Another High Court rebuke on immigration laws – and a warning on rushed policymaking
Greg Barns

Another High Court rebuke on immigration laws – and a warning on rushed policymaking

A new High Court ruling has struck down the Albanese government’s restrictions on former immigration detainees – exposing the risks of rushed, politically driven lawmaking.

Recent articles in Politics

The weaponisation of antisemitism is making Jews less safe
John Menadue

The weaponisation of antisemitism is making Jews less safe

Revulsion at Israel’s actions in Gaza is driving a global rise in antisemitism, while efforts to conflate criticism of Israel with hatred of Jews are deepening the danger.

A bold plan to fix Australia’s research and innovation system – but will it deliver?
Roy Green

A bold plan to fix Australia’s research and innovation system – but will it deliver?

A major review calls for sweeping reform of Australia’s research and innovation system – but questions remain about delivery, priorities and impact.

From hubris to holy war – the dangerous logic behind the Iran conflict
John Jiggens

From hubris to holy war – the dangerous logic behind the Iran conflict

The language and beliefs driving the US–Israel war on Iran point to escalation, not restraint – with global consequences.

Bill Shorten’s university proposal breaks the deadlock – but design will decide its value
Will Brehm,  Ben Spies-Butcher

Bill Shorten’s university proposal breaks the deadlock – but design will decide its value

Bill Shorten’s proposal for a university fund tackles a long-standing funding problem – but its impact will depend on how it is designed and delivered.

Wartime resilience already exists in multicultural Australia
Carl Gopalkrishnan

Wartime resilience already exists in multicultural Australia

As fuel and supply pressures build, multicultural Australia offers practical lessons in restraint, cooperation and resilience – but policy has yet to catch up.

Private health insurance isn’t working – and the numbers show it
Claudia Weisenberger

Private health insurance isn’t working – and the numbers show it

Premiums are rising far faster than official increases, coverage is narrowing and hospitals are under strain – Australia’s private health model is failing.

The government is sanitising Australia’s involvement in the Iran war
Sue Wareham

The government is sanitising Australia’s involvement in the Iran war

Australia’s support for US and Israeli action against Iran highlights a growing reliance on military responses over diplomacy and international law.

ACT justice system on the brink from chronic underfunding
Andrew Fraser

ACT justice system on the brink from chronic underfunding

Legal Aid, prosecutors and the courts are all under pressure, raising concerns about fairness, workload and the effective operation of the ACT justice system.

From ‘Mission Accomplished’ to 'We’ve won but haven't won enough' – the marketing of forever wars
Kellie Merritt

From ‘Mission Accomplished’ to 'We’ve won but haven't won enough' – the marketing of forever wars

The rhetoric surrounding the war with Iran echoes the propaganda used to justify Iraq – a conflict that cost the life of the author’s husband, FLT Paul Pardoel.

ABC’s National Forum fails its first test on antisemitism
Vivienne Porzsolt

ABC’s National Forum fails its first test on antisemitism

The ABC’s new flagship forum failed to interrogate key claims and perspectives on antisemitism, leaving major gaps in a critical national debate.

A war without clear objectives is turning against Trump
Michael Keating

A war without clear objectives is turning against Trump

With no clear objective and mounting economic and political costs, the case for ending the Iran war is becoming overwhelming.

AI's inclination to 'go nuclear'
Connie Peck

AI's inclination to 'go nuclear'

Studies show AI systems used in military scenarios tend to escalate conflicts, raising serious concerns about their role in decisions involving nuclear weapons.



More from Politics