The Pseudo Energy Wars, Saving Julian Assange And Demise Of The Liberal Party

The Pseudo Energy Wars, Saving Julian Assange And Demise Of The Liberal Party

The biggest war is not the one in Ukraine – there are no generals in this war, there are no medals to hand out, and it’s possibly a war without end. And, of course, it’s a war that’s been concocted by the mainstream media and the Opposition, mainly to put pressure on the new Labor government. Yes, it’s the energy war, which is a war on public sensibilities and could end up being a war on the credibility of the media.

For nine years, the media barely focused on the failures of the Liberal–National government to formulate an energy policy between 2013–2022 and now they’re shaking their fists at Anthony Albanese for creating not just an energy crisis, but firing the first shots in a fictitious energy war. And it’s not just energy: refugees are arriving by boat! For nine years, these were “on water matters” that couldn’t be reported, but now it’s open slather, with media reports now claiming that people smugglers in Sri Lanka are telling their clients Australia is now very welcoming of boat arrivals.

One area the new Labor government can act upon is Julian Assange: he’s been languishing in a British jail for over three years and Albanese – when he was Leader of the Opposition – did say that he couldn’t see the point of the continuing incarceration of Assange. Well, now he’s the Prime Minister, and now is the time to act. And also cease the prosecution of four whistleblowers in Australia – Jeff Morris, Richard Boyle, David McBride and Bernard Collaery – there’s no point to these prosecutions either, and it’s time to drop these cases.

After each election, all political parties – whether they win or lose – assess where they went right, and where they went wrong. And the National Secretary of the Labor Party, Paul Erickson, has outlined all the reasons for why Labor won the election, and why the Coalition lost – eight key points – and the Coalition would be wise to listen in and take on these points. Free advice is probably the best advice.

And is Scott Morrison the worst Prime Minister in Australia’s history? It’s an easy answer: a Prime Minister who won’t be remembered for very much, squandered a massive amount of political capital built up during the pandemic, kept on repeating the same mistakes over and over again – and didn’t learn from any of these mistakes – and then lost an election the Coalition didn’t need to lose and shouldn’t have lost. If only they displayed some level of competence. But they didn’t.

So, yes. An easy choice for the worst Prime Minister. Come on down, Scott Morrison, come on down…

Avsnitt(305)

The Iran Ultimatum, A House Of Cards and Climate Chaos

The Iran Ultimatum, A House Of Cards and Climate Chaos

Housing affordability dominates the headlines as the Albanese government repackages its 5% deposit scheme for first home buyers, but with global evidence showing such policies push up prices without f...

29 Aug 202548min

Reform, Resistance and Netanyahu’s Rant

Reform, Resistance and Netanyahu’s Rant

We unpack the government’s Economic Reform Roundtable, where Anthony Albanese brought together business, unions, and welfare groups to debate productivity, equity, housing, and workplace reform – but ...

22 Aug 202558min

A state of Palestine and the price of fearless journalism

A state of Palestine and the price of fearless journalism

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s announcement that Australia will recognise the state of Palestine at the UN in September marks a historic foreign policy shift, yet conditions are placed solely on Pa...

15 Aug 202548min

The March For Humanity

The March For Humanity

In this episode of New Politics, we cover the massive Sydney Harbour Bridge protest where up to 300,000 Australians defied torrential rain to demand justice for Palestine, an end to Israel’s genocide ...

8 Aug 202546min

Politics, Palestine and the continuing AUKUS mess

Politics, Palestine and the continuing AUKUS mess

AUKUS turns costly as Australia signs a 50-year treaty with the UK – without US backing. The Nationals reignite the climate wars, aged care reforms are delayed, and Gareth Ward remains in Parliament d...

1 Aug 202543min

A Year of Delivery and Censuring Gaza

A Year of Delivery and Censuring Gaza

The first sitting week of Australia’s new federal Parliament has begun with a show of strength from the Albanese Labor government, now holding a record-breaking majority. In this episode, we explore w...

25 Juli 202548min

China, Censorship and the Great Australian Housing Mirage

China, Censorship and the Great Australian Housing Mirage

In this episode, we break down a big week in Australian politics – from Anthony Albanese’s strategic reset of Australia–China relations through diplomacy and trade, to the Coalition’s continued Cold W...

18 Juli 202552min

Criminalising Dissent and the True Public Cost of Privatisation

Criminalising Dissent and the True Public Cost of Privatisation

This week, we expose the real costs of privatisation in Australia’s essential services – early childhood education, health, aged care, and universities – highlighting how deregulation, outsourcing, an...

11 Juli 202551min

Populärt inom Politik & nyheter

aftonbladet-krim
p3-krim
svenska-fall
rss-krimstad
spar
flashback-forever
rss-sanning-konsekvens
rss-vad-fan-hande
aftonbladet-daily
motiv
rss-aftonbladet-krim
rss-flodet
politiken
rss-klubbland-en-podd-mest-om-frolunda
rss-frandfors-horna
rss-krimreportrarna
grans
krimmagasinet
dagens-eko
olyckan-inifran