The Flashwire

Miko Santos of Mencari News

The flashwire is your rapid-response breaking news podcast — a stripped-down, adrenaline-paced bulletin that drops minutes after major stories break. It’s designed for listeners who want accuracy and speed, not noise. Think of it as the audio equivalent of a newsroom’s red alert light turning on. Each episode runs under 5 minutes — short enough to drop between scrolls, but packed with verified updates, eyewitness info, expert soundbites, and a forward look at what happens next. www.readmencari.com

  1. PRESSCON: Albanese Backs U.S. Iran Strikes, Warns of Regional Escalation as Australia Urges Citizens to Flee

    MAR 1

    PRESSCON: Albanese Backs U.S. Iran Strikes, Warns of Regional Escalation as Australia Urges Citizens to Flee

    This piece is freely available to read. Become a paid subscriber today and help keep Mencari News financially afloat so that we can continue to pay our writers for their insight and expertise. Albanese Backs U.S. Iran Strikes, Warns of Regional Escalation as Australia Urges Citizens to Flee March 1, 2026 Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Sunday expressed support for U.S.-led military strikes against Iran, calling the Iranian regime a direct threat to international peace and security while urging Australians in the Middle East to depart immediately. Speaking in Sydney, Albanese stopped short of committing Australian forces to the operation but defended the strikes as a necessary response to Iran’s nuclear program and its support for armed proxies. He cited at least two IRGC-linked attacks on Australian soil in 2024 — including the firebombing of an Adass synagogue in Melbourne — as evidence of the regime’s global reach. Key Developments: * Australia opened a DFAT registration portal for citizens seeking assisted departure from Israel and Iran * Travel advice upgraded to “do not travel” for Israel, Lebanon, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and the UAE * Flight disruptions reported across the region, with Emirates and Etihad services affected by transport hub closures Australia’s Prior Actions Against Iran: * Expelled Iran’s ambassador in 2024 — the first expulsion since World War II * Suspended operations at its Tehran embassy * Listed the IRGC as a state sponsor of terrorism * Sanctioned more than 200 Iranian-linked individuals When pressed on the legality of the strikes, Albanese deferred to the United States and allied nations directly involved, reiterating that Iran’s conduct — including bombing areas of Dubai — represented an escalation “consistent with the nature of the regime.” Australians requiring consular assistance can contact the Consular Emergency Centre at 1300 555 135 (within Australia) or +61 2 6261 3305 (international), available 24 hours a day. Follow us across all major podcasting platforms and social media channels for updates that matter. Your support keeps independent journalism alive! For more in-depth coverage on these stories and other news affecting Australia and the world, subscribe to readmencari.com. Support our independent journalism by listening to our podcasts on all major platforms and considering a subscription to help us continue delivering fearless reporting free from financial and political influence. Got a News Tip? Contact our editor via Proton Mail encrypted, X Direct Message, LinkedIn, or email. You can securely message him on Signal by using his username, Miko Santos. The Mencari readers receive journalism free of financial and political influence. We set our own news agenda, which is always based on facts rather than billionaire ownership or political pressure. Despite the financial challenges that our industry faces, we have decided to keep our reporting open to the public because we believe that everyone has the right to know the truth about the events that shape their world. Thanks to the unwavering support of our readers, we’re able to keep the news flowing freely. If you’re able, please join us in supporting Mencari. Join over 1000 readers. Sign up here. We’d love it if you could share the email with your friends! Just (copy the URL here. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.readmencari.com/subscribe

    13 min
  2. BREAKING: Australia's Unemployment Holds at 4.1%, But Youth Underemployment Surges to 14.8%

    FEB 19

    BREAKING: Australia's Unemployment Holds at 4.1%, But Youth Underemployment Surges to 14.8%

