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Trump’s pharma tariffs would hurt Americans the most

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

Dr Ruth Mitchell, neurosurgeon and Nobel Peace Prize winner with the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, joins Dr Emma Shortis to discuss why a growing number of Australians want an AUKUS review, Trump’s pharmaceuticals tariffs, and what the US President can learn from Jane Fonda.

This discussion was recorded on Friday 11 July 2025.

You can sign our petition calling on the Australian Government to launch a parliamentary inquiry into AUKUS.

Dead Centre: How political pragmatism is killing us by Richard Denniss is available for pre-order now via the Australia Institute website.

Guest: Ruth Mitchell, Board Chair, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War // @drruthmitchell

Host: Emma Shortis, Director, International & Security Affairs, the Australia Institute // @emmashortis

Show notes:

Polling – AUKUS, the Australia Institute (July 2025)

The Corporate Prince: Neoliberalism’s Drive to Privatise Power

 — Publication: Progress in Political Economy — 

Is neoliberalism dead or alive? The latest big beautiful tax cuts fought through by Trump are in hard contrast with his arm wrestling of other states by imposing tariffs. While the tax cuts are conceived as hyper-neoliberalism, many people perceive tariffs as a complete contradiction with neoliberal doctrine. The seemingly contradictory policy mix of Trump and his extreme right companions around the world makes many people call this the end of the neoliberal era. And it is not only the seemingly erratic behaviour of Trump that posed this problem: both Biden and Obama were described as neoliberal, and so were George W. Bush and Bill Clinton. At this point, the labelling appears so broad that it might seem futile to talk about neoliberalism – it functions as little more than a leftist buzz word.

We should not retire the term neoliberalism too soon, though. The problem is that neoliberalism gets too quickly identified with a very specific set of policies – tax cuts, trade liberalisation, privatisations and so on – or, alternatively, with the abstract quest for individual freedom. Both of these perspectives fail to capture what neoliberalism is actually about: the privatisation of power. As long as we are not paying attention to this underlying tendency of capitalism’s latest (if not last) stage, we are unable to really understand economic and social policies, as well as what glues political formations together. And so, we are incapable of effectively critiquing contemporary capitalism and fighting the rise of the extreme right.

The Housing Crisis Is More Than Just a Supply Problem

 — Organisation: Strong Towns — 

Who Lends to Households and Firms?

 — Organisation: Federal Reserve Bank of New York — Publication: Liberty Street Economics — 

American Statesmanship for the Golden Age

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

California generally—and Claremont in particular—has produced some of the most profound and revolutionary conservative thinkers of the last half-century.

And for a great many of them, it’s because they understood what’s at stake if we abandon our American identity.

And we’re lucky enough to have a few of them, like Michael Anton, now working in the administration with us.

Now, Claremont Institute President Ryan Williams asked me to speak a little bit about statesmanship and, more to the point, about how to respond to some of the challenges our movement will need to confront in the years to come.

It’s an interesting question.

And I think it’s useful to reflect on the state of the Left in 2025’s America.

Last week, a 33-year-old Communist running an insurgent campaign beat a multimillion-dollar establishment machine in the New York City Democratic mayoral primary.

I don’t want to harp on a municipal election, but there were two interesting threads. The first is that it drives home how much the voters in each party have changed.

If our victory in 2024 was rooted in a broad, working- and middle-class coalition, Mamdani’s coalition is the inverse.

The Downtown Library Garage Fire ... Yikes

 — Author: Betsy Phillips — 
Several tanks that might have stored flammable materials were found at the site of June's fire

Review of Merchant Card Payment Costs and Surcharging

 — Organisation: Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) — 
Media Release Number 2025-19: The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has today released a Consultation Paper as part of its Review of Merchant Card Payment Costs and Surcharging. This follows an extensive public consultation process since the release of an Issues Paper in October 2024. The Payments System Board (PSB) has reached the preliminary view that it would be in the public interest to:

Organize for Attack!

