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Political strategist Isaac Levido says “tech divergence” is sharpening voter expectations and intensifying frustration with government delivery.

‘Uber in 90 seconds, health appointment in nine months’: Why voters are turning to populists

Campaign mastermind Isaac Levido says the rise of Donald Trump and Pauline Hanson is not an unexpected phenomenon, but a direct consumer backlash against sluggish governments.

  • Rob Harris

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Trump’s speech to supporters before the Capitol riot.

‘Fake news’: How a Donald Trump video brought the BBC undone

The White House, having already gone to war with large parts of the US media, has just started a fight with the Beeb. The cost for Britain’s national broadcaster is already immense.

  • David Crowe
A screenshot from Behind the Plymouth Brethren -- a not-so Exclusive podcast.

Exclusive Brethren called the web a ‘pipeline of filth’. Now they have a podcast

The controversial church has launched a new podcast, aiming to hit back at “media conspiracy theories″⁣.

  • Kishor Napier-Raman and Madeleine Heffernan
Cyclists crossing London’s Westminster Bridge.

London’s hire bike love affair carries on blooming despite the odd bumpy ride

Thousands hop on a London hire bike every day, and true believers swear they’re quicker than the Tube.

  • David Crowe
Andrea Jenkyns in full song at the Reform UK national conference in Birmingham.

The razzle-dazzle politics of Britain’s rising Right

Nigel Farage and his Reform UK running mates like Dame Andrea Jenkyns know how to put on a show, but can they really win power?

  • David Crowe
Well may he laugh: Reform leader Nigel Farage, whose party stands to claim the biggest block of votes at the next election.

No laughing matter: how Nigel Farage stole the lead in UK politics

It couldn’t happen in Australia, where compulsory and preferential voting protect the two-party system, but British politics is fractured – on the right and the left.

  • George Brandis
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Yvette Cooper, UK home secretary, during the Border Security Summit in London, UK, on Monday, March 31, 2025. The number of asylum seekers arriving in the UK has been increasing, and a further backlog built up when the previous government paused the processing of asylum claims while it worked on a plan — subsequently dropped by Labour — to send some to Rwanda. Photographer: Jason Alden/Bloomberg

UK plans to end ‘failed experiment’ in immigration

Prime Minister Keir Starmer is under pressure to cut migration after the recent success of Nigel Farage’s anti-immigration Reform UK party in local elections.

  • Andrew MacAskill
Boris Johnson pecked by ostrich.

Ostrich shows Boris Johnson where he sits in pecking order

The former British PM was cruising through what appeared to be a wildlife park when an ostrich stuck its head through the window to give him a feisty peck.

  • Livia Albeck-Ripka
An ostrich pecks the former British PM through his car window, making him curse as his child giggles. Credit: Carrie Johnson via Instagram
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Boris Johnson's run-in with a feisty ostrich

An ostrich pecks the former British PM through his car window, making him curse as his child giggles. Credit: Carrie Johnson via Instagram

Former prime minister John Howard bowls a ball during a cricket game in Pakistan in 2005.

From Hawke to Dutton: Politicians and their sporting mishaps

News that a cameraman was bloodied after a misplaced punt from Peter Dutton is just the latest political sports mishap

  • Penry Buckley