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ABC's Sally Sara wins award for 'most unbalanced interview of the year', as cartoonists at Nine, the Guardian paint US as villain over Iran war

ABC's Sally Sara wins award for 'most unbalanced interview of the year', as cartoonists at Nine, the Guardian paint US as villain over Iran war

Sky News AU04-07-2025
Read Gerard Henderson's Media Watch Dog column every Saturday morning on SkyNews.com.au
THE LATEST IT'S GONG AGAIN TIME FOR MWD FAVE PHILLIP ADAMS ON THURSDAY 3 JULY
At last some GOOD NEWS. Media Watch Dog fave Phillip ('Have I told you more than a score of times that I was a teenage commie') Adams has just received another gong. How do we know this? Well, Comrade Adams put out this post on Elon Musk's X at Hangover Time on Thursday 3 July and a member of the Newcastle Soviet forwarded it to MWD.
So, it's Farewell to Phillip Adams AO, AM, Hon DUniv (Griffith), Hon DLitt (ECU), Hon DUniv (SA), DLitt (Syd), Hon. DUniv (Macquarie), FRSA, Hon FAHA.
And it is Arise Phillip Adams AO, AM, Hon DUniv (Griffith), Hon DLitt (ECU), Hon DUniv (SA), DLitt (Syd), Hon. DUniv (Macquarie), FRSA, Hon FAHA, Hon. D.Litt (Newcastle). NEW AWARD – MWD AWARD FOR THE MOST UNBALANCED INTERVIEW IN THE FIRST HALF OF THE CALENDAR YEAR
AND THE WINNER IS SALLY SARA
Here's how the segment commenced on ABC Radio National on 18 June 2025:
Sally Sara: That was the chair of the UN independent International Commission of Inquiry on the occupied Palestinian territory in Israel, Navi Pillay. She's just presented her report to the UN Human Rights Council, which says that Israel has committed crimes against humanity with a clear goal in mind, quote, "the destruction of life in Gaza". It comes as fighting between Iran and Israel escalates. Israel has made the case that its actions are in self-defence. Iran, on the other hand, has told the United Nations Security Council that Israel's strikes are unlawful. So the question remains, where do Israel's actions lie in line with international law? William Schabas is a professor of international law at Middlesex University. I spoke with him a short time ago.
William Schabas: Yes, thank you.
Sally Sara: What do you make of these remarks from Navi Pillay from the UN Independent Commission of Inquiry on the occupied Palestinian territory?
William Schabas: Well, this is not the first report that she's issued. She was formerly the High Commissioner for Human Rights at the United Nations, and she has headed this commission now for really, since it was set up in late 2023. You know, the conclusions and the observations are consistent.
And so it continued. Professor Schabas went on supporting the view of Navi Pillay and Comrade Sara did not challenge him at all. There followed such questions as:
Sally Sara: From your point of view, do you think that genocide is currently happening in Gaza and the West Bank?
William Schabas: Oh, yes…
And this:
Sally Sara: When looking at genocide, how important is it to consider both the actions that are occurring but also the language that you're talking about, which gives some indication of intent here, why those actions are happening?
And this:
Sally Sara: What do you think about a couple of the defences which are often put forward by Israeli officials, and we've certainly had interviews on this program where it's been the case. One is the defence of self-defence, and the other, in terms of what's happening in Gaza, is Israel denying that it is the occupying force. What do you think when you hear those arguments?
William Schabas: Well, those are old arguments….
And this:
Sally Sara: Professor William Schabas, thank you so much for your analysis and expertise this morning. It's been valuable. Thank you.
William Schabas: Thank you.
There was no push-back at any time from Ms Sara. It was, indeed, the softest interview of the year so far. MWD will award this prize again in December – for the second half of the year.
CAN YOU BEAR IT? INSIDERS 'TALKING PICTURES' FANGS THE UNITED STATES WHILE GOING SOFT ON IRAN
You've got to admire photographer Mike Bowers. He was involved in a late-night dinner some decades ago with Barrie Cassidy and a senior ABC manager in Europe or somewhere when the decision was made to create the ABC TV Insiders program. In addition to Cassidy, others who attended were ABC executive Max Uechtritz, former ABC producer Gaven Morris and photographer Mike Bowers.
Your man Cassidy became the presenter of Insiders from its birth in July 2001 until his retirement in June 2019, and Comrade Bowers ended up presenting the 'Talking Pictures' segment.
Comrade Bowers has stayed on every Sunday doing much the same thing in a leftist kind of way on his 'Talking Pictures' segment.
The idea of 'Talking Pictures' is to get cartoonists and occasionally photographers to comment on the work of their cartoonist mates – along with, on occasions, the work of photographers. It's no surprise, then, that Bowers and his guests invariably praise the work of cartoonists/photographers. It is only rarely that there is any criticism. Which makes the segment somewhat boring and invariably predictable.