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

On Independence Day, nearly a dozen black-garbed individuals, some equipped with body armor and firearms, allegedly orchestrated a premeditated ambush on law enforcement outside the Prairieland Detention Center in Alvarado, Texas. According to the federal criminal complaint, the group began firing on the center with fireworks and spray-painting anti-ICE and pro-Antifa slogans on vehicles until law enforcement moved to secure the area. Once law enforcement came out of the building, two assailants opened fire with AR-15s, firing 20-30 rounds and wounding at least one officer.

The attack was entirely foreseeable. Antifa militants motivated by virulent rhetoric have repeatedly doxxed and targeted ICE, going all the way back to Antifa member Willem Van Spronsen’s 2019 attack on a Tacoma, Washington, ICE detention facility. Van Spronsen was killed by responding officers and became a popular anarchist martyr.

What is the government doing to protect the World Heritage-listed Murujuga rock art? 

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

The ancient Indigenous rock art on Western Australia’s Burrup Peninsula has been deservedly listed on the UNESCO World Heritage Register.

But the spectacular Murujuga petroglyphs remain under threat.

Extensive scientific evidence reveals that pollution from the adjacent Woodside gas export terminal has seriously damaged the engravings.

Scientists warn that unless the acid gas emissions from the terminal are curtailed, the rock art will be destroyed, regardless of the World Heritage listing.

“The tragedy is that Woodside’s gas development does not need to be at Murujuga,” said Stephen Long, Senior Fellow at The Australia Institute, who produced The Fight to Save Murujuga documentary.

“The gas from the proposed extension will be shipped in from offshore gas fields hundreds of kilometres away.”

Despite the warnings from scientists, in late May, Environment Minister Murray Watt provisionally approved a 50-year expansion of the gas project, claiming the approval was subject to strict conditions to protect Murujuga.

However, those conditions remain a secret. The Australia Institute last week wrote to Minister Watt requesting the conditions be made public.

“Keeping the conditions secret prevents public scrutiny and undermines public trust and accountability,” said Mark Ogge, Principal Advisor at The Australia Institute.

America’s AUKUS, PBS push forces Australia toward sovereignty red line

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

He wore what he wanted, and if a lounge suit didn’t suit then the event didn’t suit him.

When being sworn into the Privy Council, he simply refused to partake in the elaborate ceremony and in response to the exasperated Lord Chamberlain, just calmly said “I’ll bet you two bob I’m still allowed in”.

He won the bet.

Chifley was an engine driver before he was a parliamentarian, and he made sure he would wear his working-class blue shirt in rooms where the worker should be represented.

It was a political signal – he was a union man, for the worker, and he made sure his dress, when necessary, represented his origins.

Curtin had workers at the heart of his sartorial signals as well. He was, as Stuart Macintyre wrote in Australia’s Boldest Experiment: War and Reconstruction in the 1940s, “determined to make the Labor Party respectable” and dressed in a three-piece suit.

For him, he wanted the worker to be respected when Labor MPs were in the sorts of rooms that workers at the time would be barred entry.

Greg Combet would make a point of rolling up his sleeves when in meetings, which once helped mark the difference between unionists and the capital class.

Volodymyr Zelensky isn’t the first war-time leader to wear military garb as a link to his people – Winston Churchill spent much of World War II in the nautical uniform of the Royal Yacht Squadron.

These signals matter. They’re a public display of a politician’s values and priorities.

Does Donald Trump deserve the Nobel Peace Prize? We asked 5 experts

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has formally nominated United States President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize. He says the president is “forging peace as we speak, in one country, in one region after the other”.

Trump, who has craved the award for years, sees himself as a global peacemaker in a raft of conflicts from Israel and Iran, to Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

With the conflict in Gaza still raging, we ask five experts – could Trump be rewarded with the world’s most prestigious peace prize?