    This piece is freely available to read. Become a paid subscriber today and help keep Mencari News financially afloat so that we can continue to pay our writers for their insight and expertise. The ABS Labour Force report for January 2026 presents a mixed picture of the Australian jobs market. While headline unemployment held steady and full-time employment rose by 50,000, a simultaneous loss of 33,000 part-time positions tempered overall employment growth to just 18,000 for the month. Key Details: * Unemployment rate steady at 4.1% (seasonally adjusted) * Full-time employment up 50,000; part-time employment down 33,000 * Net employment growth of 18,000 for January * Participation rate fell to 66.7% — down 0.6 percentage points from January 2025’s record high * Underemployment rate rose 0.2 points to 5.9% * Underutilisation rate climbed 0.2 points to 10.0% * Youth underemployment jumped 1.0 percentage point to 14.8% * Total hours worked rose 0.6% — outpacing employment growth Trend Indicators: * Trend unemployment fell from 4.2% in December to 4.1% in January * Unemployed persons decreased for the fourth consecutive month * Trend hours worked grew faster than employment on an annual basis ABS Commentary: Sean Crick, ABS Head of Labour Statistics, noted the youth underemployment rise “largely reversed the fall recorded last month,” flagging the reversal as a key concern within an otherwise stable headline result. Crick attributed stronger hours growth to fewer workers taking seasonal leave compared with typical Januarys. Follow us across all major podcasting platforms and social media channels for updates that matter. Your support keeps independent journalism alive! For more in-depth coverage on these stories and other news affecting Australia and the world, subscribe to readmencari.com. Support our independent journalism by listening to our podcasts on all major platforms and considering a subscription to help us continue delivering fearless reporting free from financial and political influence. Got a News Tip? Contact our editor via Proton Mail encrypted, X Direct Message, LinkedIn, or email. You can securely message him on Signal by using his username, Miko Santos. The Mencari readers receive journalism free of financial and political influence. We set our own news agenda, which is always based on facts rather than billionaire ownership or political pressure. Despite the financial challenges that our industry faces, we have decided to keep our reporting open to the public because we believe that everyone has the right to know the truth about the events that shape their world. Thanks to the unwavering support of our readers, we’re able to keep the news flowing freely. If you’re able, please join us in supporting Mencari. Join over 1000 readers. Sign up here. We’d love it if you could share the email with your friends! Just (copy the URL here. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.readmencari.com/subscribe

    5 min
  3. Australian Wages Rise 3.4% Annually as Public Sector Outpaces Private Growth for Fourth Straight Quarter

    FEB 18

    Australian Wages Rise 3.4% Annually as Public Sector Outpaces Private Growth for Fourth Straight Quarter

    This piece is freely available to read. Become a paid subscriber today and help keep Mencari News financially afloat so that we can continue to pay our writers for their insight and expertise. Australian wages grew 0.8% in the December quarter 2025 and 3.4% over the year, according to seasonally adjusted data released Wednesday by the Australian Bureau of Statistics. The Wage Price Index report showed public sector wages rising at an annual rate of 4.0%, outpacing private sector growth of 3.4% for the fourth consecutive quarter. ABS Head of Prices Statistics Michelle Marquardt attributed the stronger public sector result to new state enterprise agreements delivering multiple pay rises throughout the year, including backdated increases applied shortly after agreements were finalised. Healthcare and social assistance was the top-contributing industry for the quarter across both sectors, driven by Commonwealth-funded wage increases in aged care and early childhood education, as well as scheduled enterprise agreement rises for frontline health workers in New South Wales. Private sector annual wage growth edged up to 3.4% from 3.3% recorded in the year to December 2024. The ABS noted the Wage Price Index is designed to measure pure price change in wages and salaries, independent of workforce composition or changes in the quality or quantity of work performed. Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, Wage Price Index, Australia, December Quarter 2025. Released Feb. 18, 2026. Follow us across all major podcasting platforms and social media channels for updates that matter. Your support keeps independent journalism alive! For more in-depth coverage on these stories and other news affecting Australia and the world, subscribe to readmencari.com. Support our independent journalism by listening to our podcasts on all major platforms and considering a subscription to help us continue delivering fearless reporting free from financial and political influence. Got a News Tip? Contact our editor via Proton Mail encrypted, X Direct Message, LinkedIn, or email. You can securely message him on Signal by using his username, Miko Santos. The Mencari readers receive journalism free of financial and political influence. We set our own news agenda, which is always based on facts rather than billionaire ownership or political pressure. Despite the financial challenges that our industry faces, we have decided to keep our reporting open to the public because we believe that everyone has the right to know the truth about the events that shape their world. Thanks to the unwavering support of our readers, we’re able to keep the news flowing freely. If you’re able, please join us in supporting Mencari. Join over 1000 readers. Sign up here. We’d love it if you could share the email with your friends! Just (copy the URL here. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.readmencari.com/subscribe

    4 min
  4. Australian Opposition Leader Unveils Revamped Shadow Cabinet, Reunites Liberal-National Coalition

    FEB 17

    Australian Opposition Leader Unveils Revamped Shadow Cabinet, Reunites Liberal-National Coalition

