After the landslide: One year on from the historic 2025 election

Thu, Jul 09, 2026 11am AEST Zoom

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Last year, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese led the Labor Party to a historic victory, winning a landslide for his second term. The Liberal Party suffered its worst result since World War 2. But with the rise of One Nation at home and crisis abroad, the world already looks very different to how it did in May last year.

Join The Australia Institute co-CEO Richard Denniss, Chief Political Analyst Amy Remeikis and Democracy Director Bill Browne as they discuss what's changed in Australian politics since the last election and where it might go from here. 

SPEAKERS:

Dr Richard Denniss – co-Chief Executive Officer, The Australia Institute

Richard Denniss is co-CEO of the Australia Institute. He is a prominent Australian economist, author and public policy commentator, and has spent the last twenty years moving between policy-focused roles in academia, federal politics and think-tanks. He was a Lecturer in Economics at the University of Newcastle and former Associate Professor in the Crawford School of Public Policy at the Australian National University. He is a regular contributor to The Monthly and the author of several books including: Dead Centre: How political pragmatism is killing us, EconobabbleCuring Affluenza and Dead Right: How Neoliberalism Ate Itself and What Comes Next?

Amy Remeikis – Chief Political Analyst, The Australia Institute

Amy Remeikis is the Chief Political Analyst at The Australia Institute. Amy is renowned for her incisive political commentary and extensive experience as a journalist, author, and former Guardian Australia political reporter. Amy regularly appears in national media and is celebrated for her powerful writing on gender, politics, and social justice. Her work continues to influence public debate and policy discussions across Australia.

Bill Browne – Director, Democracy & Accountability Program, The Australia Institute

Bill Browne is the Director of the Democracy & Accountability Program. His diverse areas of interest include the use of opinion polling, forecasting to predict policy outcomes, truth in political advertising reforms, digital technology and the role of the states and the Senate in Australian democracy. Prior to coming to the Australia Institute, he worked as an environmental, social, governance (ESG) analyst.

When

Thursday, July 09, 2026 at 11:00am - 12pm AEST

Where

Zoom

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