The Liberals haven’t changed, they’ve just worked out when to keep their mouths shut

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

Grattan, who among her many talents holds an institutional memory that makes every politician quake, gave a lesson in the intersection between media and politics by focussing on the lack of political reaction to two pieces of news.

One, Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke’s interview on Sky News last Sunday, where he admitted that no one from the NZYQ cohort of immigration detainees, released by a High Court decision, had reached the threshold of laws designed to enable the government to re-detain them.

For that we need a bit of context – for years Australia had detained asylum seekers, refugees and migrants who had their visas either cancelled or refused, but couldn’t be deported because they were stateless, would face death or serious harm in their birth countries, or their countries refused to co-operate with Australia’s deportation.

Most of the people caught up in this had either committed a crime or been charged with a crime. Some have no convictions.

But unlike when an Australian-born citizen commits a crime, is given a custodial sentence and then released back into the community at the end of their sentence to resume life, Australia wanted these people out.

When they ran into a deportation boundary, the workaround was to lock them up in immigration detention.

Unlike a sentence handed down by a court, there is no end date to this sort of detention. It was called “indefinite” and successive governments just sort of swept it under the rug without trying to find a humanitarian solution.

Anthony Albanese can restrict gas exports and save the Tomago aluminium smelter

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

Keeping Tomago open and keeping metals refining in Australia is important. This is important for local jobs, Australia’s wider industrial development and the shift to green metals.

But before governments hand over public money, it’s important to understand what has caused the problem.

While big companies ask for subsidies regularly, this time taxpayers are being asked to bail out Rio Tinto as a direct result of Australia’s excessive gas exports.

It is the gas companies that are to blame for the energy cost increases that Rio claims threaten Tomago’s future.

Let me explain.

Making aluminium involves huge amounts of electricity. Resource economists like to joke (we really do) that aluminium is just “congealed electricity”.

In Australia, the wholesale electricity price is largely set by the wholesale gas price. In fact, there is a “near-perfect correlation between natural gas prices and electricity prices in Australia’s National Electricity Market”.

That’s because, renewables offer their electricity to the market first because their costs are very low once they’re built (and if weather conditions are good).

Coal-fired generators usually come next because they can’t adjust their output up or down particularly quickly.

This leaves more flexible electricity sources to fill in the final amount of electricity required, and because meeting demand depends on them they get to set the price.

Have Your Say on Australia’s Economic Future

 — Organisation: Prosper Australia — 

What’s On July 14-20 2025

 — Organisation: Free Palestine Melbourne — 
What’s On around Naarm/Melbourne & Regional Victoria: July 14-20, 2025 With thanks to the dedicated activists at Friends of the Earth Melbourne! . . See also these Palestine events listings from around the country: 9293

Media Report 2025.07.13

 — Organisation: Free Palestine Melbourne — 
A city grappling with weekly protests and antisemitism The Age | Sophie Aubrey & Kieran Rooney | 13 July 2025 https://edition.theage.com.au/shortcode/THE965/edition/39938d2d-35f6-7eeb-ecfb-4b56a2d4027e?page=443a4d3b-798f-c87e-b5a7-6e582cc22386& For a year and a half, many of Fiona Cochrane’s Sundays have looked much the same. She boards a train, often with her children and grandchildren, and joins hundreds – sometimes thousands – of […]

No nukes: Australia must push for serious global nuclear disarmament

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

On this episode, Paul Barclay is joined by Dr Tilman Ruff, co-founder of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) to discuss Australia’s role in trying to rid the world of nuclear weapons, including renouncing protection by nuclear weapons, the need to sign the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), and the risks associated with the AUKUS deal.

This discussion was recorded on Wednesday, 26 February 2025, and things may have changed since the recording.

Order What’s the Big Idea? 32 Big Ideas for a Better Australia now, via the Australia Institute website.

