More than 1000students, workers and activists marched on May 6 to call for urgent action on climate change. Isaac Nellist reports.
Issue 1344
News
The Hunter Asylum Seeker Advocacy screened Ithaka, a film about Julian Assange, with his father John Shipton a keynote speaker. Niko Leka reports.
Activists tried to stop several people from being removed from the Melbourne Immigration Transit Accommodation centre, likely to be deported.Felix Dance reports.
Socialist Alliance Sydney candidate Andrew Chuter is pioneeringshort YouTube videos to take the campaign message beyond the usual suspects. Peter Boyle reports.
Australian Services Unionand the Municipal and Utilities Workers Union members working for Moreland City Council have taken strike action after management offered apay cut.Darren Saffin reports.
An estimated 15,000 teachers rallied in Hyde Park and marched to NSW parliamentto demand better pay and conditions. Jim McIlroy reports on their second strike in six months.
Kuku Yalanji woman Pat O’Shane is calling on voters to put the Liberal National MP Warren Entsch last on the ballot given his support for the racist One Nation party. Renee Leesreports.
For a fourth time a Senate committee investigating contentious oil and gas exploration in theBeetaloo Basinin the Northern Territoryhas had to ask for an extension, largely because of corporate favours. Pip Hinman reports.
The Kurdish community called on the Australian government to condemn the Turkish invasion of South Kurdistan (northern Iraq) just as it has condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Peter Boyle reports.
A central theme ofthe May Day march in Sydney was that Prime Minister Scott Morrison's Liberal-National Coalition government had to be voted out at the federal electiononMay 21. Video by Peter Boyle.
In the lead-up to a federal election, some May Day rallies across Australia from April 30 to May 2 were bigger than usual. Kerry Smith reports.
Housing is a human right was the theme of the Housing Alliance lutruwita/TasmaniaandGrassroots Action Network Tasmania protest outside Parliament House. Jenny Forward reports.
The Tigrayan community marched through Sydney CBDto call for Australian and international solidarity in the face of ongoing genocidal attacks from the Ethiopian armed forces.Peter Boyle reports.
Analysis
Socialist Alliance candidate for Wills Sue Boltonsaid kicking the Scott Morrison government out is critical, butgoing soft on Labor won't help the workers’ movement. Jacob Andrewartha reports.
Socialist candidate Felix Dance said the federal government must be worried about its re-election chances for Peter Dutton to give a war speech on ANZAC Day, writesMayura Ashok.
Jacob Andrewartha argues why its important to put Socialist Alliance number 1 inthis election.
A ferocious fire in a neglected boarding house in inner city suburb of Newtown has renewed calls for tenants’ rights and greater government regulation of these often neglected places. Pip Hinman reports.
Socialist Alliance Victorian Senate candidate Felix Dancecriticised the Coalition's “khaki election” strategy, saying “war is a racket”.
Cost-of-living pressures and the economy are critical issues in most election campaigns, and they certainly are in this one, arguesWilliam Briggs.
It is what we have come to expect from the Prime Minister— comments that reflect age-old prejudice and which put him firmly in the bigot camp, arguesJanet Parker.
Canberra's bullying ofthe Manasseh Sogavare government for its deal with China follows from its longstanding paternalisticapproach on the existential matter of rising seas. William Briggs reports.
Phil Sandford had two consuming passions: jazz and revolutionary socialism, writes Derek Mortimer.
World
British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss calls for the “globalisation” of NATO to pre-empt “threats in the Indo-Pacific”, namely China, William Briggs reports.
The scandal of electronic eavesdropping on 65 leaders of the Catalan independence movement by Spanish state intelligence shows signs of becoming a long-running soap opera. Dick Nichols reports.
The “leak” of the draft decision by the Supreme Court to overturn Roe vs Wade, the 1973 ruling legalising women’s right to abortion, signals that it will probably do so in its final decision on the Mississippi anti-abortion law before it. Barry Sheppard reports.
As a result of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Finland and Sweden are closer than ever to joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Duroyan Fertl spoke to Pinja Vuorinen, Chair of the Left Youth of Finland about the debate.
Since the beginning of March, protests have erupted across Sri Lanka demanding the resignation of President Nandasena Gotabaya Rajapaksa, writes Janaka Biyanwila. These protests emerged in the context of rising costs of living, exacerbated by a foreign debt crisis.
For Ukrainian refugees in Berlin, like those in Warsaw, Chisinau, and elsewhere, this war isn’t about support for Zelensky or NATO, writes Marcel Cartier. It is about defending their identity as Ukrainians.
Sudan's democratic forces are up against a brutal militia, which is determined to strengthen its forces, buy influence and take power, reports T Hassan and W Madit.
A wave of protests has spread throughout Sri Lanka in recent weeks, sparked by an economic crisis. Chris Slee reports.
Culture
A teacher in Turkey’s southern province of Mersin, was issued a fine for communicating in Kurdish and Arabic with his students, reports Medya News.
Turkey's Constitutional Court has ruled that the refusal by a public office to register a baby with the name “Ciwan” — which contains the Kurdish letter “W” — was constitutional, reports Medya News.
Progressive filmmaker, Damon Gameau spoke with 鶹ý about his new film, a response to the devastating 2019–20 bushfires.