19 January 2026

Government must not forget the other big issues amid Bondi tumult

| By Ian Bushnell
Join the conversation
37
Hon Anthony Albanese MP, Prime Minister of Australia

No time to waste: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese must adopt a new sense of urgency. Photo: Thomas Lucraft.

Parliament returns early this week to debate legislation proposed in response to the Bondi massacre, which despite the government calls for national unity has become hyper politicised.

The event and its aftermath have dominated the headlines, as a flagging Opposition seizes on an opportunity to restore its diminished stocks and win back supporters, who the polls say have deserted to One Nation.

Prime Minister Albanese’s been lambasted for his caution in not immediately announcing a royal commission but also for rushing new hate speech and gun control laws into Parliament.

Many are wanting it both ways. The horror of that December day demands a response but it seems that for those calling the loudest the purpose is more to bring the government down than achieve actual outcomes.

Bondi has become a lightning rod for a storm of issues, long-held gripes, and dog whistles, particularly about the rate and mix of immigration, and assumption that Labor is soft on national security.

Instead of the nation being brought together, too many are sowing division.

READ ALSO Millions of under 16s social media accounts closed since ban came into effect

Before Bondi, Labor seemed unassailable and coasting to a third election win in 2028, with the Coalition divided, obsessed with itself and with few policy options.

After a cautious first term picking the low-hanging policy fruit and a thumping election victory some might argue vindicated that approach, Albanese may have thought time was on his side when it came to any legacy of reform.

Bondi dashed that hope, if it ever was that valid anyway.

While there must be serious scrutiny of the government, the intelligence community and how deep antisemitism and racism in general, runs in Australia society, this cannot hijack the rest of the nation’s policy agenda.

The current ferment has the potential to consume Australian political life and push to the background crucial policy questions that the Albanese Government has already put in the too-hard basket for too long.

These include tax reform; the structural deficit; funding to the states and territories, particularly when it comes to health and education, the supply, cost and tax treatment of housing; productivity; the energy transition and achieving net zero; the parlous state of our universities; and Australia’s continuing environmental degradation.

Not to mention how to negotiate an alliance in which that ally is systematically destroying the world order on which it was based.

READ ALSO More medical graduates staying on as AMA renews push to keep them in Canberra

The Albanese Government risks its energy being drained dry by the current tumult. It needs to regain the initiative and its agenda, because these issues are fundamental to the social fabric and are at the core of what kind of country Australia will be.

The Bondi killings should never be diminished and the royal commission and the laws being debated this week, whatever form they eventually take, are vitally important, but the Albanese Government and the Opposition cannot be diverted from the other issues intrinsic to the nation’s future that demand to be addressed.

Free Daily Digest

Want the best Canberra news delivered daily? We package the most-read Canberra stories and send them to your inbox. Sign-up now for trusted local news that will never be behind a paywall.
Loading
By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.

Join the conversation

37
All Comments
  • All Comments
  • Website Comments
LatestOldest

The Bondi Incident and National Security are obviously important issues that need to be resolved but yeah…these issues can also be a distraction.

HiddenDragon10:39 pm 19 Jan 26

“The Albanese Government risks its energy being drained dry by the current tumult.”

The impact of Bondi will not be distraction or delay (this government will move on as soon as the focus groups say it is safe to do so – i.e. pretty quickly), but the hit which Labor in general, and Albanese in particular, has taken in the polls.

Even if the polling numbers recover, the sobering experience of the honeymoon coming to an end and being seen through by many more in the voting public and the commentariat will make this government even more wary of reaching beyond the “low-hanging” policy fruit”.

The issues listed above in the fourth from last sentence were never going to be addressed in a truly worthwhile way by this government because they all involve a serious risk of losing more votes than they win, and that is something which this political-to-his-fingertips PM has no interest in. It was only ever going to be badly over-hyped tinkering and half measures.

