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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Monday, 28 July 2025
Labor and Liberals facing internal fault lines over Gaza, net zero, and Welcomes to Country.
Anthony Albanese and Sussan Ley during the opening of parliament last week. (ABC News: Ian Cutmore)
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It's one of the most enduring political rules — never fight the last election at the next one.
But the Liberals are already showing signs of missing this important memo in the new political term.
Over
the weekend, the WA Liberal Party supported a motion to abandon a
target of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, heaping more
pressure on federal Opposition Leader Sussan Ley to dump the policy.
Delegates
at the WA Liberal State Council also approved a motion to get rid of
the Indigenous and Torres Strait Islands flags behind the prime minister
at press conferences and cut back on Welcome to Country ceremonies.
It
is understood that both motions were carried with an overwhelming show
of support when they were read out and without needing to go to a
ballot.
Influential WA Liberal MP Andrew Hastie. (ABC News: Briana Shepherd)
The
behind-closed-doors meeting was held at a hotel in federal MP Andrew
Hastie's electorate of Canning, and Hastie, a future leadership
contender and rival to current leader Sussan Ley, said the motion was
about sending a "clear signal" to Australians. But what is that clear
signal?
The most obvious signal
is that the "sensible centre" Liberal Party that Ley seeks to lead and
portray exists as nothing more than an illusion.
Wars of the past still simmer
While
Ley sat on the fence on net zero when asked where she stood last week —
a dangerous place for any leader to sit — she was positive about the
importance of the Welcome to Country ceremony opening the parliament.
It
puts her at odds with many in her party who want to continue the
culture war that derailed the last week of Peter Dutton's campaign. I
say derailed because voters were looking for a clear economic narrative
and vision from the opposition leader. Instead, they got served more of
the same.
The
fact that these two issues — net zero and Welcome to Country — are
becoming the defining fault lines inside the Liberal Party is all the
evidence you need that the wars of the past are being fought again,
instead of the party engaging with the issues that are defining the
future.
Labor, for its part,
will tackle its level of commitment to Indigenous issues of treaty and
truth, and criminal justice when its First Nations caucus meets this
week in Canberra.
There's a
strong feeling in the party that they must not squander the thumping
majority they have been delivered, with many believing that advancing
Aboriginal rights issues needs to be revisited.
A
sign of Labor confidence after week one of the 48th parliament is a
debate going on about whether the five Labor MPs who have been seated on
the opposition benches because the party's numbers are too big have got
the rough end of the deal or a sweet blessing.
One
told me it provides a "fresh perspective" on the house. They are now
working on a name for their group of five Labor members. Latest
contenders are "the Happy Bench" or "the CrossReds." Either way, it's a
good problem to have.
Labor has its own fault lines
The
issue many Labor MPs are thinking of as we enter week two of the first
sitting fortnight is what more Australia should be doing to denounce the
humanitarian horror unfolding in Gaza.
Prime
Minister Anthony Albanese released a strong statement about the
worsening humanitarian crisis, calling on Israel to end its blockade of
aid and immediately comply with its obligations under international law.
The opposition said the statement was "one-sided" and ignored Hamas's role in blocking aid.
But France's plan to recognise Palestinian statehood
is changing the direction many think the government needs to take.
Former foreign minister Bob Carr and Labor backbencher Ed Husic think
it's time to change course.
These
prominent Labor figures are urging Albanese's government to join French
President Emmanuel Macron in recognising a Palestinian state at a
United Nations summit in September, in a bid to create momentum for a
two-state solution.
Yesterday,
on Insiders, the PM poured cold water on the prospect of following
France. But Labor insiders still hold hope that this position could
shift if there is movement from like-minded countries, like the UK,
before that September meeting.
Photos move the story
Albanese told Insiders a decision by the Israeli government to allow some aid into Gaza was "just a start" and more needs to be done.
Albanese pointed to images of a starving one-year-old boy, saying, "It breaks your heart".
"A
one-year-old boy is not a Hamas fighter. The civilian casualties and
deaths in Gaza is completely unacceptable. It's completely indefensible.
My government has been very consistent in calling for a ceasefire," he
said.
"We have been consistent
in calling out the terrorists in Hamas and saying that the hostages
should be released. But we have rules of engagement, and they are there
for a reason. They are to stop innocent lives being lost, and that is
what we have seen."
Albanese said he had been moved by the images of this "innocent young boy".
"For
anyone with any sense of humanity, you have to be moved by that. And
you have to acknowledge that every innocent life matters — whether they
be Israeli or Palestinian."
The PM said, "we need to move to a longer-term" solution and he called for a two-state solution.
Albanese previously said he had spoken to Israeli President Isaac Herzog to tell him Israel was losing support.
"What
I have said [to him] is that what sometimes friends have to say to
their other friends when they are losing support," he said.
"Israel
is, I think, when you look at internationally, the statements that have
been made by, including this week, more than two dozen nations
combining to call out the lack of aid being allowed into Gaza, is that
they need to recognise — they need to operate within international law.
The message is clear: Israel is on notice from its traditional friends.
The images of starving children in Gaza have crossed the Rubicon. Australians will not accept this.
Patricia
Karvelas is host of ABC News Afternoon Briefing at 4pm weekdays on ABC
News Channel, co-host of the weekly Party Room podcast with Fran Kelly,
and host of politics and news podcast Politics Now.
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