• 32 minutes 15 seconds
    Starmer’s downfall should be a warning sign for Albanese
    Keir Starmer's resignation after just 18 months as British Prime Minister raises important questions for centre-left governments across the democratic world. We examine the striking parallels between Labour in the UK and Labor in Australia, exploring why governments elected on promises of transformational reform often revert to cautious incrementalism, and how this has fuelled the rise of Reform UK and One Nation. As voters increasingly judge governments against their promises rather than their predecessors, Anthony Albanese faces the same challenge: deliver meaningful political and economic change, or risk creating the conditions for insurgent political movements to flourish. #AUSPOL
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    Song listing:
    • ‘La Femme d’Argent’, AIR.
    25 June 2026, 9:00 pm
  • 23 minutes 54 seconds
    How America lost the war
    For years, the United States and Israel argued that war with Iran was inevitable, but after four months of conflict, soaring oil prices, disruption to the Strait of Hormuz and global economic uncertainty, Iran has emerged stronger while many of Washington’s objectives remain unfulfilled. As a ceasefire agreement approaches, we examine the strategic failures of the US and Israel, the collapse of the regime change narrative, the return of diplomacy, the future of Iran's nuclear program, and what this conflict reveals about power, geopolitics and the changing balance of influence in the Middle East.  
    #AUSPOL
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    Song listing:
    • ‘La Femme d’Argent’, AIR.
    19 June 2026, 9:00 pm
  • 32 minutes 43 seconds
    Hanson and the politics of hate
    Pauline Hanson’s National Press Club appearance revealed that the politics of grievance, culture wars and division remain central to One Nation’s appeal. As voters continue to face cost-of-living pressures, housing affordability and a declining trust in institutions, we examine the rise of populism in Australia, the decline of the Liberal Party, the contradictions in One Nation’s economic agenda, and whether fear-based politics offers real solutions or simply creates new scapegoats. We also discuss the media’s role in normalising fringe political movements and why harmful ideas must be challenged rather than ignored.   #AUSPOL
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    Song listing:
    • ‘La Femme d’Argent’, AIR.
    18 June 2026, 9:00 pm
  • 22 minutes
    The One Nation poll surge: Protest or a passing fad?
    Recent opinion polls showing One Nation leading the primary vote have sparked debate about the future of Australian politics, but the bigger story may be the growing dissatisfaction with Labor, the Coalition and the political establishment itself. As voters grapple with cost-of-living pressures, housing affordability and declining trust in institutions, support for Pauline Hanson’s party appears increasingly driven by protest rather than ideology. In this episode, we examine whether One Nation’s surge represents a temporary backlash, a lasting political realignment, or a warning sign that Australia's traditional two-party system is facing its greatest challenge in decades.
    #AUSPOL
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    Song listing:
    • ‘La Femme d’Argent’, AIR.
    12 June 2026, 9:00 pm
  • 33 minutes 51 seconds
    Is Israel heading towards AUKUS? The bigger story behind the submarines
    For years, the debate over AUKUS has focused on submarines, costs and delivery schedules, but the bigger story may be Australia’s growing integration into American military and defence systems. This week, we examine new legislation before the US Congress that would deepen defence technology cooperation between the United States and Israel, and what that could mean for Australia through AUKUS Pillar II. As artificial intelligence, autonomous weapons, cyber warfare and advanced military networks become increasingly interconnected, questions are emerging about Australian sovereignty, strategic independence and who ultimately controls critical defence decisions. Is AUKUS simply a submarine program, or is it part of a much larger project that could reshape Australia’s military, foreign policy and relationship with the United States and Israel for decades to come?   #AUSPOL #AUKUS #geopolitics #NewPoliticsPodcast 

    Subscribe to New Politics for weekly briefings and full analysis: www.newpolitics.com.au  
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    Song listing:
    • ‘La Femme d’Argent’, AIR.
    11 June 2026, 9:00 pm
  • 17 minutes 14 seconds
    Discarding human rights for the sake of Israel
    The Albanese government frequently presents Australia as a defender of international law, human rights and the rules-based international order, but does that commitment extend to all nations equally? This week, we examine serious allegations of sexual violence, physical abuse and rape made by Australian citizens detained by Israeli forces following the illegal interception of the Sumud Flotilla, with the acts now referred to the International Criminal Court. As scrutiny grows over Australia's response to Israel's actions in Gaza and Lebanon, we explore questions of accountability, consistency, international law, human rights, the ICC, Anthony Albanese, Penny Wong and whether Australia's foreign policy principles are being applied equally – or only when politically convenient. #auspol

    Subscribe to New Politics for weekly briefings and full analysis: www.newpolitics.com.au  