For a long time, Comrade Bowers – who recently moved from the leftist Guardian Australia to the leftist New Daily – ignored the work of The Australian's Johannes Leak, one of Australia's finest cartoonists and artists. However, after Media Watch Dog commented on his absence, Leak's work now gets cited briefly every now and then. Such as last Sunday.
However, 'Talking Pictures' is essentially a manifestation of the taxpayer funded public broadcaster as a Conservative Free Zone with leftists talking to, and about, other leftists. Here's how it commenced on Sunday 29 June:
Mike Bowers: I'm Mike Bowers and I'm photographer-at-large for The New Daily . I'm talking pictures this morning with freelance cartoonist Glen Le Lievre . And a very warm welcome back.
Glen Le Lievre: Morning Mike, glad to be here.
Mike Bowers: We seem to stumble from one Trumpastrophe to another. He shocked the world again using stealth bombers. It's not so much the Manhattan Project as the Madhattan Project.
Glen Le Lievre: Spare a thought for the poor dove, what it must be like to be trapped in there.
Mike Bowers: This is your cartoon, Glen, dove of peace here is not going to outrun the mushroom cloud.
How about that? First up, Comrade Bowers elected to discuss a Glen Le Lievre cartoon with, yes, Comrade Le Lievre. Both comrades thought his cartoon was pretty funny. Quelle Surprise! By the way, Bowers did refer to The Madhattan Project. 'The Madhatter Project' would have worked better if he was going for a joke. But there you go.
Needless to say, the segment was essentially a leftist rant. For starters, contrary to Le Lievre's cartoon, the US's air attack on Iran was not an assault on a peaceful dove. The US attacked the nuclear facilities of Iran – which is a theocracy that kills or imprisons its dissenters, suppresses women, funds terrorist organisations and fired missiles indiscriminately into Israel in October 2024 and April 2025.
It didn't get any better. The Bowers-Le Lievre duo showed give-peace-a-chance cartoons by Harry Bruce ( Cairns Post ), David Pope ( Australian Financial Review ), Fiona Katauskas ( Guardian Australia), David Rowe ( Australian Financial Review ), Megan Herbert (Nine Newspapers) and Matt Golding (Nine Newspapers). All were critical to a greater or lesser extent of the United States or Israel. Not one was critical of Iran.
There were references to a couple of non-leftist cartoonists – whom Comrade Le Lievre criticised. Let's go to the transcript:
Mike Bowers: Warren Brown has been on fire recently, and he's witnessing the A-bomb 1945 with military here in New Mexico, watching Trinity and witnessing the F-bomb 2025, as the press blocks its ears because the president dropped the F-bomb.
Glen Le Lievre: Thank God Warren decided to do the F-bomb drawing so the rest of us didn't have to.
Somewhat dismissive, don't you think? And then there was this:
Mike Bowers: Glen, Trump's approach to Iran is something he swears by, and there's definitely a surplus in the swear jar here, according to Johannes Leak. So Albo's defence budget is just a couple of buttons.
Glen Le Lievre: Defence from whom, from what? The Chinese? I mean, if they're coming for our buttons, they're too late.
Another dismissive comment about a conservative cartoonist. Le Lievre fails to understand that China does not have 'to come for' Australia. Australia can be dominated by any unfriendly nation which interdicts Australia's sea lanes and/or flight paths. That's why defence is important.
And here's how 'Talking Pictures' ended:
Mike Bowers: Glen, you've got the bomb as a shark-like figure here eating the kids.
Glen Le Lievre: Every box of kids is guaranteed to have your daily requirement of snap crackle and please stop.
Mike Bowers: Yeah, please stop. I love 'Free Nobel Prize inside!'
Glen Le Lievre: You've got to get to the bottom of the box.
Quite an achievement when you think about it – even if you don't. All up, the Bowers/Le Lievre duo showed 11 cartoons – and two were drawn by Comrade Le Lievre. That's 18 per cent according to MWD. And the segment ended with the duo talking about Le Lievre . Can You Bear It? (FALSE) PROPHET CHAS LICCIARDELLO'S PREDICTION THAT DONALD TRUMP WAS TO BE A LAME DUCK PRESIDENT DROWNS IN THE ABC's SITUATION ROOM
In recent times, the ABC has increased its resources in the United States. Indeed, it sent John Lyons to Washington DC in the new position of Editor Americas. Never mind that he was back in Australia, around the time of the release of his latest book, when the Canadian election took place. These things happen.
As avid Media Watch Dog readers know, Comrade Lyons is on record as having said that he intends to interpret the Trump administration to Australians. And President Donald J. Trump is not a Canadian. Not yet, at any rate. So your man Lyons' views on Canada don't matter much.
But Ellie's (male) co-owner digresses. In the absence of Lyons on leave, Australians have to rely on the taxpayer-funded public broadcaster's Planet America to find out what's going on in the US. This is how the ABC currently describes this program:
Planet America
