New Politics

New Politics

Share this post

New Politics
New Politics
The short journey from principle to pragmatic: whatever happened to Penny Wong?

The short journey from principle to pragmatic: whatever happened to Penny Wong?

This is a time when Australia should project the confidence of a middle power with a clear sense of its own interests. Instead, it just rubber stamps the decisions made by others.

Eddy Jokovich's avatar
David Lewis's avatar
New Politics's avatar
Eddy Jokovich
,
David Lewis
, and
New Politics
Jul 04, 2025
∙ Paid
13

Share this post

New Politics
New Politics
The short journey from principle to pragmatic: whatever happened to Penny Wong?
2
2
Share

In 2022, Penny Wong entered government with a reputation for strong character and a parliamentarian based on principle: this was the Senator who sparred forensically in opposition, who then went on to be the foreign minister who strategically and carefully reset relationships with Beijing after they were severely damaged by the Morrison government, and the tirelessly worked to put Australia back into the centre of Pacific diplomacy.

This aura, however, has been dulled by the politics of Israel–Gaza and the wider Middle East region. As civilian casualties in Gaza have risen over the past 20 months, and as the Trump administration continues to override international law in Iran, amongst other places, Wong – normally unafraid of clear and tough language – began to speak in abstract and obtuse language. She would not label the unfolding catastrophe in Gaza as a genocide, nor would she accept that the United States had breached international law and protocols, or explain how Australian interests were served by silence on these key issues. In the space of 18 months, one of Australia’s most articulate foreign minister has drifted towards joining the “unprincipled greats” of Australian diplomacy.

Keep reading with a 7-day free trial

Subscribe to New Politics to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in
A guest post by
Eddy Jokovich
Editor of New Politics, and co-presenter of the weekly New Politics Australia podcast. He has worked as a journalist, publisher, author, political analyst, campaigner, war correspondent, and lecturer in media studies.
Subscribe to Eddy
A guest post by
David Lewis
Musician. Thinker. Intellectual. A more varied career than you’d expect.
Subscribe to David
© 2025 New Politics
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start writingGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture

Share