#InvasionDay

2026-02-07

It is 100% guaranteed these post-Bondi laws will be abused. And how do these laws actually relate to what happened in the first place? Why isn't more money going to community groups doing the actual useful work?

Listen to Larissa Baldwin-Roberts, Widjabul Wia-bal woman, talk about #auspol, #invasionDay, #treaty, #climateChange and caring for Country.

Serious Danger – Hate speech laws & Invasion Day
podverse.fm/episode/mrx_Gdks5

#racism #antisemisitism #aboriginal #firstNations #greens #gaza

2026-02-05

Oh wow, the guy who threw an actual bomb into the invasion day March is a terrorist after all??

Who'd ever have thunk it.

#Aboriginal #Indigenous #Decolonise #SovereigntyNeverCeded #Treaty #FuckRacism #FuckWhiteness #FuckColonisation #AustraliaDay #InvasionDay #NoPrideInGenocide #AbolishAustralia #DomesticTerrorism #Terrorism

2026-02-05

Invasion Day rally attempted bombing declared terrorist act

The attempted bombing of an Invasion Day rally in Perth’s CBD last week is declared a terrorist attack by authorities.

2026-02-01

Thinking today of mob around this continent feeling unnoticed and unwanted (again).

If (almost) any other community had been targeted by an attempted mass murder (likely mass casualty bombing attack) at a gathering marking a sacred day of mourning, do you think it might have made a few more headlines? Might there be a bit more discussion in parliament? Calls for a #RoyalCommission, extensive community discussion of how to address the pervasive #racism very likely at the root of the attack?

There already exists a comprehensive national #antiracism strategy developed over years in consultation with a wide number of relevant experts and stakeholders. It was delivered to the federal government and tabled in parliament over a year ago. The government is yet to respond.

Instead, the duopoly reaches for knee-jerk rushed legislation, atrociously designed, with almost no opportunity for genuine scrutiny, that relies purely on the discredited approach of further #CriminalisationOfDissent Indeed, the existence of these laws is already being weaponised by the #MurdochPress against the very group targeted by the attempted bomb attack, claiming that #Indigenous criticisms of white Australia are racist hate speech and the groups organising the #InvasionDay rallies ought to be proscribed.

Jesus wept.

2026-02-01

canberratimes.com.au/story/916…

Despite her rictus smile, the federal Liberals' first female leader is running fast towards a brick wall of impatient male ambition.

Walls usually fare better - human flesh yielding in much the same way as bricks don't.

But that doesn't make a collision right for an unpopular Liberal-Nationals combination at risk of being eclipsed by One Nation on primary vote share whether together or apart.

In a heroic rebuttal of the clear democratic-demographic message from voters in last year's electoral tsunami, the Liberal Party's conservatives have had enough of what one called "an experiment [with Sussan Ley] that hasn't connected".

Believing they have a majority in the party room, hardliners want to hark back, double-down and muscle-up.

This, after losing almost every urban contest to Labor and centrist independent candidates (mainly women) over two elections. It is an odd call given their party holds just nine of 88 urban seats nationwide.

On paper, Ley could be the ideal leader for a fast-delaminating electorate, were she granted the time and space to chart the new liberal course she signalled.

However, her authority has never been acknowledged by the party's right faction (and its media vassals) and nor has that authority been projected by her.

Since narrowly beating Angus Taylor for the post last year, Ley has avoided conflicts on matters of policy or principle. Retaining Scott Morrison's net zero-by-2050 commitment would have been the logical place. Or ditching nuclear energy.

This timidity was a mistake, but hardly a new one. Invariably, vulnerable leaders model vulnerability. They never get stronger through appeasement, and as much as they delude themselves to the contrary, they never grow on their internal enemies.

Ley's best chance of survival was always to focus on rebuilding public support by delivering on her own pledge to "meet the Australian people where they are".

Were she to pursue that path single-mindedly as a newly elected leader, her rivals would have griped but they could hardly have cut her down in those early months - especially in the wake of such a comprehensive electoral caning.

Had it even begun to work, Ley would have been strengthened by the uptick in public support.

Not convinced? Never underestimate the attractiveness of good polls within beleaguered political parties.

It was enough for Labor factions to switch to Kevin Rudd twice (2006 and 2013) despite him lacking institutional roots within the labour movement. And it was enough for Liberal right-wingers to hold their noses and replace Tony Abbott with moderate Malcolm Turnbull in 2015. In both cases, as if to prove the point, it was also their declining public popularity which eventually left them exposed internally.

This should have been Ley's sole KPI. If she pushed for affirmative action quotas, backed renewables rather than nuclear, and proposed sensible changes to drive housing affordability, her standing among younger voters might have shielded her against internal opponents.

In her first big speech as leader, she outlined this very course. She talked of urbanising her party, taking material steps to recruit women, bringing back respect and accountability to conservative politics, and to leaving culture wars behind.

Her watchwords might have been, inclusion, opportunity, community.

Now, her fortunes look dire with speculation rife of an imminent strike by Taylor and a tandem process already under way against Nationals Leader, David Littleproud.

The core state of centre-right politics in Australia right now is summarised by three less hopeful descriptors: disloyalty, dysfunction, delusion.

From the main agitants involving themselves in a squalid stereo implosion, perhaps only Ley and the little-known Colin Boyce have clean hands.

