Too afraid to speak up: Aussie unis in grip of anti-Semitism crisis
Anti-Jewish sentiment on campus is driven by a vocal minority who have cowed the majority into silence, a forum on tertiary education has heard.
Anti-Jewish sentiment on campus is driven by a vocal minority who have cowed the majority into silence, a forum on tertiary education has heard.
Controversial senator Lidia Thorpe has fired a broadside at King Charles III just moments after he concluded an address at Parliament House in Canberra.
The optics, as they say in politics, aren’t great, particularly for a bloke seeking to renew his lease on the Lodge in the middle of a cost of living and housing crisis, writes James Morrow.
Analysis: In the fight for the White House the left has made the idea that Trump was and remains Hitler mainstream. Is it any wonder some of not-so sound mind might make the decision to take it a step further?
A ‘last days of Rome’ vibe hanging around the Albanese government has been made worse after claims of a “bullying” environment in Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles’ office, writes James Morrow.
After a year of muddle that has seen pro-Hezbollah marches in our streets, a shocking rise in anti-Semitism, and society all but torn apart, Labor has begun to find its voice on the Middle East.
Carrying a Hezbollah flag is light years away from, say, showing your support for Palestinian civilians caught in the crossfire between Israel and Hamas or hoping the Palestinians get a state, writes James Morrow.
A senior Hamas official killed in an Israeli airstrike has been revealed to also have been a top educator employed by a controversial UN aid organisation.
Just like in the 1970s, opponents of nuclear power aren’t allowing facts get in the way of a good scare campaign, James Morrow writes.
Shadow communications minister David Coleman has questioned how people are meant to respond to a complicated piece of legislation in just a week.
Original URL: https://www.thechronicle.com.au/journalists/james-morrow/page/10