Guest: Dr Tilman Ruff AO, Co-founder and Founding Chair, the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons // @tilmanaruff

Host: Paul Barclay, Walkley Award winning journalist and broadcaster // @PaulBarclay

Show notes:

Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference by Allan Behm, the Australia Institute (August 2022)

Media Report 2025.07.08

 — Organisation: Free Palestine Melbourne — 
Police told not to confront CBD protesters The Age | Cameron Houston, Chip Le Grand & Rachel Eddie | 8 July 2025 https://edition.theage.com.au/shortcode/THE965/edition/f6304a53-35d9-31c1-612d-878ecbe46a91?page=35c2cda0-3bec-b99a-82ab-3f6f4f578f5f& Victoria’s new chief commissioner has ordered a review into police handling of a violent attack on an Israeli restaurant in Melbourne after it emerged officers were earlier given orders not to interact […]

Trump, Epstein and the Deep State

 — Author: Chris Hedges — 

The Week Observed, July 11, 2025

 — Publication: City Observatory — 

What City Observatory Did This Week

Oregon’s transportation agency has driven itself into a fiscal brick wall of its own making. After the Legislature rejected a $14 billion transportation package, ODOT announced hundreds of layoffs while stubbornly clinging to unfunded mega-projects that have exploded in cost.

Long COVID patients among those likely to be targeted under new Medicaid work requirements

 — Author: Julia Doubleday — 

Last week, Donald Trump signed his so-called Big Beautiful Bill, officially condemning millions of the most vulnerable Americans to lose their health insurance, handing an eye-popping budget to ICE, and of course, providing another tax break to the ultra-wealthy.

Among the cruel cuts? A provision stating that Medicaid recipients must work, volunteer, or attend education or training for a minimum of 80 hours each month. Defenders of the bill point out that this work requirement contains exemptions for the elderly, pregnant, caregivers, and yes, the disabled. But disabled according to whose definition?

The Gauntlet is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

The Oregon Department of Transportation crashes into a financial brick wall

 — Publication: City Observatory — 

ODOT is still failing to come to grips with the reality that it doesn’t have the funds to proceed with bloated megaprojects.

ODOT’s financial problems stem largely from a handful of megaprojects that have exploded in cost, and for which the revenues have evaporated.

Oregon’s legislature rejected a proposed $14 billion transportation funding package on June 28, but the Oregon Department of Transportation seems determined to move ahead with largely un-funded megaprojects.

Staffers at ODOT were unaware (or simply in denial)  that the “Big Beautiful Bill” eliminated hundreds of millions in funding for the Rose Quarter project.

The Oregon Legislature adjourned on June 28, without passing a hoped for $14 billion transportation “package,” and in the wake of this failure the agency has announced it will lay off hundreds of its employees.  At the same time, it maintains that it will push on with its highway expansion mega-projects–even though costs have blow through budgets and the agency lacks money to complete them.  After years of denial, the Oregon Department of Transportation has driven at high speed into a financial brick wall.

Radical Transparency Is the Future of Internet Discourse

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

In June “Texas Patriot,” a prominent anonymous account supportive of President Trump, announced during the height of tensions with Iran, “F*ck it. If Trump takes us to war, I’m done with him and his administration.

I voted for:

NO WARS

No taxes

Cheap gas

Cheap groceries

MAHA.

What of these things has actually happened?

I’m pissed.”

This message from a popular pro-Trump account seemed significant. Was Trump’s populist base turning on him? But shortly thereafter, Right Angle News, another popular anon account, asserted that the Texas Patriot account was actually based in Pakistan. Yet another popular anon account contested this, saying that Texas Patriot is actually an American who was originally from Texas and now lives in Georgia. Notably, most other major accounts weighing in on the controversy, from “Proud Elephant” to “Evil Texan,” are themselves anonymous, adding further to the hall of mirrors.

Either way, “Texas Patriot” deleted his own account shortly thereafter, perhaps at least suggesting there was something that he or she had to hide—or at least that he didn’t desire scrutiny.

