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“We go, ‘finally, someone’s not following the script.'”
“We’re never going to see the complete picture. We want to understand there’s other perspectives out there.”
Horse manure in the 1800s
On the panel was Abbie Chatfield (podcaster, Greens supporter), Konrad Benjamin who is better known as ‘Punter’s Politics’ (podcaster, unaligned, and whose catchphrase is ‘policy over party’), Hannah Ferguson (Cheek Media co-founder, Greens member and Teals supporter), Freya Leach (policy maker at the Liberal-affiliated Menzies Research Centre, Liberal member), Joel Jammal (Turning Point Australia founder, conservative libertarian) and Trisha Jha (researcher at the Centre of Independent Studies, centre-right commentator, not a content creator).
Coming out of your social media feeds and into one studio, they debated whether Australia is doing enough to combat climate change, if nuclear should be part of Australia’s energy future, the merits of using superannuation to buy a house, whether immigration should be cut, student debt and even horse manure in the 1800s (you’ll have to watch the debate to hear more about this one).
From podcasts to brainrot, candidates are trying to capture the attention of young voters
The posts were cleared of breaching any laws, with the AEC finding no evidence that the podcaster had been paid for any political posts, or that Albanese or Bandt had any creative control in the interviews.
Concerns of young Australians shifting
“We have frequently faced these kinds of like civilisational moments where it looks like everything is going to implode and then we have innovated our way out of it,” she told the group.
While the panel clashed on how much property investors are impacting the housing market, they agreed that a lower barrier to entry is needed for young people trying to get into the property market.

With young voters set to overtake the ‘boomer’ vote for the first time this federal election, politicians have looked to influencers more than ever before.
Political influencers here to stay
“It reinforces your thinking. It doesn’t challenge it. And that’s something we need to really consider … We want to understand, there are other perspectives out there.”
“In a way, it might actually speed up some of these issues which are on the fringe, which struggle for airtime and only get it every three years when there’s an election campaign on, now courtesy of influencers who may pick it up as their issue.”