7 July 2025: Rob Martin, a retired businessman from Clyde North, will fly to Italy tomorrow to join the international campaign to break Israel's siege of the Gaza Strip.
Man charged over Melbourne synagogue fire amid calls for parliament to reconvene to pass new protest laws ABC | 6 July 2025 https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-07-06/synagogue-fire-charges-protest-laws-victorian-parliament/105498480 A man has been charged after the door of the East Melbourne Hebrew Congregation synagogue was set alight while people were inside on Friday night. The NSW man has been charged with […]
As the Treasurer embarks upon a national tax reform debate, it’s important that the Australian public thinks about what we actually want to tax and how much.
Who is paying too little tax? Are we taxing the right things? These are all democratic questions as much as economic ones.
Taxes are just one of the ways that governments raise the revenue needed to provide the hospitals, schools, roads, aged care and social safety nets Australians rely on.
The more tax a government collects, the bigger the public sector it can sustain. But who we choose to tax and how much has profound implications for fairness and equity.
The fact is, Australia is one of the lowest-taxing countries in the developed world.
Australia raises very little tax revenue compared to similar countries. If Australia were to collect the same amount of revenue from taxation as the OECD average, the Commonwealth would have had an extra $140 billion in revenue in 2023-24.
Think what an additional $140 billion a year could deliver for your local emergency room, primary school, aged care facility or national park.
Yesterday, I wrote a post for the Indivisible Santa Fe website. As the title indicates, it is for all my communities. I’m lucky to have several. For those in this one, there’s an excerpt below. Full version here.
Today, I make a comparable pledge, one fit for today’s America, one I invite every member of my communities to join:
For the support of the restoration of pluralistic constitutional democracy in the United States and the better achievement by its government of the basic commitment to the equal right of all to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, I pledge my life, my fortune, and my honor.
Further thoughts on John Alt’s article Editor It might be helpful to recognise that Premise #2 is a good basis for describing the financial operations…
As food prices keep climbing and grocery chains rake in record profits amid slim margins, it’s time to seriously consider a public alternative to the supermarket giants and dépanneurs: municipally owned grocery stores.
Lala Peñaranda of Trade Unions for Energy Democracy Matt Kirkegaard of Progressive International present the Colombian Oilworker’s Plan — a bold strategy for a worker-led public pathway to transition off fossil fuels, with vital lessons for the Canadian labour and climate movements.
Alex Connolly, a renewable energy worker in Nova Scotia, compares the workplace conditions from his time in the oil sands to his current work putting up wind turbines. He shares how quality wages and work closer to home aren’t at odds with lower emissions.
At the launch of the 2025 federal election, major political parties started their campaign with talk of tax reform. Mark Carney’s campaign platform, though neither progressive nor ambitious, garnered by far the most attention, in part for the reversal of his predecessor’s flagship tax policies: the consumer carbon price and the increase in the capital gains inclusion rate. The Conservative Party had initially campaigned in undoing these tax initiatives, but Carney’s campaign promises rendered right-wing sloganeering around these policies ineffective—conservatives got what they wanted.
While the personal finances of voters understandably took centre stage, little was said about another key tax policy: the corporate income tax (CIT). The federal NDP’s platform did promise to take on corporate income taxes and profits, with a surtax on corporations earning over $500 million in profits, as well as a 15 percent minimum tax on book profits, but these commitments were not elevated into the realm of public debate.
Tenant organizing is often framed as a reactive force, sparked by crisis, but organizers also argue that the real strength of the housing justice movement lies in their proactive, long-term approach. Organizing can build durable networks that can respond to immediate threats like evictions or rent increases while, at the same time, pushing for broader systemic change.
One of the challenges in the fight for housing justice is aligning the decentralized, dynamic energy of tenants organizing with the policy strategies of institutional actors. While tenant unions and grassroots organizations often respond to crises such as evictions, rent hikes, and landlord intimidation, other tenant-related organizations like legal clinics, academic institutions, and other adjacent non-profit groups tend to work with longer timelines, formal processes, and policy interventions. These rhythms don’t always align, but when they do, the results can be transformative.