Death, Taxes, and Building Canada’s Social Infrastructure

 — Publication: Perspectives Journal — 

Death and taxes. As a family doctor, I work everyday to delay the former but could not do my job without the latter. Taxes pay for the hospitals my patients use, for the tests I order, and for the income I earn.

Politicians however, often describe taxes as a ‘burden.’ When elections come around, so do promises of ‘relief.’ But are taxes such a terrible disease?

In reality, Canada’s taxes are intentionally low. Canada’s low tax regime may instead be responsible for making life more expensive, less affordable, and yes, even responsible for making some of us sick. 

As Canadians turn away from the United States, we are increasingly looking to the European Union as an important partner and ally. If Canada were an EU member state, something more of us wish were true, we would be near the bottom in tax revenue. Taxes in Canada are approximately 33 percent of GDP. Germany and France, the EU’s largest members, are at or near the top. They collect more than 40.9 per cent and 47.3 percent of GDP in taxes, respectively. 

Something Old, Something New

 — Author: Sarah Kendzior — 

First, my gratitude. 2025 has been a tumultuous year. Like many, I am worn to the bone. I have not taken a week off since 2024, due to my book The Last American Road Trip coming out in April and because I am the only person creating this newsletter. I like it this way — original research, original writing, original photography, my paywall-free and anti-AI business model — but it is a lot of work.

There’s a song called “Devil’s Got the Blues” by 1920s St. Louis singer Lonnie Johnson that nails my state of mind: “My brains is cloudy, my soul is upside down.” If I don’t sound like myself in this post, that is the reason why.

Due to exhaustion, I am taking a week off. I will return later this month.

But even in this sad time, I am very grateful. The highlight of 2025 has been engaging with my readers: both in person on book tour, and also here in the comments. It is such a joy hearing from you. It keeps me going emotionally and keeps my family going financially. I don’t believe in paywalls in time of peril, and I rely on voluntary paying subscribers to keep this newsletter afloat.

Media Report 2025.07.10

 — Organisation: Free Palestine Melbourne — 
Palestine Israel Media Report 10 July 2025 1/ Israel’s plan for ‘humanitarian city’ on ruins of Rafah paves way for Trump’s ‘Gaza Riviera’ (The Age, SMH, 10/7/2025) 2/ Letters (The Age, 10/7/2025) 3/ ‘Not our job’ to police keffiyehs in classrooms, says NSW Education Department (The Australian, 10/7/2025) 4/ Netanyahu and Trump talk hostages as Gaza war grinds on (Canberra Times, 10/7/2025) 5/ Nothing […]

Statement: On the Antisemitism Report and the Prime Minister’s Response

 — Organisation: Free Palestine Melbourne — 
10 July 2025: We are deeply alarmed by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s embrace of recommendations that would see public funding withheld from universities, media organisations, and arts institutions unless they adopt a deeply contested definition of antisemitism—one that dangerously conflates criticism of Israel with hatred of Jews.

Everything You Need To Know About the U.S. / Israeli War With Iran (w/ Alastair Crooke) | The Chris Hedges Report

 — Author: Chris Hedges — 

This interview is also available on podcast platforms and Rumble.

Following attacks on Iran by Israel and the United States, the world held its breath as the prospect of World War III loomed on the horizon. After 12 days of conflict, a ceasefire has brought about new uncertainty for the future.

Former British diplomat Alastair Crooke joins host Chris Hedges on this episode of The Chris Hedges Report to make sense of the current situation in the Middle East and what can be expected in the coming weeks or months.

Economic Liberation: A Gender-Based Case for Basic Income

 — Publication: Perspectives Journal — 

In courtrooms and shelters across Canada, a hidden crisis unfolds. Gender-based violence traps hundreds of thousands of Canadian women in dangerous situations and economic precarity—not because they lack the courage or skills to escape, but because they lack the financial means.