Leaving aside that Ley politicised the aftermath of the Bondi terrorist attack - to the country's detriment, and her own, as it turned out - she at least stuck to an established principle in accepting the resignations of three Nationals who breached shadow cabinet solidarity by crossing the floor.

Just as a stronger and more confident opposition leader would have worked with Anthony Albanese post-Bondi rather than trying to skewer him politically, Littleproud should have turned his ostensibly safer leadership towards working with Ley so as to avoid a coalition-ending crisis.

He now faces a spill motion from Boyce, a sophomore backbencher who argues pointedly (i) that Littleproud has recklessly dissolved the coalition twice inside 12 months, and (ii) that by declaring the Nats cannot partner with the Liberals with Ley as the leader, Littleproud has made his own position "untenable".

Both are fair points.

Boyce's one-man raid mightn't depose Littleproud, but it has highlighted that a once serious party has succumbed to student-politics style stunts.

With diminishing room to move, Ley recognises the break-up for the threat it is.

On Friday, she offered Littleproud a slender chance for re-admission by delaying until February 9 the naming of Liberals in shadow cabinet vacancies created by Nationals.

It is inherently defensive - an attempt to survive a crisis by a leader who knows she is up against a wall.

And it further underscores that she might have been better served by building her own wall out of public support for fresh policies attuned to the times and directed at the realities of modern Australia.

After all, what's the worst that could have happened?

  • Mark Kenny is The Canberra Times' political analyst and a professor at the ANU's Australian Studies Institute. He hosts the Democracy Sausage podcast. He writes a column every Sunday.


#AusPol #WhyTheFuckIsLabor #HahahahaLiebs #NatsAreNuts #GreensYEAH #VoteGreens #VoteProgIndies

2026-01-29

@IndyMediaAus simple. the terrorist was apparently not black or brown, hence straya's endemic racism kicked into gear. again. as usual. jfc.

straya, a country constantly lying to itself.

#AusPol #TheVoice #iVotedYes #FsckenStrayaVotedNo #Racism #VotedNoGetKarmaComebackYouRedneckRacists #Misanthropy #FirstNations #AlwaysWasAlwaysWillBe #InvasionDay

PersonalEscritoubique
2026-01-29

: "On January 26, a community march in Boorloo/Perth that had been organised to mark Invasion Day was attacked by a man who threw a handmade bomb into the crowd.

The device, apparently concealed in a sock and allegedly designed to explode upon impact, was an act of terror that specifically targeted First Nations people and their allies."

foe.org.au/boorloo_attempted_b

I am very confused as to how there is even a question to if it was politically motivated or not. It was an invasion day protest, and it's not like there isn't contention regarding January 26th.

abc.net.au/news/2026-01-28/why

#auspol #invasionday #terrorism #WApolice #wapol

sortius :Fire_Bisexual:sortius@infosec.exchange
2026-01-28

Took him TWO FUCKING DAYS to speak, and it's just pissweak shit.

Fuck this racist, Zionist pet, PM:

Police should ‘throw the book’ at man charged with Perth Invasion Day explosive device incident, Albanese says

theguardian.com/australia-news

#auspol #InvasionDay

Dr Stefanie Affeldtdrstaff@norden.social
2026-01-27

»On 26 January, 1938, as Australia marked 150 years since colonisation, Uncle William Cooper helped organise the Day of Mourning.« #InvasionDay #WhiteAustralia #Colonialism lens.monash.edu/january-26-and

sortius :Fire_Bisexual:sortius@infosec.exchange
2026-01-27

Still not a word from our fuckwit PM about this terrorist attack against Aboriginal people.

I suppose if you don't have Zionist dollars, and Zionist lawyers, you can't pressure the PM into acting.

Oh, and you've gotta be damn white to get anything done:

Man charged with making explosives after Perth Invasion Day incident

abc.net.au/news/2026-01-27/man

#auspol #InvasionDay #Nazis

2026-01-26

I ended up having a nap yesterday and didn't finish my #InvasionDay thread of places I #PayTheRent

I'm finishing up with a donation directly to Pay The Rent paytherent.net.au/

2026-01-26
Fllicsfllics
2026-01-26

Australia Day marked by ‘Invasion Day’ rallies | REUTERS

Thousands marked Australia's national day by attending 'Invasion Day' rallies in support of Indigenous Australians and calling for unity, while separate anti-immigration protests also drew crowds. Read the story here: 👉 Subscribe: Keep up with the latest news from around the world: Follow Reuters on Facebook: Follow…

fllics.com/en/video/australia-

sortius :Fire_Bisexual:sortius@infosec.exchange
2026-01-26

Where are the law changes from Albo over this?

Dude throws a bomb into a crowd of Indigenous people, with an intent to maim and kill. No press conference yet, no talk of changing laws, just radio silence from the colonial masters.

I suppose you have to be white and Zionist to get the laws changed:

Invasion Day: police investigate ‘device’ thrown into Perth crowd as huge marches held across Australia

theguardian.com/australia-news

#auspol #InvasionDay

sortius :Fire_Bisexual:sortius@infosec.exchange
2026-01-26

Tell me again how the "March for Australia" isn't a bunch of Nazis.

If you know someone who was involved in this event, make sure you let them know they're a Nazi, and stop knowing them:

youtube.com/watch?v=oLyvL-rkfgo

#auspol #InvasionDay #Nazis

2026-01-26
Sad invasion day

#invasionday

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