The 2025 Ellen Meiksins Wood Lecture was held on Tuesday, May 20th in partnership with Toronto Metropolitan University’s Faculty of Arts. A special thanks to TMU Interim Dean of Arts Amy Peng for hosting this Broadbent Institute event.
Canada’s public education system is in crisis mode. From chronic underfunding and privatization to attacks on teachers and burnout—these aren’t isolated issues. Across the globe, right-wing movements are attacking public education, banning books, rewriting history and pitting parents, teachers, and students against each other. That same rhetoric is taking hold here in Canada, as we saw in the 2025 federal election.
What does a progressive industrial strategy look like in an age of climate crisis, economic upheaval, and capitalist profiteering?
In this episode of Progressive Political Economy, Todd Tucker, Director of Industrial Policy and Trade at the Roosevelt Institute, lays out the stakes for Canada and the US as Donald Trump dismantles the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) and ignites a trade war. Drawing on lessons from the Green New Deal and FDR’s New Deal, Tucker shows how the fight against Trump’s tariffs gives Canadian progressives the chance to build a high-road industrial strategy for reduced emissions, strong communities, and empowered workers.
The IRA promised a rare blend of climate ambition and labour standards, proving that investment can be conditional on union wages, local sourcing, and prosperity for fossil fuel-dependent communities. While Trump rolls back that progress, Canada has the industrial policy for social infrastructure—like dental care, pharmacare and universal medicare—to lead where the US falls behind.
The last letter we have in Thomas Jefferson’s handwriting is an RSVP, dated June 24, 1826. It is a response to an invitation from the mayor of Washington, D.C., to attend a celebration of the 50th anniversary of American Independence. Jefferson was too ill to attend. In fact he would die, as if American destiny had decreed it, on the day for which the celebration was scheduled: July 4, 1826, fifty years to the day after the adoption of the Declaration of Independence by the Continental Congress.
In his letter, sent from Monticello, Jefferson reflected on the meaning of the Declaration, whose language he had famously crafted. He showed that his revolutionary spirit had not dimmed.
He called the Declaration “an instrument pregnant with our own, and the fate of the world”:
The scientific reality is that sea level rise and increased storm damage will make heavily populated parts of Australia uninhabitable, and the economic reality is that houses in those areas will be uninsurable.
It is impossible to get insurance against likely events.
The only reason an insurance company will insure your car is they know it is unlikely that you will crash it. That’s why no matter how much you are willing to pay, the company won’t insure your car if you have an accident while drink driving.
Put simply, insurance is a gamble, and your premium is determined by the odds of a payout and the size of the catastrophe.
When you insure your house, you are betting that something bad is going to happen and the insurance company is betting that it won’t.
At the end of the year if you do not crash your car or burn your house down you will probably feel good about your choices, but not nearly as good as your insurer who got a few thousand dollars from you in exchange for your peace of mind.
But insurance companies don’t make risky bets. They know that there is only about a one in 600 chance you will have a house fire, which is precisely why they are happy to bet you won’t.
But see what happens if you try ringing them to insure your car against hail damage after hail has been forecast. Hint, no chance.
Most of eastern Australia would have been keeping one eye on the weather report, given the ‘rain bomb’, while others were reeling from the news an alleged child sex offender had been working at Melbourne child care centres.
Like every day, millions of Australians would have been lost in the life changing and mundane, and many wouldn’t have noted the date at all.
But July 2 mattered. At least for those focused on the battle we have to save the planet and life as we (sort of) know it.
From July 2, we are now closer to 2050 than we are to the Year 2000.
It’s just eight more federal elections away (presuming we continue to have three year terms).
That gives us 293 months to try and keep global warming to just 1.5 degrees.
The global average temperature increase last year was 1.6 degrees.
Spikes happen, and a single year isn’t enough to say it’s done. But we are trending the wrong way.