With several provincial elections on the horizon and ongoing discussions about poverty reduction strategies, it’s time to shift the conversation. A Basic Income Guarantee (BIG) could transform our response to gender-based violence from crisis management to prevention. This is about more than just helping individual survivors; it’s about changing an economic system that makes violence profitable for abusers and impossible to escape for victims.

Economic Abuse as Social Control

Gender-based violence costs the Canadian economy $7.4 billion annually, according to the Department of Justice. 

Small-Scale Housing Wins Big in Bend, Oregon

 — Organisation: Strong Towns — 

RBA moves goalposts and keeps rates on hold

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

On this episode of Dollars & Sense, substitute Greg (Matt Grudnoff) returns to discuss Trump’s Big Pharma tariffs, the privatisation of childcare, and why the RBA got it wrong in its latest interest rate decision.

This discussion was recorded on Wednesday 9 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

Show notes:

Wrong call – RBA rate hold unfairly dashes borrowers’ hopes for relief, the Australia Institute (July 2025)

How to fix Australia’s broken childcare system so everybody wins by Matt Grudnoff, the Australia Institute (November 2024)

Media Report 2025.07.11

 — Organisation: Free Palestine Melbourne — 
Palestine Israel Media Report Friday 11 July 2025

This Land Is Your Land

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

Should the federal government auction less than one percent of non-conservation status public lands to alleviate housing shortages and reduce the federal debt? This is how Utah Senator Mike Lee tried to frame the question when he included a provision to this effect in the Senate version of the Big Beautiful Bill. Alas for Senator Lee, the New Right’s resounding answer has been hell no, and he has beaten a hasty retreat. Perhaps to his relief, the Senate Parliamentarian ruled the public land sale provision ineligible for the reconciliation procedure under which the BBB was being handled. Mr. Lee lives to fight another day, but can the New Right be warmed up to his proposal?

For many years, Western Republicans have chafed at the federal government’s poor management of public lands, which make up most of the acreage of several states. California is almost half public land, while Nevada is more than 80%. Western states average about 50% public lands.

These lands were open to homesteading until 50 years ago, just as was the vast American valley of the Mississippi. But where the Great Plains were rapidly settled with farms and towns, the arid Mountain West saw far less settlement. Late 19th-century technology was inadequate to access the water resources necessary to farm most of the high desert, so homesteaders stuck to the very few fertile stream valleys. The rest of the land remained free for mining and cattle grazing.

The Rise in Deposit Flightiness and Its Implications for Financial Stability

 — Organisation: Federal Reserve Bank of New York — Publication: Liberty Street Economics — 

Project Acacia: RBA and DFCRC announce chosen industry participants and ASIC provides regulatory relief for tokenised asset settlement research project

 — Organisation: Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) — 
Project Acacia has today reached a significant milestone with a number of industry participants (see below) selected to explore how innovations in digital money and existing settlement infrastructure might support the development of Australian wholesale tokenised asset markets.

The Persecution of Francesca Albanese

 — Author: Chris Hedges — 

Their fair share: the tax debate we need to have

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

On this episode of Follow the Money, Matt Grudnoff joins Ebony Bennett discuss Government’s productivity agenda, why the GST is failing to do the job it was designed for, and how 91 millionaires managed to pay no tax.

Guest: Matt Grudnoff, Senior Economist, the Australia Institute // @mattgrudnoff

Host: Ebony Bennett, Deputy Director, the Australia Institute // @ebonybennett

Show notes:

The huge cost to states budgets of failing GST, the Australia Institute (July 2025)

Raising revenue right: Better tax ideas for the 48th Parliament by Greg Jericho, the Australia Institute (March 2025)

Theme music: Pulse and Thrum; additional music by Blue Dot Sessions

$200 to Escape Suburban Sprawl for a Day

 — Publication: CityNerd — 

The American Mind Podcast: The Roundtable Episode #275

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

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.

