David Pope

7:20 PM   Cartoons from The Canberra Times editorial artist.

Latest commentary and opinion

Beware, the states are about to hike up taxes

Peter Martin dinkus

Peter Martin 12:00 AM   Now that a GST rise is off the table, expect state governments to do the tax reform that the Federal Government won’t.

Madonna King: Graduating with distinctions

Would you be happier for your child to have a lower OP score but have emotional resilience in spades, work well in teams ...

Madonna King 9:48 PM   Why are we steadfastly sticking to a system, whether it's the OP score or the 2018 ATAR plan, which acknowledges nothing other than a student's academic test scores?

Chance to reap marijuana rewards lost

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The Canberra Times 12:15 AM    

A land tax would reduce NSW inequality

A tax on land would be impossible to avoid and would redistribute wealth to the less well-off.

Tim Ayres 9:00 PM   One of the biggest questions facing New South Wales and especially our state government is how to respond to the rise of inequality.

View from the Street: Greg Hunt, bestest minister in the whole world!

His face is saying what we're all thinking.

Andrew P Street 6:56 PM   And how's that whole Closing the Gap thing going, would you say? Your news of the day, reduced to a snarky rant.

Regeneration on the cards for Turnbull's mob

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Alex Malley 6:47 PM   With the loss of Warren Truss and Andrew Robb, the Turnbull Cabinet is undergoing more of a regeneration than a reshuffle.

Letters to the Editor

Clean energy feasible

Canberra Times Letters thumbnail

6:34 PM   Don Aitkin's article about the ACT government's renewable electricity program lacks analysis.

Council elections: Need for honest growth debate in 2016

If the cranes over Newstead are anything to go by, there's no slowing down to growth in Brisbane.

Chris Mountford 5:40 PM   You may have noticed the city's letterboxes, airwaves, train stations and social media feeds are becoming saturated with campaign messages for March's council elections.

Australian overseas aid seen to be less effective

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop and newly-appointed Minister for International Development and the Pacific Steven Ciobo ...

Terence Wood, Camilla Burkot and Stephen Howes 11:45 PM   The government needs to come up with a new aid Transparency Charter and be accountable to its standards.

Would GST hike have saved Tony?

John Warhurst

John Warhurst 11:45 PM   The conventional wisdom is that leaders in strong positions can take on risky reforms, but big issues can also help those in tight corners.

The new Big Short: China may soon rock the global financial system

Paul Sheehan.

Paul Sheehan 3:50 PM   The Big Short is a sensational movie about rotten banks, but an even bigger story about banking may be unfolding in China.

Comments 8

Sky rail more an eye opener than an eyesore

Station at Murrumbeena, Sky Rail Murrumbeena. Artist's impression.

Julie Szego 12:00 AM   Protesters are selfishly moaning about a project that could be good for Melbourne.

Australia must commit to closing the nutrition gap

Stephen Simpson

Stephen Simpson 2:44 PM   The Closing the Gap health strategy neglects food and diet, despite the benefits of improving Indigenous communities' food supplies.

Comments 21

The breathtaking irony of Ruddock's UN human rights appointment

Pope Francis signs a cricket bat he received from Cardinal George Pell at the Vatican. Pell's dicky heart prevents him ...

Elizabeth Farrelly 9:00 PM   I've heard of being kicked upstairs but this is ridiculous. I know people get promoted to their point of incompetence, but the UN? The Vatican? These are not incompetence-friendly situations.

My dad killed himself when I was 13. He hid his depression, I won't hide mine

Amy Marlow and her dad, Doug McDowell.

Amy Marlow 11:18 AM   I’m not ashamed of his life or his mental illness or his suicide. The burden of silence ends with me.

Comments 6

Detoxing from a smartphone addiction

cr: Getty Images
GW - march 28, upfront / now and then

Caucasian woman using cell phone in bed

Emily Sohn 11:08 AM   On the first days without the internet, I feel twitchy, unsettled and panicky. Then a feeling a contentment washes over, but it never lasts.

Comments 1

In the Herald: 11 February 1964

In the Herald dinkus

A collision between two Australian warships off the south coast of New South Wales resulted in one sinking, the Herald reported on this day in 1964.

Save school kids from radical views on sexuality

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Kevin Donnelly 12:00 AM   Under the guise of anti-bullying, the Safe Schools Coalition is promoting a radical view of gender and sexuality.

Towers not needed to build density

Paris has density without the need for 60-storey towers.

Benjamin Driver   We should congratulate the Herald for promoting expanded and new public transport projects for Sydney, but at the same time be politely skeptical about the details surrounding some of these proposals.

Comments 17

Best ad for Australia is its people

Tim Schildberger

Tim Schildberger   It's time we shook off whatever identity crisis we've battled these last couple of decades, and embrace our slightly unsophisticated, but charming personality.

Investigative journalists are finding innovative ways to expose secrets and lies

Jonathan Holmes

Jonathan Holmes   Most of the fourth estate lacks the time and money needed to prise open the secret doors that the powerful keep locked.

Comments 2

Letters to the Editor

Trams cost more to run

Canberra Times Letters thumbnail

It is necessary to correct the assertions by Kevin Cox (Letters, February 9).

Fifty years of safety from sharks must not be ignored in Queensland

Sharks have been separated from humans for 50 years in Queensland.

Bill O'Chee   If there is one subject sure to attract discussion at surf lifesaving clubs, it's sharks, especially on our most popular beaches. 