Coming to you from the Situation Room, John Barron and Chas Licciardello cut through the spin as they discuss the people, policies and politics from the week in Donald Trump's second term in the White House. Planet America is on a production break. Chas and John will return soon.
Alas, Planet America is on what journalists like to call a W.E.B. – as in Well Earned Break. MWD can barely wait for its return. In the meantime, here's a refresher on the Thought of Chas Licciardello. It occurred on 12 December 2024 – around six weeks before Trump was sworn in as the 47th President of the United States. Let's go to the transcript where Comrade Chas discussed US politics with presenter David Marr on Radio National's Late Night Live (aka Late Night Left).
Chas Licciardello: Trump, right now is at the zenith of his power. It only goes down from here. He comes a lame duck or a lame dog, so to speak, from here.
David Marr: Thank you for that.
Yes. Lotsa thanks for that. Now, as avid readers know, since returning to the Oval Office close to six months ago, President Trump has been very, very busy. Among other things, he has introduced a new tariff regime or 'Liberation Day', put his somewhat hyperbolically named 'Big and Beautiful Bill' to Congress, presided over the bombing of Iran's nuclear facilities, had a bust-up with Elon Musk, engaged in a row with Ukraine's president Vladimir Zelensky and more besides.
Yet it's just six months ago that your man Chas, the ABC's home-based 'expert' on matters America, declared that Trump was at the zenith of his power and was about to become 'a lame duck or, perhaps, a lame dog'. How's that for a false prediction? What planet is Chas on? And here's another question: Can You Bear It?
That's Chas and John in the ABC 'SITUATION ROOM' at Ultimo in inner-city Sydney AS VERBAL BOMBS GO OFF IN THE PENTAGON'S PRESS ROOM, THE ABC TV NEWS CHANNEL FALLS ASLEEP ON THE JOB
Unlike the topic of the taxpayer-funded public broadcaster's coverage of the Trump administration, there was enormous interest in MWD's comments last week about the handling of the aftermath of the US attack on Iran's nuclear facilities. Or, rather, the ABC's lack of coverage of same.
Soon after 10 pm (AEST) on Thursday 28 June there was a conference at the Pentagon which was addressed by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Dan Caine.
As MWD pointed out last week, it was a riveting occasion. Hegseth attacked sections of the media for their coverage of the US military action. And Caine gave considerable detail about the extraordinary military action when US stealth bombers flew for 36 hours from the US to Iran and back. As President Trump put it – from 52,000 feet the B-2 bombers successfully dropped 14 bunker-busting bombs on designated targets in Iran – each around the size of a refrigerator door.
In Australia the Pentagon press conference could be watched live on Foxtel – either Fox News or Sky News – or on Sky News Regional. However, the ABC TV News channel had an early night.
Can You Bear It?
A MARK KENNY MOMENT
Wasn't it great to see Mark ('Please call me Professor Kenny') Kenny back on ABC TV Insiders on Sunday 29 June? As Media Watch Dog readers know, your man Kenny has – in the words of the late Kitty Muggeridge – risen without trace. After a brief stint as a student at the University of Adelaide he went to work for a socialist left backbench Labor MP in the South Australian Parliament. From there, Comrade Kenny became an ABC producer in Canberra and then it was on to a journalist position at Fairfax Media.
Then, lo and behold, it was a matter of 'Arise Professor' as Comrade Kenny was given a professorship at the Australian National University. Quite an achievement since, according to MWD's research, he has neither academic teaching experience nor any substantial publications – apart from newspaper articles and columns.
It is not clear whether or not the learned professor teaches any students at the ANU. But he does put out a podcast called 'Democracy Sausage' which is of little interest to the vegans in our midst – among others. And he is a regular panellist on the ABC TV Insiders program.
COMRADE KENNY STUMBLES AS HE FANGS THE LIBERAL PARTY OVER ITS FEMALE REPRESENTATION
Did anyone catch the comment by Mark ('Please call me Professor') Kenny in the 'Final Observations' segment of Insiders last Sunday? If not – here it is in its full (verbal sludge) form. In other words, this seems to be what passes for scholarship when professors meet at the taxpayer-subsidised Australian National University. David ('Please call me Speersy') Speers was the presenter and Professor Kenny chose to discuss the Liberal Party and its leader Sussan Ley:
David Speers: Mark.
Mark Kenny: Just on the scale of the – uh – the women problem that the Liberal Party has. Labor will have more women in the parliament than the Coalition, right? has MPs, right? – Uh – Labor will have – um – a majority in both houses. Ley will have five women behind her, sitting behind her, when she's sitting at the dispatch box. Um – uh – so they could all travel to Parliament in the same car effectively. Whereas Labor's contingent of women would need a full-size bus.