For decades, the foreign policy elite in both parties insisted that America’s greatness has more to do with Damascus than Detroit, or Baghdad than Bozeman. It was a bipartisan delusion—driven by ideology, divorced from consequence, and devastating to the American people.
Against the wisdom of the ancients and our own founders, we went abroad “in search of monsters to destroy.” But our foreign exploits proved fruitless, producing little but fallen soldiers and toppled regimes, soon replaced by even more dangerous ones. Worse still, the sands of faraway deserts blinded us to the sand that our own house stood on.
Now is the time to rebuild—to restore our republic and usher in a new American golden age. But first, we must face the truth.
Neoconservative foreign policy, once mistaken as a legitimate branch of the conservative movement, has proven to be one of the most destructive ideological projects of the last half-century. With its soaring rhetoric and shallow roots, it promised that endless war could birth endless peace, that liberal democracy could be exported like grain, and that remaking the world was more urgent than restoring our own nation.
That misjudgment has cost this nation dearly. In blood. In treasure. In trust.
Pat Buchanan foresaw this disaster decades ago. He warned:
In the past week, decisions in Salem and Washington DC have driven a stake through the heart of the $2.1 billion plan to widen a mile-and-a-half stretch of I-5 near downtown Portland.
The metaphor for this project is quickly changing from “driving stakes” to mark the start of construction, to driving a stake through the heart of speculative financial plans ODOT has spun.
The American Mind’s ‘Editorial Roundtable’ podcast is a weekly conversation with Ryan Williams, Spencer Klavan, and Mike Sabo devoted to uncovering the ideas and principles that drive American political life. Stream here or download from your favorite podcast host.
On this episode of Dollars & Sense, substitute Greg (Matt Grudnoff) and Elinor discuss the 91 millionaires who paid zero tax, the grim reality driving the gender pay gap, and why negative gearing is back on trend (but still making housing less affordable).
This discussion was recorded on Thursday 3 July 2025 and things may have changed since recording.
Host: Matt Grudnoff, Senior Economist, the Australia Institute // @mattgrudnoff
Host: Elinor Johnston-Leek, Senior Content Producer, the Australia Institute // @elinorjohnstonleek
FPM Media Report Wednesday July 2 2025 At least 30 dead in Israeli strike on internet cafe in Gaza popular with journalists https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-07-01/israel-attacks-gaza-cafe-internet-killing-journalist/105480502 By Maddy Morwood with wires In short: An internet cafe in Gaza frequented by journalists was targeted by the Israeli military, killing at least 30 people including Palestinian photojournalist Ismail Abu Hatab. […]
The deterioration of the Tasmanian budget means that net debt is expected to reach $10 billion by 2027-28.
However, two simple measures at the Commonwealth level could raise an additional $303 million a year in revenue for the Tasmanian government, or $1.5 billion in total over the 5 years to 2030.
These changes are:
Renegotiating Western Australia’s GST deal, which was struck under the Scott Morrison government, and gives WA a much higher share of total GST.
Broadening the GST to include private school fees and private health insurance.
Independent Economist Saul Eslake estimates that for the five years to 2030, the average annual cost of the WA GST deal is around $4.1 billion a year, and says changes to the GST carve-up deal are not working as intended.
“A government that truly believed in equity, and was committed to prudent and responsible budget outcomes, would scrap this appalling piece of public policy,” wrote Saul Eslake in The Conversation.
“And an Opposition that was sincere in its claims to stand for fiscal responsibility would support any move by the government to do so.”
If that $4.1 billion was distributed to other jurisdictions on existing GST revenue shares, the Tasmanian government would receive around $154 million a year in additional revenue.
Over the period to 2030, close to an additional $770 million could be generated.
Despite the complaints of conservatives, it was not in disloyal subversion or terrorism against the American state that the American university lost its soul. Nor, despite the strictures of leftist radicals, did academia sully itself by colluding with government warmongers. In fact, the purpose of the modern university, since it was created in Berlin by Wilhelm von Humboldt and transplanted to America, has always been to serve the nation, not least by helping to produce and celebrate a national culture. As an institution of higher learning, the university has a duty to seek truth and knowledge in all its varied domains. But when we think about the university as citizens, we should think fundamentally of the duties of the American university to the state that privileges it and to the country which supports it.
