Good morning
Hello and welcome to 2026, and the first parliamentary sitting of the year.
We can not say it was a good summer. The worst of it is to be remembered today, with the parliament to hold a condolence motion for the 15 people killed in the Bondi terror attack; Tibor Weitzen, Matilda, Rabbi Yaakov Levitan, Marika Pogany, Rabbi Eli Schlanger; Dan Elkayam, Reuven Morrison, Alex Kleytman, Peter Meagher, Boris Gurman, Sofia Gurman, Edith Brutman, Boris Tetleroyd, Adam Smyth and Tania Tretiak.
Parliamentarians from both chambers will deliver speeches in memory of those lost. We will see how much of a role politics plays. The Coalition blamed the government for the attack in what was the first time we have seen an opposition politicise a mass casualty event in modern Australian history. That act may have got the Coalition through the summer with the same leadership, but the signs of fracture are already occurring.
The government will introduce its gun reform bill into the parliament, after the Greens made it clear it could not support the hate speech laws in its current form. That matched the government’s feelings on the matter – it had set up the bill as a wedge for the Coalition, which was pushing the government for the very same hate speech legislation it then refused to support.
So the politics has started early and in a way we have not seen in Australia for some time. That doesn’t bode well for any of us.
But we will do our best to call out as much of the political BS as possible, while keeping you up to date on what is happening – in the parliament and out.
It is going to be a very hard day. And for those who lost loved ones, or who have had their world completely rocked by the events of December 14, harder for all the politics being played.
We’ll do our best to navigate it with heart, honesty and clear eyes.
Ready? Me either. Let’s jump in together.











Comments (9)
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Gregory Shearman
Mon, 19.01.26
15.07 AEDT
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Henry Bennett
Mon, 19.01.26
14.18 AEDT
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Gregory Shearman
Mon, 19.01.26
14.12 AEDT
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Fiona
Mon, 19.01.26
10.34 AEDT
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Andrew Faith
Mon, 19.01.26
09.45 AEDT
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Fiona
Mon, 19.01.26
08.35 AEDT
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Amy Remeikis
Mon, 19.01.26
08.41 AEDT
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Fiona
Mon, 19.01.26
08.45 AEDT
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Amy Remeikis
Mon, 19.01.26
09.05 AEDT
Join the conversation
"One of the greatest aspects of compulsory preferential voting is that it weeds out the worst of the worst."
One of the poorest aspects is the fact that the Nationals with half the votes of the Greens get 10 seats, while the Greens get none in the HoR. If percentages were given on the primary vote then the Greens would win 15 seats in the HoR.
The good with the bad.
That’s the issue, because it’s become political it’s all about optics. With Albanese he won’t put up with grandstanding and an opposition in disarray, so good on him to at least give ground to get a result, a true PM.
A "small act of kindness" would be to stop cancelling advocates for the Palestinian people.
"“We’re not a government that puts things up over and over again to see them defeated,” he told ABC radio Melbourne."
wah maybe put up some good legislation, or WORK WITH PEOPLE ffs
Why does the PM go onto 'that' program and talk to 'those' people? Is it because he went to ones wedding?
P.S. Lovely to have you back Amy. x
oh I can comment! (there's not link one front page to comment)
Yeah this will be a long day
And the first comment in the new system! Welcome x
oooh so it's a whole day of discussion at the bottom? Am I reading this right?
You are and it is!