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    Song listing:
    • ‘La Femme d’Argent’, AIR.
    5 June 2026, 9:00 pm
  • 25 minutes 59 seconds
    AUKUS: The $368 billion submarine mirage
    AUKUS was sold as a transformational defence agreement that would deliver a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines and strengthen Australia's security for decades to come. Nearly five years later, the promised new submarines have become second-hand Virginia-class vessels from the United States, raising fresh questions about a program expected to cost up to $368 billion. As former Labor minister Peter Garrett launches an independent review of AUKUS, we examine the escalating costs, shifting promises, lack of parliamentary scrutiny, growing dependence on the United States and Britain, and whether Australia is sacrificing sovereignty and assuming enormous financial risk for a defence strategy that remains increasingly uncertain.
    #AUKUS #Auspol #DefencePolicy #NuclearSubmarines #NationalSecurity #NewPoliticsPodcast

    Subscribe to New Politics for weekly briefings and full analysis: www.newpolitics.com.au  

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    Song listing:
    • ‘La Femme d’Argent’, AIR.
    4 June 2026, 9:00 pm
  • 22 minutes 25 seconds
    Integrity on hold: The crisis facing the National Anti-Corruption Commission
    The resignation of NACC commissioner Paul Brereton has reignited debate about whether Australia’s federal anti-corruption watchdog is capable of delivering the accountability it promised. Created by the Albanese government in response to scandals including Robodebt, sports rorts and growing distrust in politics, the NACC was meant to restore integrity to public life. Nearly three years later, it has become a secretive, risk-averse institution that has avoided major political investigations while securing only a handful of lower-level convictions. We examine Brereton’s controversial tenure, the structural limitations built into the NACC, and whether Australia’s anti-corruption framework is too weak to confront political power, influence and government misconduct.

    Subscribe to New Politics for weekly briefings and full analysis: www.newpolitics.com.au  

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    Song listing:
    • ‘La Femme d’Argent’, AIR.
    29 May 2026, 9:00 pm
  • 31 minutes 29 seconds
    The Teal Party of Australia: Will it take off?
    The teal independents transformed Australian politics by offering moderate urban voters an alternative to the Liberal Party’s culture-war politics under Scott Morrison and Peter Dutton, combining climate action, integrity and economic conservatism outside the traditional party system. But as discussion grows about forming a formal “Teal Party of Australia”, we examine whether the movement could lose the very independent appeal that made it successful. We also explore the collapse of traditional party loyalties, the rise of outsider movements like One Nation, growing voter dissatisfaction with both Labor and Liberal, and how housing affordability, cost-of-living pressures and economic insecurity are reshaping the future of Australian politics.

    Subscribe to New Politics for weekly briefings and full analysis: www.newpolitics.com.au  

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    Song listing:
    • ‘La Femme d’Argent’, AIR.
    28 May 2026, 9:00 pm
  • 20 minutes 57 seconds
    The continuing Budget fallout: A political war over housing and wealth
    The debate surrounding Australia’s 2026 Budget has rapidly evolved into a broader political battle over housing affordability, negative gearing, wealth inequality and the future direction of the Australian economy. In this episode, we examine how Labor’s housing reforms have triggered an aggressive backlash from the Liberal Party, conservative media and vested property interests, with warnings about attacks on “aspiration”, investment and wealth creation increasingly crashing into the reality facing millennials and Gen Z Australians locked out of home ownership. We explore whether the media-driven outrage over the Albanese government’s reforms reflects genuine public concern or a deeper attempt to protect a decades-old economic model built on property speculation, tax concessions and rising inequality, and ask whether Australia’s political and economic consensus is beginning to unravel. #AUSPOL

    Subscribe to New Politics for weekly briefings and full analysis: www.newpolitics.com.au  

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    Song listing:
    • ‘La Femme d’Argent’, AIR.
    22 May 2026, 9:00 pm
  • 23 minutes 17 seconds
    The Royal Commission, Palestine and the clampdown on free speech
    Australia’s Royal Commission into Antisemitism and Social Cohesion is becoming a major political flashpoint over free speech, Israel and Palestine, civil liberties and political dissent. We examine how accusations of antisemitism are increasingly being linked to criticism of Israel, Zionism and support for Palestinian rights, the controversy surrounding the IHRA definition of antisemitism, and whether Australia is moving toward tighter limits on political debate and protest. As tensions over Gaza continue to influence public discourse, the debate is raising larger questions about democracy, social cohesion, racism, censorship and who gets heard in Australian politics. #AUSPOL #Antisemitism #Palestine #Israel  

    Subscribe to New Politics for weekly briefings and full analysis: www.newpolitics.com.au

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    Song listing:
    • ‘La Femme d’Argent’, AIR.
    21 May 2026, 9:00 pm
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