If Bondi does have an impact on the prospects for genuine and important reform it will be if Albanese is seriously and permanently damaged to the extent that the heirs apparent and presumptive sense an opportunity for product differentiation by way of public or blatantly leaked dissent on issues of real substance.

Albanese’s mistake was in not calling out the Netanyahu Government and their actions in Gaza which has led to a surge in anti semitism around the world.

Only Malcolm Turnbull has stepped up and called out Netanyahu.

Capital Retro8:18 am 20 Jan 26

Just to be clear franky, what exactly were the Israel’s actions in Gaza that has led to a surge in global anti Semitism?

I have asked you this at least twice on other threads but you have not responded.

Until you do respond you are in the hate speech zone.

Lets start with the disproportionate response.

From Gaza Health & Israeli Foreign Affairs.
1195 Israeli deaths
71391 Palestinian deaths inc 20179 children.
Includes 248 journalists & 224 aid workers.

Then the small matter of settlers forcing (at gunpoint) Palestinians off their land in the WB.

Plus Netanyahu has an arrest warrant out for war crimes issued by the International Criminal Court.

Probably just minor inconveniences for you CR.

True, however the Australian Governments reluctance to be involved in the issue of Palestine is understandable. Sadly the Israel/Palestine issue is not a simple as what people think.

When we can stop violent angry aggrieved men from inflicting their violence, injury and death on others, the world will be a better place. Achieving this through legislation is a pipe dream.

Mass murderers are exacting revenge for perceived threats or attacks from others and they want to be remembered for their violence, which they dream about, plan and enact coldly. As a community we need to recognise abusive individuals to alert others to the risks. Most of these murderers have clearly shown their abusive and violent nature in the past, often in domestic circumstances. We need to stop ignoring them or making excuses for their behaviour, reporting them instead, to prevent harm instead of bemoaning it afterwards.

Capital Retro8:14 am 20 Jan 26

The Bondi shooting was a pogrom targeting a specific ethnic group.

The alleged perpetrators had Islamic State ideals which have no similarities to the reasons for killing that you have suggested.

There is no way we can stop this happening again and again.

Yeah, true. The shooters in the Bondi Incident had raised Red Flags that were ignored.

Reasonable article Ian, though the only person who’s politicised Bondi, the Royal Commission and the subsequent speech and gun laws is Albanese. He could have shown himself to be a leader but instead has managed to upset everyone, political and non-political. And he’s been rightly belted in the polls because of it.

The government is failing on the economy, their spending explosion will see interest rates go up soon and then the polls will get even worse.

It’s a shame the Coalition also lacks leadership and political nous because the 2028 election is well and truly winnable. Remember this time last year the Coalition was leading Labor in the polls until the worst election campaign in political memory put paid to that. Notably their fall in the polls is One Nation’s gain, not the governments. Barnaby must be grinning.

Parliament today is going to be a joke and expect a diminished Prime Minister to conduct Australia Day events over the weekend. Wonder if he might even get booed.

Penfold, you really do seem to be deaf, dumb and blind to events and views that are different from yours.

The first persons to politicise this issue were groups you support, not Albanese. He may be lacking as a leader but he did not seek to blame anyone except the murderers themselves. Perhaps other groups might consider this approach.

Yes, I’m an optimist in thinking that those driven by a desire for personal power, hatred of certain groups and ideas (many of whom rushed to blame others) are capable of critical thinking and being a little more objective, focusing on facts instead of personal biases.

Well psycho that really depends on whether one blindly follows the ABC and is unable to form independent views on news events, or not.

“Well psycho that really depends on whether one blindly follows the ABC and is unable to form independent views on news events, or not.”

The irony, when Penzero gets his daily groupthink talking points from yesterday’s right wing news sources and blogs.

It’s like clockwork when you can quite easily predict what he’ll be posting each day.

Too funny. 😂👨‍🦯

Daily Digest

Want the best Canberra news delivered daily? Every day we package the most popular Region Canberra stories and send them straight to your inbox. Sign-up now for trusted local news that will never be behind a paywall.

By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.