Coalition backs out of Gonski cash deal

Matthew Knott   The Turnbull government will not fund the final two years of the Gonski school funding deals and will not compete with Labor in an election-year battle to shower more money on schools, Education Minister Simon Birmingham says.

Latest political news

Briggs quits government after 'incident' abroad

Jamie Briggs during question time at Parliament House.

Latika Bourke   Junior Minister Jamie Briggs is quitting the front bench after an "incident which occurred while he was abroad" involving a female public servant.

Brough stands aside over police inquiry

On his own: Mal Brough during question time on December 3.

Heath Aston   Mal Brough has stood aside as Special Minister of State in Malcolm Turnbull's Cabinet. Matthias Cormann and Marise Payne will take over his two portfolios.

Doctors question timing of Medicare cuts

The 23 items facing the axe are claimed 52,500 times a year.

Heath Aston   Doctors have criticised the Turnbull government for using the Christmas-New Year holiday period to reveal the first tranche of items to be dropped from the government-subsidised Medicare Benefits Schedule.

Is this David Cameron's Tony Abbott moment?

Lynton Crosby will reportedly be included in the New Year Honours List to be unveiled later this week.

Latika Bourke   The likely awarding of a knighthood to Australian-born political strategist Lynton Crosby is being likened to former prime minister Tony Abbott's disastrous knighting of Prince Philip.

Coalition voters reject cut in penalty rates

"The government has no plans to change penalty rates": Employment Minister Michaelia Cash.

Gareth Hutchens   The Turnbull government will face overwhelming opposition from voters in key Liberal and Nationals seats if it supports the move to cut Sunday penalty rates.

Liberals admit 'problem with women'

Malcolm Turnbull with  women in his cabinet after they were sworn in on September 21.

Farrah Tomazin   The Liberal Party is considering an ambitious target to more than double the proportion of women it has in Parliament over the next decade. 

Jim Carlton 'thoroughly decent' person

Jim Carlton, who died on Christmas Day, aged 80.

A successful student politician, Jim Carlton went on to become a minister in the Fraser government, and later the head of the Red Cross in Australia.

Families, pensioners to feel pinch of new laws 

Paper tickets for ferries, buses and trains to be phased out.

Michaela Whitbourn 12:15 AM   As the clock strikes midnight a raft of legal changes will kick in – and many Sydneysiders will feel the pinch.

Australia's carbon emissions jump in 2015

Combined with emissions from land use and deforestation the overall increase in emissions on the previous year was 1.3 per cent.

Latika Bourke   Australia's pledged to reduce its emissions, but our output of carbon dioxide emissions just jumped.

Women's anti-violence group loses funding

Fiona McCormack, CEO of Domestic Violence Victoria, says AWHN is needed urgently.

Alana Schetzer   Loss of federal government funding has put pressure on the National Women's Health Network and it could close in the next year.

Comment & Analysis

My Manus Island nightmare

Refugee Loghman Sawari has now spent three Christmases in Manus Island limbo.

Michael Gordon   Punishing one group of people endlessly in order to deter others is immoral.

We lose the plot in real-life migrant tales

Josephine Tovey

Josephine Tovey   In literature and film, like the soon-to-be released Brooklyn, we sympathise with the struggle of pioneering migrants. But are we capable of the same empathy for the real-life migrants of today?

PM's phoney war with a rabble and a zombie

Paul Sheehan.

Paul Sheehan   Malcolm Turnbull is triumphant yet not victorious. Rather than convert his sweet spot into political gold with an early election, he is likely to try to charm the Senate rabble and milk the zombie status of Bill Shorten.

How to make Australia a better federation

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and the premiers of NSW, Victoria and Western Australia at this month's COAG meeting.

John Brumby   Turnbull shows signs of being better at this than Abbott.

Comments 22

Time to recognise the good

Paul Malone thumbnail

Paul Malone   It is well worth pointing out that news is about the bad things that have happened. It is not representative of what is happening overall

Another problem on Turnbull's tax reform table

Scott Morrison and Mathias Cormann.

Michael Gordon   If the Prime Minister wants an honest debate about tax reform, he now has an even more cogent case for everything being on the table.

The dangers of driving with the Treasurer

It's a tough job: Treasurer Scott Morrison.

Michael Gordon   Scott Morrison overlooked one detail this week when he likened the task of returning the budget to surplus to hopping in the family car and heading off for a summer holiday with the family.

Strength from stress: Turnbull’s defining belief

Peter Hartcher dinkus

Peter Hartcher   The Prime Minister’s embrace of risk is more than rhetoric – it has roots in deeply personal experience.

Morrison's slow and steady journey

Treasurer Scott Morrison and Finance Minister Mathias Cormann in Perth to deliver the mid-year economic and fiscal outlook.

Peter Martin   The new Treasurer is facing several headwinds that threaten the economy in the short and long term.