Big Bill, Big Win | The Roundtable Ep. 275

Rebecca Thomas

 — Organisation: The Equality Trust — 

With over 17 years of experience as a leading expert on equality and human rights, Rebecca has dedicated her career to advancing social justice through policy and legislation. Her current work, which focuses on advising government and parliament on matters relating to employment and children’s rights, has had a significant impact on shaping inclusive public […]

The post Rebecca Thomas appeared first on Equality Trust.

The Sims Are Taking Over the City

 — Organisation: Strong Towns — 

Skrmetti Won’t Fix the Bostock Problem

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

In a July full of high-stakes Supreme Court rulings, U.S. v. Skrmetti stood out as a crucial victory against insanity. In a 6-3 decision, the Court asserted that it is not a violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment for Tennessee to ban transgender surgeries and hormone therapies for children with gender dysphoria. This opinion, along with cases like Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization in 2022 and Medina v. Planned Parenthood last month, allows room for sanity in red states. These are important victories against the institutional Left, which seeks to shut down debate on controversial issues by imposing its political will under the guise of newly invented rights. Skrmetti doesn’t win the fight against transgender extremism, but it allows red states to pass sane laws and begin to reverse course.

The huge cost to state budgets of failing GST

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

New Australia Institute research shows that if the GST had kept up with economic growth, as it was intended to do, states and territories would have received an additional $231 billion in revenue in the time since it was introduced.

That includes $22 billion in lost revenue in 2023-24 alone.

The decline of GST revenue has been driven by inequality. This is because wages haven’t kept up with the cost of housing, which means lower-income earners have less money to spend on other things that GST is applied to, and wealthier people are able to avoid GST on things they are more likely to use, like private health insurance and private school fees.

Key findings:

Trump’s Big Bill makes America more dangerous while enriching a few

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

On this episode of After America, Dr Emma Shortis discusses how Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ will further redistribute wealth from lower and middle class people to the richest Americans, before Josh Bornstein joins the show to discuss the Supreme Court and whether the rule of law is crumbling in the United States.

This discussion was recorded on Friday 4 July 2025 and things may have changed since recording.

You can sign our petition calling on the Australian Government to launch a parliamentary inquiry into AUKUS.

Join Dr Emma Shortis and Dr Richard Denniss in conversation about After America: Australia and the new world order at the University of Melbourne at 6pm AEST, Wednesday 16 July.

Guest: Josh Bornstein, Principal Lawyer, National Head of Employment Law, Maurice Blackburn // @joshbornstein

Host: Emma Shortis, Director, International & Security Affairs, the Australia Institute // @emmashortis

Host: Angus Blackman, Producer, the Australia Institute // @AngusRB

Where to now for Indigenous justice?

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

On this episode, Thomas Mayo joins Paul Barclay to discuss the Voice referendum, the use of Indigenous issues as a political football, disinformation in the media and social media, truth in political advertising laws, and the continuing importance of the Uluru Statement and a voice for indigenous people.

This discussion was recorded on Thursday 6 February 2025, and things may have changed since the recording.

Order What’s the Big Idea? 32 Big Ideas for a Better Australia now, via the Australia Institute website.

Guest: Thomas Mayo, Assistant National Secretary, Maritime Union of Australia // @thomasmayo

Host: Paul Barclay, Walkley Award winning journalist and broadcaster // @PaulBarclay

Show notes:

Compared to the cost of protesting, buying time with a minister is very cheap by Jack Thrower and Vivien Clarke, the Australia Institute (January 2025)

Pathways to Work: Our Submission

 — Organisation: The Equality Trust — 

The below is our submission to the government consultation on the Pathways to Work: Reforming Benefits and Support to Get Britain Working Green Paper. Consultation Questions Chapter 2: Reforming the structure of the health and disability benefits system 1. What further steps could the Department for Work and Pensions take to make sure the benefit […]

The post Pathways to Work: Our Submission appeared first on Equality Trust.