Uh – there are more women in the Teals than in the Liberal Party – uh – parliamentary Liberal Party. Um – the, the, the minor party of the Greens has more women in it than the Liberal Party has, has women. Um – and in fact, there are more Greens with hyphenated names than there are Liberal women in the parliament. So, I mean, it's a fairly significant problem.
What is – uh a really, um, significant problem – right? – is that Professor Kenny could not make an – um – obvious point without being hopelessly wrong for the most part. The learned professor is wrong. There are not more women in the Teals than in the Parliamentary Liberal Party. There are six Teals in the House of Representatives. There are 19 women in the Parliamentary Liberal Party – 6 in the House of Representatives and 12 in the Senate. The learned professor is wrong. The Greens do not have more women than the Parliamentary Liberal Party. The Greens party has 7; the Liberal Party has 19. The learned professor is wrong. There are not more Greens with hyphenated names than there are Liberal women in parliament. There are 5 Greens members belonging to what Paul Keating once called the hyphenated-name set. There are 19 women in the Parliamentary Liberal Party.
It was hardly 'news' – even on Insiders – for Mark Kenny to state that the Parliamentary Liberal Party needs greater female representation. Yet the learned professor tried to make a joke about this – while managing to get his (alleged) facts wrong. Even though he used notes to make his point.
Verily a Mark Kenny Moment.
An avid reader has just drawn my attention to an interview which Comrade Kenny did with Peter FitzSimons in the Sun-Herald on 11 May 2025. It was part of the '5 Minutes with Fitz' series – which, I am sure you will agree, is a long time to spend reading something written by The Red Bandannaed One of recent memory. It's notable that the ANU professor did not contest Comrade FitzSimons' evident sexism and ageism. Here we go:
Fitz: What I saw when they crossed from the Dutton concession speech [on election night] to the Albanese victory speech was a cross from a room of grieving old white men and their good lady wives with twin pearls and a fresh hairdo, to a cheering mob of all ages, colours, sexualities and no doubt – let's say it – even genders that actually looked like Australia.
MK: Precisely….
And then there was this:
Fitz: When I do your course, professor, I've decided upon my PhD thesis: 'By being 'woke', the ALP has made itself stronger. By rejecting it, the LNP are circling oblivion'. I shall make the case that when organisations go 'woke', they become more powerful, more connected and reactive to the world they're in, and more successful.
MK: Exactly….
[This was the first time I have heard that Professor Kenny actually teaches courses at the ANU. This might be worth checking out. – MWD Editor.]
DOCUMENTATION THE GUARDIAN AUSTRALIA'S FIRST EDITOR KATH VINER GETS FACT-CHECKED IN PRIVATE EYE
Media Watch Dog has always resented the entry into Australia of The Guardian (the avowedly leftist British newspaper which commenced publication in Manchester in 1821 funded by the profits made from the slave trade). As avid readers know, The Guardian Australia was the idea of one-time Liberal Party leader and prime minister Malcolm Turnbull. Your man Turnbull wrote in his book Malcolm Turnbull: A Bigger Picture (Hardie Grant Books, 2020) about how he did this.
Turnbull was apparently of the view that the Australian media was not left-wing enough. [Really. – MWD Editor.] So he approached Alan Rusbridger, editor of The Guardian in Britain, and suggested to a left-wing business guy in Australia that he 'use his fortune to bankroll an Australian edition of The Guardian '. Turnbull also introduced Rusbridger 'to two seasoned Canberra political writers, Lenore Taylor and Katharine Murphy (aka Murpharoo)'.
And so it came to pass that Rusbridger's deputy Kath Viner was dispatched to the colonies to set up The Guardian Australia as its first editor. Comrade Viner returned to the Mother Country circa 2015 and was replaced by Comrade Taylor as editor with Comrade Murpharoo as her political editor. The former is still in situ at The Guardian headquarters in inner-city (where else?), Sydney. The latter recently stepped down as Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's senior press secretary.
Ellie's (male) co-owner is of the view that avid readers would like to know how the socialist Kath Viner is doing while toiling for the masses in London. Thanks to Private Eye for this entry in its 'Street of Shame' column in its edition of 13-26 June 2025:
Prophet & Loss
Understandably preferring to avoid the newspaper she is in charge of, Guardian editor Kath Viner spends much of her time these days writing lengthy posts on LinkedIn, where last week she celebrated the 10th anniversary of her appointment as boss.