    This piece is freely available to read. Become a paid subscriber today and help keep Mencari News financially afloat so that we can continue to pay our writers for their insight and expertise. The Leader of the Australian Opposition has announced a restructured Coalition front bench, reuniting the Liberal and National parties under a single parliamentary team and signalling a sharpened electoral strategy ahead of the next federal election. The new shadow ministry centres on economic accountability and national security, with the opposition leader framing the reshuffle as a direct challenge to what he described as “the worst government in our nation’s history.” Key Appointments: * Senator Jane Hu — Deputy Leader; Shadow Minister for Employment, Industrial Relations, Productivity and Deregulation * Tim Wilson — Shadow Treasurer, tasked with pursuing lower taxes and reduced inflation * Senator Jacinta Price — Shadow Minister for Small Business and Skills and Training * Senator Claire Chandler — Shadow Minister for Finance, Government Services and the Public Service * Andrew Hastie — Shadow Minister for Industry and Sovereign Capability; Deputy Leader in the House of Representatives * Aaron Violi — Shadow Minister for Digital Economy, Science, Technology, Innovation and Cyber Security * Senator Michaelia Cash — Shadow Attorney-General; Opposition Leader in the Senate * Senator John O’Dunoghue — Shadow Minister for Home Affairs and Immigration Coalition Position: The opposition leader cited rising living costs, energy prices, housing affordability, and border security as the defining issues the new team will prosecute against the Labor government. The reunification of the National Party was confirmed as endorsed by the Liberal Party leadership. Follow us across all major podcasting platforms and social media channels for updates that matter. Your support keeps independent journalism alive! For more in-depth coverage on these stories and other news affecting Australia and the world, subscribe to readmencari.com. Support our independent journalism by listening to our podcasts on all major platforms and considering a subscription to help us continue delivering fearless reporting free from financial and political influence. Got a News Tip? Contact our editor via Proton Mail encrypted, X Direct Message, LinkedIn, or email. You can securely message him on Signal by using his username, Miko Santos. The Mencari readers receive journalism free of financial and political influence. We set our own news agenda, which is always based on facts rather than billionaire ownership or political pressure. Despite the financial challenges that our industry faces, we have decided to keep our reporting open to the public because we believe that everyone has the right to know the truth about the events that shape their world. Thanks to the unwavering support of our readers, we’re able to keep the news flowing freely. If you’re able, please join us in supporting Mencari. Join over 1000 readers. Sign up here. We’d love it if you could share the email with your friends! Just (copy the URL here. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.readmencari.com/subscribe

    4 min
  5. PRESSCON : Housing becomes Liberal Party's #1 promise as new leader targets locked-out buyers

    FEB 13

    PRESSCON : Housing becomes Liberal Party's #1 promise as new leader targets locked-out buyers