The political glory years are fresh as ever

Alan Ramsey

Alan Ramsey   Paul Keating could well have woken with a smile today and Bob Hawke with a snarl.  

Turnbull will resist early poll temptation

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull

Mark Kenny   An early election would carry the risk of being perceived by voters as opportunistic and a breach of faith.

Back-to-basics approach for innovation

Ben Roediger dinkus

Ben Roediger   Australian scientists and engineers are among the most inventive in the world. Any initiative that enables their ideas to be tested in the market should be lauded for the forward-thinking policy it is.

Comments 8

Turnbull's dilemma: how to get states on board

Peter Reith

Peter Reith   Tax reform is vital medicine for  the Australian economy, but it takes a lot of time to put together a pill that people will be willing to swallow.

Dose of compassion needed

Michael Gordon

Michael Gordon   Tony Abbott is gone, but the former prime minister's "nope, nope, nope" mindset when it comes to border protection is still pervasive.

Ugly truth about the budget is what we need

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull Treasurer Scott Morrison have decided against an immediate ban in borrowing from SMSFs for investment in property, despite views from eminent economist Saul Eslake that it could lead to something similar to the US subprime crisis.

Peter Martin   Expect the unvarnished truth in the mid-year update, because there's little point in lying.

Common sense prevails, but only just

Michael Gordon

Michael Gordon    Malcolm Turnbull's authority is in tact and Ian Macfarlane's credibility is in tatters after the former resources minister's bizarre and brazen bid to force his way back into cabinet came a cropper.

Politics of exclusion must be rejected

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Tim Dick   The choice between the politics of the old and that of the new is not a choice only faced by Australia. It’s faced by the US, by Britain, by any developed country with a significant migrant population – almost all of them.

Treaty would build better foundation

George Williams dinkus

George Williams   Australia does not recognise the sovereignty of its first nations by way of a treaty, and the effects have been devastating.

Comments 6

Bishop, Abbott, Trump and politics of delusion

Illustration: Matt Davidson.

Adam Gartrell   Politicians aren't just good at lying to us – they're good at lying to themselves too.

The mad monk and the coming of the raptor

Annabel Crabb dinkus

Annabel Crabb   The end of the year, when everyone is tired and snippy, is always a bit prone to farce of one kind or another.

Macfarlane defection will end in tears

Michael Gordon

Michael Gordon    The history of political defections in Australia is replete with unhappy endings.

Special features

Best political cartoons of 2015

We bring you the best political cartoons from 2015, care of Fairfax's award winning cartoonists.

Highs and lows of the year in politics

Our awards for the people in politics who made 2015 a memorable year.

Malcolm Turnbull's first 100 days as PM

ANALYSIS Big problems persist. Short of an election, Malcolm Turnbull's authority struggles to escape the gravity of its creation.

Dose of compassion needed

Michael Gordon Tony Abbott is gone, but the former prime minister's "nope, nope, nope" mindset when it comes to border protection is still pervasive.

Tricky politics of Sunday penalty rates

Generally speaking, the loudest advocates of scrapping Sunday penalty rates don't get them and don't need them. This is no great revelation, but motive and perception are crucial to the trajectory of this important debate.

'Don't worry' budget built on bracket creep

"Bracket creep" will help rein in the budget deficit for a government unwilling to raise taxes

The best of Canberra 2015

Our best pictures of the federal political year for 2015.

Federal politics 2015: End of year mega quiz

Another year, another prime minister ousted. 2015 was chock-full of political action. Were you paying attention?

Another problem lands on PM's tax reform table

Michael Gordon If the Prime Minister wants an honest debate about tax reform, he now has an even more cogent case for everything being on the table.

Someone's playing politics. It isn't ASIO

David Wroe The war within the Coalition on national security has gone nuclear.

Cuts to hit the most needy, doctors warn

Patients will be out of pocket by up to $62 or more per test for procedures such as X-rays, ultrasounds, CT scans and MRIs, according to a doctors' group.

Morrison thinks we can't handle the full truth, yet

Every year the surplus moves a year further away. It's like driving towards an unreachable horizon. 

ABC's preferred new boss 'not afraid of failure'

Matthew Knott At a conference last year, Google executive Michelle Guthrie extolled the virtue of eating your own dog food.

Budget update fails to map out road to surplus

There is nothing in the mid-year budget update to be alarmed about, but nor does it suggest Malcolm Turnbull will do any better than his predecessors at getting the budget back to surplus.

Macfarlane in political wilderness

Mark Kenny As far as political gambles go, this was a big one, and it went seriously wrong.

John Bannon: a quiet giant of politics

Mark Kenny Even now when I'm grinding out the kilometres in Canberra, I often rely on something John Bannon once confided about distance training. He said when your body wants to stop, you can always go a bit further, and you will be glad you made that choice.

Turnbull's tax reform striptease has started

It's time to start ruling out some of the options even if business doesn't like it.