'On June 1st 2015 we were pre-Brexit, pre-Trump, pre-pandemic, pre-AI. The Guardian was making big losses and the business model was not sustainable. When I see photos from my first day, I look so innocent!' she chortled. 'It has been constantly challenging and I have taken some tough decisions to build the Guardian's future – we now have 1.3 m people in every country in the world who support our journalism financially.'
Fun fact: in the financial year up to 2015, when Viner took over as editor, the Guardian lost £17.6m. In the last set of accounts, losses stood at £38.2m – though staff were assured last month they are likely to come down to 'less than £25m' for 24-25.
When paying membership of the Guardian passed the 1m mark way back in November 2018, Viner still felt confident enough to boast of the success of the paper's actual pages. 'This means that within just three years, the Guardian is on a path of being sustainable. We hope to break even by April 2019,' she told readers.
The Guardian Australia is reported to have paid back its seed funding to Turnbull's millionaire mate. However, it is noted in media circles in Australia for paying its wage-slaves low remuneration. Meanwhile, The Guardian in London continues to survive on the funds it gets from The Scott Trust Limited – something that its editor Kath Viner seems not to know.
[Interesting. I do not recall that either Comrade Taylor or Comrade Murpharoo ever declared their Malcolm Turnbull- Guardian connection when they were on the couch of the ABC TV Insiders program (producer Samuel Clark). – MWD Editor.]
NEW SEGMENT: MWD RAILS AGAINST CLICHÉS & JOURNALISTS TELLING OTHERS TO 'GET REAL'
THIS WEEK STARRING NINE'S JAMES MASSOLA
Ellie's (male) co-owner just loved it when, every morning, ABC Radio National Breakfast would interview a bloke or sheila from the Canberra Press Gallery about Australian national politics. Over the years, such MWD faves as Paul ('They call me Bonge but not as often as used to be the case') Bongiorno, Nine's David Crowe and more besides. Especially since the interviewers were the likes of Fran (I'm an activist') Kelly and Patricia ('Please call me PK') Karvelas.
Now, alas, RN's Breakfast is under the new management, so to speak, of presenter Sally Sara. And the segment with Canberra Bubble media types occurs only once a week on Fridays after the 8 am News.
These days James Massola is national affairs editor for The Age and Sydney Morning Herald . He appeared on the RN Breakfast discussing Australian national politics on Friday 27 June – along with the program's Melissa Clarke (who seems to be on everything every day) and Katina Curtis (of the West Australian ). This is what Comrade Massola had to say, in somewhat turgid language, about Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's press conference on the US attack on Iran and more besides. Let's go to the transcript:
James Massola: ..I know there was some things going on in the PM's personal life at the time Sal, which he hasn't spoken about publicly, which I won't now. But it was an odd - sorry - an odd press conference. And I kind of came away thinking, "well, okay, this is what progressive patriotism", you know, which is a phrase that Anthony Albanese is bandying around the moment. He's, you know, trying to, if you like, slightly reorient our Foreign Policy to be very much sort of focused on our region, if you like. And I thought this is a manifestation of that.
He doesn't want us to be the country that, you know, under John Howard, for example, would send off one, you know, if you like - I shouldn't say it, but I will say it - a token, you know, naval vessel, or what have you, to a task force or a group. And sort of, you know, maybe we don't contribute all that much, but we're there.
He [Anthony Albanese] wants us as a country to be slightly, uh, well, to be orientated in a slightly different way. And that's what we've seen this week.
Sally Sara: Of course, for those ADF people who are deployed, even if it's a small deployment – it is a challenging and active deployment, for those ADF personnel.
James Massola: – Which is why I said it hesitantly, absolutely Sal.
What a load of absolute tosh. Correct MWD if it is wrong, but you know, if you like, it was sort of the Hawke Labor government which sent one naval vessel to the First Gulf War. The Howard Coalition government, on the other hand, sent Australia's SAS to the Second Gulf War and to Afghanistan (along with other members of the Australian Defence Force). This was more than a token commitment. Hendo shouldn't say it – but he well, sort of, you know, Nine's man in the Canberra Bubble got this wrong.
And then there was this when presenter Sally Sara turned the topic to the Liberal Party and women:
James Massola: I'm gonna take, I would like to make a couple of points about Sussan Ley this week. I think it's been underestimated the significance of a Liberal leader saying, "actually, I'm opening the door", or 'I'm open to quotas'. I think that was a big deal. And secondly, on Angus Taylor, I mean, I heard, obviously, I heard your interview with him this morning.
I took a slightly different view to Mel [Clarke], in that I heard a person who is saying, "I don't really have a specific plan. I think we need to do more. We need to fix this problem, but I'm not going to say anything that I haven't said anything before about how we're going to do that".
