Menu

Home

Subscribe to hear every episode in your favourite podcast app:
Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsSpotify




Latest episodes


May 22, 2024 •

Jennifer Robinson on UK courts giving Assange one last appeal

Julian Assange’s lawyer, Jennifer Robinson, describes the long, meandering court process Assange has faced as “punishment by process”. Just this week, in a decision that may have saved Assange from being immediately extradited to the United States, the British High Court ruled it will hear one more appeal against his extradition – but not until later this year.

Today, Assange’s lawyer Jennifer Robinson, on why she’s back in Australia lobbying the government and whether they can secure a deal before the US election in November.

Latest

May 21, 2024 •

Albanese abandons plans to bring home 'ISIS brides'

When you look at the Al Roj refugee camp in Northern Syria on Google Maps, you can see it’s only a few hundred metres away from an airport tarmac. But for the 40 Australian citizens stranded at the camp – with no water, electricity or real plan for the future – getting on a plane home could still be years away.

Today, special correspondent for The Saturday Paper Jason Koutsoukis, on why the government seems to have abandoned its plans to bring them home.

Latest

May 20, 2024 •

Richard Flanagan on Labor's first extinction

If you’ve bought salmon at the supermarket, there’s a strong chance it came from Tasmania. The island state is home to a billion-dollar salmon farming industry and much of it is located at Macquarie Harbour. But the Harbour is also home to a 60-million-year-old creature whose fate appears to be the first Australian species to be wiped off the face of the earth during this federal government.

Today, writer and contributor to The Monthly Richard Flanagan on how corporate greed, political inaction and our demand for supermarket salmon are all choking the Maugean Skate.

Latest

May 17, 2024 •

The Jim Chalmers Interview

This week, Jim Chalmers delivered what could be the most politically significant budget of his career – with the future of a Labor government and the country’s cost of living crisis on the line.

Today, he joins 7am to discuss his vision for Australia’s economy and whether the government has done enough to end the living crisis.

Latest

May 16, 2024 •

The pitches from budget critics: How do they stack up?

It’s a budget we’ll be talking about for a long time, as we head to the next election and try to escape the cost of living crisis. But even though the budget is only 36 hours old, we’re starting to see the early criticisms from rival politicians emerge. So, has Labor spent enough to ease the cost of living? Or spent too much? And do the critics have plans of their own that would actually benefit Australians?

Today, columnist for The Saturday Paper Paul Bongiorno on where the battle lines are being drawn.

Latest

May 15, 2024 •

A budget built to fight an election

Jim Chalmers delivered what could be the most important budget of his political career last night. But how much will it help with the cost of living and how will we feel the impact?

Today, chief political correspondent for The Saturday Paper Karen Barlow on the budget that’s attempting to reshape Australia’s response to the living crisis.

Latest

May 14, 2024 •

Skipping meals, dumpster diving and cereal for dinner

It’s budget week, which means crunch time for the leaders tasked with tackling how expensive Australia is right now. And the thing we’re all talking about is our grocery bills, why food seems to cost more each time we visit the supermarket.

Today, national affairs correspondent for The Saturday Paper Mike Seccombe on what some call the great price gouge and whether the government is doing enough to address the rising cost of putting food on our plates.

Latest

May 13, 2024 •

Australia, the ‘land of suck-it-up’

This week, as we approach a federal budget, we’re bringing you The Cost: Inside the living crisis. We’ll explore the impact this crisis is having on our country, why it just isn’t ending and whether our leaders are doing enough to protect our standard of living.

Today, executive director of the Australia Institute Richard Denniss on when prices will finally stop going up – and the kind of country we risk becoming once the crisis is finally over.

Latest

00:00
00:00
1250: Jennifer Robinson on UK courts giving Assange one last appeal