the temptation is to look for neat summaries and settled conclusions. But in the latest episode of our podcast Pearlcast, that impulse is firmly resisted.

Radar lock or editorial block? The ABC's China-Japan report has blind spot
Fred Zhang

ANTI-CHINA MEDIA WATCH

Radar lock or editorial block? The ABC's China-Japan report has blind spot

A story published by the ABC framed a military encounter as an act of aggression. But subsequent details told a more complicated story that Australia’s public broadcaster never revisited.



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