Like the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result. And that's what we heard from Angus Taylor. And I think the Liberal Party needs to get real.
Well, in Massola-speak, MWD would like to make a couple of points about Nine newspaper's national affairs editor. MWD shouldn't say this but it will. Citing the definition of insanity as 'doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result' is, now, a boring cliché. So is urging others to 'get real'.
Ellie's (male) co-owner shouldn't say this – but he will do. Comrade Massola should get real and embrace a cliché-free lifestyle.
THE GUARDIAN /ABC AXIS
Wasn't it great to see The Guardian /ABC Axis back in action? The occasion was the Newspapers Segment on ABC TV's News Breakfast. The date was 2 July. News Breakfast provides regular slots on this segment for the avowedly leftist Guardian Australia (usually Josh Taylor) and the avowedly leftist Australia Institute (usually Ebony Bennett). But no conservative gets a run. There is no regular slot for anyone from The Australian or such organisations as the Institute for Public Affairs, The Menzies Centre, The Centre for Independent Studies or The Robert Menzies Institute.
MWD understands that the Robert Menzies Institute's Georgina Downer once had a slot but invitations suddenly ceased.
All this befits the ABC as a Conservative Free Zone. But MWD digresses.
On 2 July James Glenday and Bridget Brennan were in the presenters' chair. They spoke to The Guardian Australia's Josh Taylor. Earlier on, Comrade Taylor discussed technology matters, as is his wont, before turning his attention to, yes you've guessed it, Sky News. Here's what he had to say – with a focus on the Liberal Party and women and quotas. [Yawn – MWD Editor].
Josh Taylor: You can see that this [discussion about the Liberal Party and quotas for women in pre-selections] is obviously going to keep going, and it's really hard to see, sort of see how this is going to, whether this is going to be a sort of issue that divides the party or not. I noticed Janet Albrechtsen in The Australian is basically arguing against it again, saying that quotas will mean that we'll get worse candidates and things like that. But I think Labor will look at some of the people who are on the opposition benches and be like, well, what's happening now?
Bridget Brennan: Yeah, you know, do you remain a relevant national political party if you don't put women up front, or you don't have a system to do that, and just hope, just by doing nothing, that it will change. I think there are some pretty strong concerns around that.
Josh Taylor: Yeah. I think the other thing is that whether the branches themselves are representative of the broader population, I've heard Liberals talk about how the people in the branches just talk back Sky News talking points, back at them. And obviously that doesn't play well in the electorate, as we saw in the last election. So whether we need more, I guess diversity, and guess more people to join the branches and affect the party from within, that might be something. I think that a lot of them have gone to the Teals now.
Bridget Brennan: Yeah, yeah, that has happened. Josh, it's great to see you as always.
Turn it up. The Liberal Party went to the electorate with a policy platform close to that presented by the Labor Party. It was not drawn up by the likes of Rowan Dean. In any event, there's more genuine debate on Sky News at night than can be found in The Guardian Australia or on the ABC. Sky News has a number of paid contributors of a left-of-centre persuasion. However, the Guardian Australia is written for what in Britain is called 'a Guardian reader'. And the ABC has no conservative presenters or regular commentators on its (ever-shrinking) news and current affairs programs.
ELLIE'S 'OCCUPY ULTIMO: RESTORE Q+A ' IS A FAILURE DUE TO A LOST IN FEAST DAY TRANSLATION SITUATION
ELLIE'S OCCUPY ULTIMO CAMPAIGN IS A WOEFUL FAILURE
It is Ellie's (male) co-owner's melancholy duty to record that MWD 's campaign to get the leftist-dominated ABC TV Q+A re-instated on the taxpayer-funded public broadcaster is a failure. A total failure. Which means that Q+A – with its panels and audiences stacked with leftists – will no longer be around to provide material for Media Watch Dog .
What happened? – MWD hears avid readers cry. It seems that Hendo is at fault. In MWD on 20 June, avid readers were urged to support Ellie's 'Occupy Ultimo: Restore Q+A ' campaign by assembling around Gin & Tonic Time on the Feast Day of Saint Cyril of Alexandria at the ABC's Ultimo headquarters.
Foolishly Hendo assumed that avid readers would know the relevant date was Friday 27 June. Obviously not – so only Ellie and her (male) co-owner turned up. Apologies to all concerned.
* * * * *
Until Next Time.
* * * * *
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Anthony Albanese says Gaza crisis has gone ‘beyond the world's worst fears'
Anthony Albanese says Gaza crisis has gone ‘beyond the world's worst fears'