In that respect, from 1775 to 1989 the American university had a pretty good war record.
Zohran Mamdani’s emphatic victory in the New York City Democratic mayoral primary has shaken the core of American politics. A self-described democratic socialist, Mamdani ran a campaign centered around affordability as well as relentless denunciation of the genocide in Gaza. Mamdani drew the ire of Zionists, right-wingers and the billionaire class not only in New York City but across the country, including calls for his deportation by Congressman Andy Ogles and subsequent slander by President Donald Trump.
On this episode of Follow the Money, Bill Browne joins Ebony Bennett discuss the extraordinary scale of Labor’s victory in the May federal election, what the devastating result might mean for the Coalition, and why a large crossbench in federal parliament could be here to stay.
Guest: Bill Browne, Director of Democracy & Accountability, the Australia Institute // @browne90
Host: Ebony Bennett, Deputy Director, the Australia Institute // @ebonybennett
This is the second installment in the Notes on the Crises series on the IRS. While the first essay traced how the agency has become a political target and potential tool of authoritarianism, this piece investigates how DOGE’s so-called tech modernization efforts may further entrench those risks.
Anisha Steephen (they/them) is a nationally recognized expert in domestic economic policy and mission-driven investing, with over 15 years of experience advancing public policies that address structural inequality. Anisha served as the first Senior Policy Advisor for Racial Equity at the U.S. Department of the Treasury. Anisha can be found on bluesky @asteephen.bsky.social.
Ira Regmi (they/them) is a macroeconomic policy analyst with a background in international development. They can be found on @iraregmi.bsky.social and iraregmi.com.
The Reserve Bank of Australia and The Treasury welcome the release of a public consultation today by Australian Payments Network and Australian Payments Plus on the future of the account-to-account payments system.
What Quantitative Easing is and the “purpose” behind it Ellis Winningham Quantitative Easing (QE) is nothing more than an asset swap for reserve* liquidity. Orthodoxy,…
In its campaign to shake up higher education, the Trump Administration has taken unprecedented steps to repel foreign college students. These include banning Harvard University from enrolling foreign nationals, ordering American embassies and consulates to pause all student visa interviews, and revoking visas of students from China. While the administration has since walked back some of these measures, the problem of foreign students demands sober reflection.
The Federal Reserve’s mission and regional structure ask that it always work to better understand local and regional economic activity. This requires gauging the economic impact of localized events, including natural disasters. Despite the economic significance of natural disasters—flowing often from their human toll—there are currently no publicly available data on the damages they cause in the United States at the county level.
Rethinking public debt Lars Syll Few issues in politics and economics are nowadays more discussed — and less understood — than public debt. Many raise…
Understatement of unemployment John Haly In Australia, the media and government utilise Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) unemployment statistics. These indicate that the jobless rate…
This title borrows a phrase from Ruth Puttick, Principal Research Fellow at UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose (IIPP), during the panel “Building Dynamic Capabilities: How Do Cities Adapt to Tackle Grand Challenges?” The session was chaired by Dan Hill, Director of Melbourne School of Design, and featured Mariana Mazzucato, Founding Director of UCL IIPP, James Anderson, Head of Government Innovation Programs at Bloomberg Philanthropies, Ruth Puttick, Senior Research Fellow at UCL IIPP, and Bridgette Morris, Chief Resilience Officer for the City of Cape Town. Held as part of the 2025 IIPP Forum, the panel explored why promising ideas often stall inside city governments, and what it really takes to make progress last. This blog follows up on that conversation.
Israeli bombardment in Gaza kills 58 people in one day ABC / Reuters | 1 July 2025 https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-07-01/israeli-bombardment-in-gaza-kills-58-people-in-one-day/105479464 A beachfront cafe and schools were among targets struck on Monday as Israel stepped up its latest campaign in Gaza. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has signalled it would be intensifying operations in the Palestinian enclave after […]