    This piece is freely available to read. Become a paid subscriber today and help keep Mencari News financially afloat so that we can continue to pay our writers for their insight and expertise. The Liberal Party positioned home ownership as its centerpiece issue under new leader Angus Taylor, who says "young Australians deserve the stability and opportunity to own a home" in a direct pitch to priced-out buyers. If you can’t afford to buy a home, Australia’s conservative opposition wants you to know they’re now making that their problem to solve. Angus Taylor, sworn in as Liberal Party leader on February 13, 2026, made housing affordability his first major policy commitment - signaling a shift in conservative priorities toward younger voters facing a brutal property market. “We’ll re-establish home ownership as the centerpiece of the Australian dream,” Taylor said in his inaugural press conference at Parliament House. “All Australians, especially young Australians, deserve the stability and the opportunity to own a home.” Why this matters to you Australia’s housing crisis has intensified over the past decade. Median house prices in major cities have soared while wage growth stagnated. Many millennials and Gen Z buyers have been entirely locked out of the market, forced into long-term renting or living with parents well into their 30s. For young Australians, this represents a fundamental break from previous generations who could reasonably expect to buy a home by their late 20s or early 30s. What the Liberal Party hasn’t specified yet Taylor’s press conference was long on commitment but short on details. He didn’t outline: * Specific policies to increase housing supply * Whether they’d restrict foreign buyers or investment properties * Tax incentives for first-home buyers * Infrastructure plans to open up new housing areas * Any timeline for when these policies would be released What is the Liberal Party? Australia’s center-right major party, currently in opposition after losing badly in the 2025 election. The party traditionally favors free markets and lower taxes but is now under pressure to show it cares about issues affecting younger Australians - a demographic that has trended away from conservative parties. The housing crisis by numbers While Taylor didn’t cite specific statistics in his speech, the housing situation he’s responding to is severe: * Homeownership rates for Australians under 35 have fallen dramatically from previous generations * Rent now consumes 30-50% of income for many younger workers * Waiting times for public housing stretch into years in major cities (Note: These are general trends - the transcript doesn’t include specific data, and we can’t verify current exact figures without additional sources.) The political calculation Taylor’s housing focus represents a strategic choice. He’s competing with: Labor (current government): Already has housing policies in place, though Taylor argues they’re failing The Greens: Have pushed aggressive policies like rent caps and massive social housing expansion, appealing to younger renters One Nation: A right-wing populist party that’s been gaining conservative voters on immigration and cost-of-living issues By leading with housing, Taylor is trying to show the Liberal Party cares about issues that directly affect young people’s daily lives - not just traditional conservative concerns like defence or economic management. What comes with the housing promise Taylor packaged housing with related economic commitments: * Lower taxes overall (”The Liberal Party must always be the party of lower taxes”) * Fighting any new taxes on homes or superannuation (retirement savings) * Reducing childcare costs through more “choice and flexibility” (possibly subsidizing nannies or at-home care, though unspecified) * Lowering energy costs by scrapping what he called “carbon taxes” The credibility problem There’s an awkward fact Taylor had to confront: he was shadow treasurer when the Liberal Party made what he now admits were “big calls wrong” on tax policy during the 2025 election campaign. That loss left the party with just 30 of 151 parliamentary seats - its worst position since formation in 1944. Now he’s asking voters, including young would-be homebuyers, to trust that things will be different under his leadership. What happens next Taylor needs to follow through with actual policy. The housing commitment is currently a priority statement, not a plan. Parliament returns from summer break on February 17, 2026. The next federal election must happen by May 2028, giving Taylor roughly two years to prove his housing focus is genuine before voters decide. Opposition parties can make promises, but they can’t implement policy until they win government. For now, this is about signaling what the Liberal Party would prioritize if elected - and trying to win back voters who’ve given up on conservative politics caring about their financial future. Follow us across all major podcasting platforms and social media channels for updates that matter. Your support keeps independent journalism alive! For more in-depth coverage on these stories and other news affecting Australia and the world, subscribe to readmencari.com. Support our independent journalism by listening to our podcasts on all major platforms and considering a subscription to help us continue delivering fearless reporting free from financial and political influence. Got a News Tip? Contact our editor via Proton Mail encrypted, X Direct Message, LinkedIn, or email. You can securely message him on Signal by using his username, Miko Santos. The Mencari readers receive journalism free of financial and political influence. We set our own news agenda, which is always based on facts rather than billionaire ownership or political pressure. Despite the financial challenges that our industry faces, we have decided to keep our reporting open to the public because we believe that everyone has the right to know the truth about the events that shape their world. Thanks to the unwavering support of our readers, we’re able to keep the news flowing freely. If you’re able, please join us in supporting Mencari. Join over 1000 readers. Sign up here. We’d love it if you could share the email with your friends! Just (copy the URL here. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.readmencari.com/subscribe

    10 min
  6. PRESSCON : Ley's Exit Triggers By-Election That Could Shrink Liberal Numbers in Parliament

    FEB 13

    PRESSCON : Ley's Exit Triggers By-Election That Could Shrink Liberal Numbers in Parliament