In the Herald: February 10, 1979

In the Herald dinkus

The Don and his Invincibles team mates are back in the spotlight.

Let Aboriginal people take control of their destiny

Illustration: John Spooner

Ben Stephens and Matthew Tyler   Australia will move forward when it cedes power to Indigenous people and demands accountability.

Comments 25

Australian schools are entrenching division and inequality

Parents choose to pay school fees for the more than one-third of Australian children who are in non-government schools.

Rizina Yadav and Sam Wolfe   The question of "public versus private" education is a distraction in Australia, diverting us from a far more substantive task: what can we do to ensure schools serve all students better?

Comments 12

And the secret ingredient is ...

Alan Stokes.

Alan Stokes   Rissoles. A mixture of ingredients that are wonderful individually in their own right yet miraculously transform into something special when combined. Sound familiar?

Parties need money, business supplies it

Ross Gittins

Ross Gittins   According to the Labor Party's rising star, Senator Sam Dastyari, 10 big companies control our political process. You don't need to look far to find evidence of the power wielded by "the big end of town".

Comments 111

CSIRO a chance for PM to lead on climate

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The Canberra Times   Malcolm Turnbull should give the research organisation with a little more room to breathe.

Here's how to change the Senate voting system

There have been concerns about the ballooning size of the ballot paper – for example, the 2013 Victorian Senate ballot ...

William Bourke   Simple, but also fair and democratic – a solution to the Senate voting question

View from the Street: Will Malc lose three ministers in two months?

Say what you will about Human Services Minister Stuart Robert, leaving Parliament on Tuesday. Possibly in an act of ...

Andrew P Street   And the government continues its weird vendetta against Gillian Triggs. Your news of the day, reduced to a snarky rant.

Racial profiling is not quite what you think

People pass through security at Canberra Airport. 


27 October 2015
Photo: Rohan Thomson
The Canberra Times

John Coyne and Anthony Bergin   Our border agencies examine behaviour and characteristics to create profiles of high-risk travellers. And this is as it should be.

Comments 1

Elizabeth Quay is fabulous . . . but hotter than Death Valley

Bone dry.The water park at Elizabeth Quay on Friday.

Ray Sparvell   I made my first trip to Elizabeth Quay on Friday and I have to say it is magnificent and destined to become an iconic WA attraction.

Comments 51

Could compassion in politics be making a comeback?

Daniel Andrews' action should not amaze. It shouldn't be extraordinary, but it is.

Daniel Andrews' offer to accept refugees due to be returned to Nauru has touched a nerve.

Women need the right words to seek help for conditions 'down there'

Girls are socialised early and told normal functions of the female body must be spoken of, if at all, in strictest ...

Maggie Kirkman and Jane Fisher   There are endless euphemisms for women's conditions and body parts. If you can't name a body part, how can you seek medical help if something appears to be wrong with it?

Comments 37

In the Herald: February 9, 1927

In the Herald dinkus

Lyn Maccallum   John Archibald McKillip appealed against the Commissioner of Police not to grant him a driver's licence on the ground of deafness, the Herald reported on this day in 1927.

CSIRO cuts bring Australia global fame for choosing stupid

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.

From the earliest days of the penal colony the journals of the First Fleet officers remarked upon the weird, often violent climatic changes that made survival in the antipodes such a fraught, contingent affair.

Comments 59

Do what you love: a pipe dream for most of us

Simon Castles

Stuff this modern-day slogan, unglamorous, low-paid menial work is here to stay.

Comments 35

North Korea has pushed Seoul too far

Peter Hartcher dinkus

After North Korea tested a ballistic missile on the weekend, worried nations searched for new ways to respond to an old fear - the fear that the rogue nation will one day have a nuclear bomb and a missile capable of delivering it.

Comments 34

Letters to the Editor

Light rail misstated

Canberra Times Letters thumbnail

The opponents of light rail make the false assertion that we need to choose between rail and other modes of transport.

Affirming the challenge of parenthood

Jen Vuk dinkus

How can a film that draws immediate comparisons with crimes, such as the abduction, rape and 24-year imprisonment of Elizabeth Fritzl in Austria be described as "enthralling", "life-affirming and awe-inspiring"?

Comments 6

Why I don't feel sorry for Janet Kirby

Janet Louise Kirby, who killed her daughter after losing control of her car in Merriwa, arrived at court with her head ...

She may be a heartbroken, grieving mother but I am sickened that a wave of public sympathy seems to be flooding her way, writes Karalee Katsambanis.

Comments 55

How to retrofit Sydney to build a metro

Chris Johnson dinkus

The success of the Paris, London, New York and Tokyo metro systems comes from the urban densities that provide the patronage that makes rapid transit feasible and justifiable. How can Sydney retrofit Paris or New York-like densities in locations where a metro makes sense?

Forced council mergers will see locals losing out

The council amalgamation process is promoting the belief that politics is about delivering power to the parties.

The state government, in expensive, taxpayer-funded ads, claims the local government reform process is all about better services for our communities. It has not provided sufficient evidence to support these claims.

Comments 12

The real test of tax reform is still ahead

Peter Reith

It's a good idea to encourage a public discussion about increasing the GST but it's also good that it looks like the Turnbull government will dump a GST increase.

Comments 25

Highlights

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The latest opinion pieces from Canberra Times commentator.

David Pope

The latest cartoons from The Canberra Times editorial artist.

Pat Campbell

The latest cartoons from The Canberra Times artist.