News.com.au

time18 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Anthony Albanese says Gaza crisis has gone ‘beyond the world's worst fears'

Anthony Albanese has warned the situation in Gaza has gone 'beyond the world's worst fears' and accused Israel of denying aid to starving children in his strongest criticism to date. Just a week after describing the reported killings of Palestinians seeking aid in Gaza as 'completely indefensible', Mr Albanese has issued a new statement on the crisis. 'The situation in Gaza has gone beyond the world's worst fears,' Mr Albanese said on Friday. 'The position of the Australian Government is clear: every innocent life matters. 'Every Israeli. Every conflict has stolen far too many innocent lives.' Mr Albanese's statement also accused Israel of denying aid to children in Gaza and killing civilians. 'Tens of thousands of civilians are dead, children are starving,'' Mr Albanese said. 'Gaza is in the grip of a humanitarian catastrophe. Israel's denial of aid and the killing of civilians, including children, seeking access to water and food cannot be defended or ignored. 'We call on Israel to comply immediately with its obligations under international law.' It follows British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer warning the Palestinian people have an 'inalienable right' to a state of their own and French President Emmanuel Macron confirming he will support moves to recognise a Palestinian state in September at the UN general assembly, 'Any proposals for the permanent forced displacement of the Palestinian population must be abandoned,'' Mr Albanese said. 'Australia condemns the terror and brutality of Hamas and we reiterate our call for the immediate release of the remaining hostages. 'We continue to support all international efforts to facilitate a ceasefire, recognising that an immediate and permanent ceasefire gives the best hope of bringing hostages home and easing the agony of their loved ones.' Mr Albanese said that the 'legitimate aspirations' for the Palestinian people to have a state of their own was a bipartisan proposition. 'Australia is proud to have strongly supported the creation of the modern state of Israel,' he said. 'Then, as now, the global community envisioned two states: the State of Israel and the State of Palestine. 'Recognising the legitimate aspirations of the Palestinian people for a state of their own has long been a bipartisan position in Australia. 'The reason a two state solution remains the goal of the international community is because a just and lasting peace depends upon it. 'Australia is committed to a future where both the Israeli and Palestinian peoples can live in peace and safety, within secure and internationally-recognised borders. 'Until that day, every effort must be made here and now to safeguard innocent life and end the suffering and starvation of the people of Gaza. Sir Keir Starmer has condemned the 'unspeakable and indefensible' humanitarian conditions in Gaza after aid groups warned of mass starvation. In a statement this week, he warned that while the situation had been 'grave for some time' but it has 'reached new depths'. 'We are witnessing a humanitarian catastrophe,' he said. 'I will hold an emergency call with E3 partners tomorrow, where we will discuss what we can do urgently to stop the killing and get people the food they desperately need while pulling together all the steps necessary to build a lasting peace. We all agree on the pressing need for Israel to change course and allow the aid that is desperately needed to enter Gaza without delay. 'It is hard to see a hopeful future in such dark times. But I must reiterate my call for all sides to engage in good faith, and at pace, to bring about an immediate ceasefire and for Hamas to unconditionally release all hostages. We strongly support the efforts of the US, Qatar and Egypt to secure this. 'We are clear that statehood is the inalienable right of the Palestinian people. A ceasefire will put us on a path to the recognition of a Palestinian state and a two-state solution which guarantees peace and security for Palestinians and Israelis.' Israel-Gaza war Mr Albanese has described recent actions by the Israel Defense Forces in Gaza as 'completely indefensible' confirming in the last week that he told Israeli President Isaac Herzog directly that Israel was losing support. Describing the blockade on aid into Gaza as 'completely unacceptable' he took issue with Israel's 'excuses and explanations'. 'We need to always engage in the world as it is, rather than as we would like it to be,' he said. 'Israel's actions, many of the actions of the Netanyahu government, including by its ministers, have led my government indeed to sanction ministers in the Netanyahu government. We would not have thought that was on the agenda in 2022, when I was elected. 'Australia is a long-term supporter — and indeed played a role in the creation of the State of Israel. 'But at that time it's important to remember that two states were envisaged and Australia and certainly my government, has continued to support two states in the Middle East: the State of Israel and the State of Palestine. 'We want Israel to continue to exist within secure borders and to be able to live without the threat of terrorists such as Hamas engaging in the sort of atrocities we saw on October 7. 'But Palestinians have a legitimate aspiration for a state of their own and to be able to achieve prosperity, and that is something that has been a bipartisan position as well going back to John Howard who said there could be no peace in the Middle East, without dealing with the Palestinian question.'

PM labels Gaza a 'humanitarian catastrophe' and reaffirms aspiration for Palestinian statehood
PM labels Gaza a 'humanitarian catastrophe' and reaffirms aspiration for Palestinian statehood

ABC News

time19 minutes ago

  • ABC News

PM labels Gaza a 'humanitarian catastrophe' and reaffirms aspiration for Palestinian statehood

The prime minister has labelled the conflict in Gaza a "humanitarian catastrophe", while reaffirming an existing commitment to a two-state solution. France has announced it will formally recognise Palestine later this year, becoming the largest and most influential European nation to do so. In some of his strongest language on the conflict yet, Anthony Albanese said the conflict has gone "beyond the world's worst fears". "Gaza is in the grip of a humanitarian catastrophe. Israel's denial of aid and the killing of civilians, including children, seeking access to water and food, cannot be defended or ignored," he said. It follows Australia joining 27 other countries in a joint statement earlier this week demanding an immediate end to the war. Israel labelled those joint calls "disconnected from reality", arguing the attention of those countries should be focused on the actions of Hamas. Australia does not recognise a Palestinian state, instead referring officially to the West Bank and Gaza as the "Occupied Palestinian Territories", though it does have diplomatic ties with the Palestinian Authority. The new comments from Mr Albanese do not refer directly to France's moves to recognise Palestine, but point to Australia's long-standing ambitions around recognition. "Recognising the legitimate aspirations of the Palestinian people for a state of their own has long been a bipartisan position in Australia," he said. "The reason a two-state solution remains the goal of the international community is because a just and lasting peace depends upon it. "Australia is committed to a future where both the Israeli and Palestinian peoples can live in peace and safety, within secure and internationally recognised borders."