    This piece is freely available to read. Become a paid subscriber today and help keep Mencari News financially afloat so that we can continue to pay our writers for their insight and expertise. Sussan Ley's decision to quit Parliament will force a special election in her rural NSW seat — and if Liberals lose it, their ability to block Labor's agenda gets weaker. The political fallout from Sussan Ley’s leadership loss extends beyond Canberra’s party room drama. Her announcement that she’ll resign from Parliament entirely means voters in Farrah, a sprawling rural electorate in western New South Wales, will head back to the polls in a by-election that could shift the balance of power. What Just Happened After losing the Liberal leadership ballot Friday, Ley announced she won’t just step down as party leader — she’s leaving Parliament completely after 25 years representing Farrah. “I will be spending the next couple of weeks thanking the amazing people of Farrah and expressing my gratitude to them for the honour of representing them for 25 years,” Ley said. “Shortly thereafter, I will be tendering my resignation to the Speaker.” When she resigns, it triggers an automatic by-election in Farrah. These special elections let voters choose a new MP to fill the vacant seat for the rest of the current parliamentary term. Why This Matters For young voters in Farrah: You’ll be voting again sooner than expected, and this is your chance to signal whether you want a Liberal representative to continue in this seat or try something different. For parliamentary math: Liberals currently hold a certain number of seats in Parliament. Losing Farrah would mean one fewer MP voting on laws and policies. While they’re already in opposition, every seat matters for their ability to negotiate, block legislation, or win future votes. For political momentum: By-elections often signal broader voter mood. If Liberals can’t hold Farrah — a seat they’ve won for decades — it suggests the party’s troubles go deeper than just leadership chaos. What Is a By-Election? A by-election is a special vote held between regular elections when a seat becomes vacant — usually because an MP resigns, dies, or is disqualified. Everyone in that electorate votes to choose a new representative. By-elections happen more quickly than general elections and often become referendums on the current government or opposition party. They can shift the total number of seats each party holds in Parliament. The Seat of Farrah Farrah covers the western plains of New South Wales, including the Murray and Murrumbidgee river regions — vast farming communities far from Sydney’s urban centers. Ley first won the seat in 2001 by just 206 votes and has been re-elected nine times since. She described it as representing “the western plains of New South Wales, the Murray and Murrumbidgee rivers and the rural communities that it has been my enormous privilege to represent.” The electorate typically leans conservative, but Ley’s long personal connection to the region means it’s unclear whether voters will stick with the Liberal Party or consider alternatives now that she’s gone. The Timeline 2001: Sussan Ley wins Farrah by 206 votes, beginning a 25-year career 2001-2024: Re-elected nine times, becoming the region’s longest-serving representative May 2024: Becomes Liberal Party leader while still holding Farrah seat Today: Loses leadership, announces resignation from Parliament Next few weeks: Ley thanks constituents, formally resigns to Speaker Likely late February/early March: By-election date set and campaigning begins Estimated 4-6 weeks later: By-election held, new MP sworn in What Could Happen Scenario 1 — Liberals hold the seat: The party nominates a strong local candidate who convinces voters to stick with Liberal representation despite the leadership chaos. This would limit the damage from Ley’s departure. Scenario 2 — Labor wins: If voters blame the Liberal Party for leadership instability or want to send a message, Labor could flip the seat. This would strengthen Labor’s parliamentary numbers and suggest rural voters are abandoning conservatives. Scenario 3 — Independent win: Rural and regional Australia has seen a surge in independent candidates who promise to prioritize local issues over party politics. An independent could win if voters want representation divorced from Canberra drama. Scenario 4 — Nationals challenge: The National Party (Liberals’ coalition partner, focused on rural issues) might see this as a chance to expand their own representation in the region. Different Perspectives Liberal Party strategists are likely worried. Losing Farrah would be both a symbolic and practical blow — symbolic because it’s Ley’s long-held seat, practical because it weakens their parliamentary numbers during an already difficult period. Labor campaign teams see opportunity. Rural seats have been shifting politically across Australia, and leadership chaos in the Liberal Party creates an opening to flip traditionally conservative electorates. Independent candidates might argue this is exactly why voters need representatives who focus on local issues rather than party room drama. The trend of “teal independents” (centrist independents focused on climate and integrity) has reshaped Australian politics. Local voters face a choice: stick with the party that’s represented them for decades, or use this by-election to voice frustration with political instability and demand different representation. Follow us across all major podcasting platforms and social media channels for updates that matter. Your support keeps independent journalism alive! For more in-depth coverage on these stories and other news affecting Australia and the world, subscribe to readmencari.com. Support our independent journalism by listening to our podcasts on all major platforms and considering a subscription to help us continue delivering fearless reporting free from financial and political influence. Got a News Tip? Contact our editor via Proton Mail encrypted, X Direct Message, LinkedIn, or email. You can securely message him on Signal by using his username, Miko Santos. The Mencari readers receive journalism free of financial and political influence. We set our own news agenda, which is always based on facts rather than billionaire ownership or political pressure. Despite the financial challenges that our industry faces, we have decided to keep our reporting open to the public because we believe that everyone has the right to know the truth about the events that shape their world. Thanks to the unwavering support of our readers, we’re able to keep the news flowing freely. If you’re able, please join us in supporting Mencari. Join over 1000 readers. Sign up here. We’d love it if you could share the email with your friends! Just (copy the URL here. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.readmencari.com/subscribe

    8 min
  7. Breaking : Taylor Ousts Ley in Emphatic Liberal Leadership Victory, Wins 34-17 Amid Historic Polling Crisis

    FEB 12

    Breaking : Taylor Ousts Ley in Emphatic Liberal Leadership Victory, Wins 34-17 Amid Historic Polling Crisis

