The Members CoalitionĀ team in the NSW Public Service Association has won more leadership positions on the unionās federal body, the Community Public Sector Union, reports Kerry Smith.
Issue 1314
News
The Communications, Electrical and Plumbing Union is preparingĀ for industrial action after Australia Post cut workers' pay.Ā Matt Haubrick reports.
Geelong Library and Heritage Centre workers walked off the job on July 2 as part of a rolling campaign of protected industrial action for better pay and conditions. Adele Welsh and Sue Bull report.
Protesters took to the streets on July 3 to support an international initiative to defend Kurdistan against Turkish occupation. Chris Peterson reports.
Residents in Moreland City Council are fighting to save their pool from being downgraded or shut. Sue Bolton reports.
Residents have taken to the Supreme Court to save Willow Grove, as the local community and unionists stand by to defendĀ the historic site. Susan Price reports.
Adani hasĀ announced a new ācoal to plasticsā project in India that critics say is a dangerous plan to give coal a āsecond lifeā.Ā Margaret GleesonĀ reports.
The family ofĀ Gunnai, Gunditjmara and Wiradjuri man Raymond Noel Lindsay Thomas hasĀ waited four years to have their views on Victoria Police's practices and procedures heard in court, reports Chris Peterson.
After three years of tough negotiations, the Maritime Union of Australia won wage rises, domestic violence leave, protections against automation job losses and more, Jim McIlroy reports.
Workers at two council-owned inner west pools have beenĀ stood down by private operatorsĀ without payĀ duringĀ lockdown. Pip Hinman argues this is the ugly consequence ofĀ councilsĀ contracting out community services.
Trains have been made accessible for wheelchair users, but trams have not.Ā Chloe DS andĀ Chris Peterson report on theĀ campaign to rectify this.
Support for the unemployed and underemployed workers is a critical part of any goodĀ health response to the pandemic, writes Isaac Nellist.
An eleventh-hour reprieve has saved the Hamilton Community Pantry, reports Steve O'Brien.
Maritime Union of Australia national secretaryĀ °ä³ó°ł¾±²õ³Ł²āĢż°ä²¹¾±²ŌĀ addressed a protest demanding thatĀ Svitzer Australia reinstate tug boat crews who were replaced by labour hire.
TheĀ Retail and Fast Food Workers UnionĀ has made history by securing ther firstĀ Protected Action Ballot Order for a bookshop. Isaac Nellist reports.
Alex Salmon reports on a protest against Turkeyās invasion of southern Kurdistan (Northern Iraq) organised by the Kurdish community and supporters in Perth.
More than 100 maritime workers and trade unionists protested outside Svitzer Australia tug boat operators to demandĀ itĀ reinstate sackedĀ tug boat crews. Tim Gooden reports.
Ian Ellis-Jones reports on how the link between Cubaās world famous adult literacy campaign and First Nations literacy campaigns in Australia were revealed during a screening of the documentary Maestra in Sydney.
Charges against Baakindji woman and water campaigner Leah Ebsworth have finally been dropped, reports Paul Oboohov.
NOlympics Action Sydney wants the Tokyo Olympics cancelled because ofĀ humanitarian concerns stemming from the pandemic.Ā Kerry Smith reports.
Analysis
Scott Morrison says the government is taking sexual assault seriously, but how can it when it is not going toĀ investigate historical complaints?Ā Sonia Hickey reports.
The USĀ Department of Justiceās claimĀ that the Wikileaks founder directed a complex hacking operation has exploded. Sam WainwrightĀ arguesĀ we must continue to demand justice for Assange.
Inner West residents will finally have a say on forced council amalgamation in a non-binding referendum at the local government elections on September 4. Peter Boyle reports.
While the vaccination roll-out limps along, Jobseeker and social security support is being reduced just when it is needed the most. Suzanne James reports.
The fight to save Callan Park, the 61-hectare harbourside parkland often described as the ājewel of the inner westā, has taken a new twist. Rachel Evans reports.
Simon Butler answers the "left" argument that progressives should support nuclear power as a climate solution.
ABCās Australia Talks National Survey has provided some insights into how peopleās lives have been impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic and what they think about capitalism, writesĀ Isaac Nellist.
The federal government insists that the Murugappan family do not meet the refugee criteria and can be safely returned to Sri Lanka. Janet Parker takes a look at the adverse security situation for Tamils.
Eddie Mabo did not fight for ngau lag (my land) only to lose it to climate change, argues Makiba.
The right to die with dignity has widespread community support.Ā But will it be enough to beat the unholy alliances between conservative MPs and wealthy hard-right religious ideologues in NSW?Ā Suzanne James investigates.
World
Peter Boyle reports on a scandal erupting over attempts to prevent Inuit Ataqatigiit candidate MĆŗte Bourup Egede from winning the country's election in April.
Despite promises made during his election campaign, US President Joe Biden has continuedĀ Donald Trumpās inhumane policies towards refugees fleeing horrific conditions south of the border, writes Barry Sheppard
Kim Ives looks at events in the days leading up to Jovenel Moise's assassination in Haiti.
The decades-long campaign demanding truth and justice for victims of Chilean General Augusto Pinochetās dictatorship scored two important victories in Australia last month, reports Federico Fuentes.
Never have so many heat records fallen by such a large margin than in the past weekās historic heat wave in western North America, report Bob Henson and Jeff Masters.
Juneteenth (June 19) has finally become a national holiday in the United States. Malik Miah looks at its origins and what it represents in the struggle for Black liberation.
Derek Chavin was sentenced to 22.5 years in a Minnesota prisonĀ for the murder of George Floyd, reports Malik Miah.
Culture
Barry Healy reviews Tove, a film about Swedish-speaking Finnish artist, cartoonist and novelist, Tove Jansson, the creator of the popular childrenās cartoon series Moomin.
British-based media outlet Alborada has launched a new podcast, , Āé¶¹“«Ć½ spoke to podcast host, Rodrigo AcuƱa, about the new initiative.
Jim McIlroy reviews a new anthology of lively interviews with prominent figures in the Australian radical youth scene of the 1960s.
Mat WardĀ looks back at June's political news and the best new music that relatedĀ to it.