Reactions to France' recognition of Palestinian State
Reactions to France' recognition of Palestinian State

SBS Australia

time19 minutes ago

  • SBS Australia

Reactions to France' recognition of Palestinian State

Reactions to Emmanuel Macron's move to recognise Palestinian State Australian women to sue over 2020 Doha airport medical examinations Ben O'Connor claims 18th stage of Tour de France The Palestinian Authority has welcomed French President Emmanuel Macron's pledge to recognise the State of Palestine, calling it a historic and principled step in support of Palestinian self-determination. In a post on social media platform X, Palestinian Authority Vice President Hussein Al Sheikh thanked President Macron for confirming France's intention to formalise recognition at the U-N General Assembly in September. 'This position reflects France's commitment to international law and its support for the Palestinian people's rights to self-determination and the establishment of our independent state.' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called the move a move toward terror and it is expected to provoke a strong response from the United States. France's announcement marks a significant shift, making it the most prominent Western nation to commit to recognising Palestinian statehood. The UK will sign a new 50-year AUKUS treaty with Australia during ministerial talks in Sydney today, amid uncertainty over U-S commitment to the submarine pact. British Foreign Secretary David Lammy and Defence Secretary John Healey will meet their Australian counterparts Penny Wong and Richard Marles at the annual Aukmin meeting. They will then travel to Melbourne to meet businesses involved in the programme. They will also visit Darwin as the U-K Carrier Strike Group arrives in the Northern Territory. AUKUS, agreed in 2021, aims to build nuclear-powered submarines and deepen defence ties, but the Trump administration is now reviewing U-S involvement. Five Australian women who were allegedly subjected to invasive medical examinations at Doha Airport in 2020 have won the right to take their case to trial. The women were among dozens removed from a Qatar Airways flight bound for Sydney after a newborn baby was found abandoned in a terminal bathroom. They claim they were forcibly taken from the plane by armed guards and subjected to non-consensual genital exams in an ambulance on the tarmac. Qatar Airways, backed by the Qatari government, had attempted to dismiss the case, arguing the women weren't technically injured under international aviation law. But the court has now ruled the case can proceed and ordered Qatar to pay their legal costs. Lawyer Damian Sturzaker represented the women who are seeking an apology, compensation, and assurances that such treatment will never happen again. 'We've now got an opportunity to have a full hearing with all of their evidence coming out, and in those circumstances, we're very, very pleased with the outcome today.' Treasurer Jim Chalmers says tackling Australia's long-running productivity slump will require a national effort from business, unions and the community. The latest Productivity Commission report, released overnight, shows the past decade, under Coalition governments, was the weakest for productivity growth in 60 years. Mr Chalmers says the problem has been decades in the making. 'The Productivity Commission makes it really clear that this challenge in our economy has not been just a feature of our economy the last couple of years, but for the last couple of decades, our productivity Challenge is a long-standing challenge. The weakest decade for productivity growth in the last 60 years was the decade that our political opponents presided over. So, this challenge has been in our economy for some time." Mr Chalmers adds that boosting productivity remains a key priority for the Albanese government, alongside improving economic resilience and long-term budget sustainability. The Commission's report calls for urgent reforms in areas like education, energy and digital capability, stating that bold policy is needed to reverse the productivity slowdown and secure future living standards. Brisbane writer Siang Lu has won the $60,000 Miles Franklin Literary Award for his satirical novel Ghost Cities, a decade after it was rejected by more than 200 publishers in Australia and abroad. At the Sydney ceremony last night, the 39-year-old, who was shortlisted for the first time, revealed he was so stunned by the win he lost feeling in his hands and legs. Mr Lu, who began writing the novel in 2015, told ABC he is unsure what his win will mean for his career, but it means a lot for his parents. "I think, you know, talk to me in a year. I really don't know right now, but in terms of my career, that's difficult to say right now. I can say that, in terms of my family, definitively, it's great to be finally the favourite son." Australia's Ben O'Connor has claimed a stunning victory in stage 18 of the Tour de France, conquering a gruelling 171.5 kilometre mountain route from Vif to the Col de la Loze. Riding for Jayco Al-Ula, the 29-year-old launched a well-timed attack before the final brutal 26.4 kilometre climb, holding off the chasing pack to cross the line first. "It's a rough race. It's the biggest race in the world, but it's, for sure, the cruellest. I've wanted another victory for so many years now. I've been fighting with thirds and fourths, and always so close. But yeah, I couldn't be more proud of myself and the boys who back me every single day of this whole race, even through the pretty rough times. So yeah, thanks to everyone, and to Jayco AlUla, it's what the team needed, and it's what I needed." Slovenian Tadej Pogacar finished second, extending his overall lead to 4 minutes 26 seconds over Jonas Vingegaard, who placed third.

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