    This piece is freely available to read. Become a paid subscriber today and help keep Mencari News financially afloat so that we can continue to pay our writers for their insight and expertise. Angus Taylor has won the Liberal Party leadership in a decisive 34-17 ballot victory over Sussan Ley, who held the position for nine months. The Friday morning spill followed a mass frontbench exodus and was triggered by the party's polling collapse to below 20 percent primary support—historic lows—while One Nation surged to nearly 30 percent. The partyroom is now voting on deputy leadership, with Taylor facing the challenge of uniting a fractured opposition amid what senior senators described as a "change or die moment" for the party. Follow us across all major podcasting platforms and social media channels for updates that matter. Your support keeps independent journalism alive! For more in-depth coverage on these stories and other news affecting Australia and the world, subscribe to readmencari.com. Support our independent journalism by listening to our podcasts on all major platforms and considering a subscription to help us continue delivering fearless reporting free from financial and political influence. Got a News Tip? Contact our editor via Proton Mail encrypted, X Direct Message, LinkedIn, or email. You can securely message him on Signal by using his username, Miko Santos. The Mencari readers receive journalism free of financial and political influence. We set our own news agenda, which is always based on facts rather than billionaire ownership or political pressure. Despite the financial challenges that our industry faces, we have decided to keep our reporting open to the public because we believe that everyone has the right to know the truth about the events that shape their world. Thanks to the unwavering support of our readers, we’re able to keep the news flowing freely. If you’re able, please join us in supporting Mencari. Join over 1000 readers. Sign up here. We’d love it if you could share the email with your friends! Just (copy the URL here. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.readmencari.com/subscribe

    4 min
  8. Liberal Shadow Minister Taylor Resigns, Setting Stage for Leadership Challenge Against Ley

    FEB 11

    Liberal Shadow Minister Taylor Resigns, Setting Stage for Leadership Challenge Against Ley

    This piece is freely available to read. Become a paid subscriber today and help keep Mencari News financially afloat so that we can continue to pay our writers for their insight and expertise. Liberal MP Angus Taylor resigned from Opposition Leader Sussan Ley’s shadow cabinet Wednesday night, declaring he no longer believes she can lead the party and describing the Liberals as weaker than at any point since their formation in 1944. The shadow defence minister told reporters he had just tendered his resignation after walking into Ley’s office, a move that sets the stage for a formal leadership challenge expected within days. Taylor’s resignation comes amid mounting internal pressure over the Liberal Party’s historic polling collapse. The latest Sky News Pulse shows the party at 19 percent primary vote under Ley’s leadership, with her personal approval rating at minus 40 percent. Liberal Senators Sarah Henderson and Jane Hume have publicly warned the party faces an “existential crisis” and risks being “wiped out” unless change occurs. Sky News reports the anticipated leadership spill vote is “extremely tight,” potentially hinging on one or two MPs. Ley has pushed back against public dissent, telling Sky News on Monday her leadership was “secure” and that party discussions should remain in the partyroom. Under parliamentary convention, shadow cabinet members must resign if they do not support the party leader. Follow us across all major podcasting platforms and social media channels for updates that matter. Your support keeps independent journalism alive! For more in-depth coverage on these stories and other news affecting Australia and the world, subscribe to readmencari.com. Support our independent journalism by listening to our podcasts on all major platforms and considering a subscription to help us continue delivering fearless reporting free from financial and political influence. Got a News Tip? Contact our editor via Proton Mail encrypted, X Direct Message, LinkedIn, or email. You can securely message him on Signal by using his username, Miko Santos. The Mencari readers receive journalism free of financial and political influence. We set our own news agenda, which is always based on facts rather than billionaire ownership or political pressure. Despite the financial challenges that our industry faces, we have decided to keep our reporting open to the public because we believe that everyone has the right to know the truth about the events that shape their world. Thanks to the unwavering support of our readers, we’re able to keep the news flowing freely. If you’re able, please join us in supporting Mencari. Join over 1000 readers. Sign up here. We’d love it if you could share the email with your friends! Just (copy the URL here. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.readmencari.com/subscribe

    4 min

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About

The flashwire is your rapid-response breaking news podcast — a stripped-down, adrenaline-paced bulletin that drops minutes after major stories break. It’s designed for listeners who want accuracy and speed, not noise. Think of it as the audio equivalent of a newsroom’s red alert light turning on. Each episode runs under 5 minutes — short enough to drop between scrolls, but packed with verified updates, eyewitness info, expert soundbites, and a forward look at what happens next. www.readmencari.com