تمت مشاركة ‏‎‎live video‎‎‏ ‏‎The Sydney Morning Herald‎‏ من قبل ‏‎Australian Politics - Fairfax‎‏.
‏25,302‏ مشاهدة
تم بث فيديو مباشر من ‏‎The Sydney Morning Herald‎‏.

Join Latika M Bourke from London as she interviews Shadow Treasurer Chris Bowen in Sydney in Australia's first dual Facebook Live.

تمت مشاركة ‏صورة‏ ‏‎The Sydney Morning Herald‎‏ من قبل ‏‎Australian Politics - Fairfax‎‏.
صورة ‏‎The Sydney Morning Herald‎‏.
The Sydney Morning Herald

Got a question for shadow treasurer Chris Bowen? Leave it in the comments below and Latika M Bourke might ask it on your behalf during tonight's Facebook Live interview on this page from 8pm.

"I love meeting people, I get hugged and I'm very comfortable hugging back. It's not something I've contrived."

Spend a morning on the hustings with Julie Bishop and it is quickly apparent why she's the minister in hottest demand among Liberal candidates.  
theage.com.au

Over homemade passata and a glass of red with Annabel Crabb, the Prime Minister says many of his critics just "don't get it".

Over passata and a glass of red, Malcolm Turnbull expands on his mistakes and the necessity of compromise.
smh.com.au

The concept was simple, but the execution was delicate.
The idea was to take portraits of politicians that revealed their true feelings, to capture split seconds of real, reactive emotion before the mask came down and the politician-subject put on a face for the camera.

Malcolm Turnbull has attempted to clear up growing confusion about a national plebiscite on same-sex marriage by saying he wants a vote held by the end of the year and expects it to be compulsory.
But Mr Turnbull appeared to open up a new front of uncertainty by saying for the first time that he wants the plebiscite process to be modelled on a referendum vote.

Voters in Malcolm Turnbull's electorate have one of the lowest death rates in Australia, reveals a new analysis mapping deaths across the political divide.

Turnbull, Shorten and Barnaby: whose voters live longest?
smh.com.au

Is Malcolm Turnbull's deal of a same-sex marriage plebiscite unravelling?

When Tony Abbott suddenly declared the push for marriage equality to be "an important issue" last year - breaking with the political right's belittling of it as merely the boutique pre-occupation of the inner-city "luvvies" - it was tempting to imagine the Coalition had unde...
smh.com.au

Cartoon of the Day: David Pope with stability and government. More political cartoons here http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/cartoons

صورة ‏‎Australian Politics - Fairfax‎‏.

Two of Malcolm Turnbull's most senior ministers have refused to say how they would vote in Parliament if the government's plebiscite on same-sex marriage is passed.

Treasurer Scott Morrison refused six times to say how he would vote in Parliament on Tuesday night, while Foreign Minister and deputy Liberal leader Julie Bishop said the question was "hypothetical".
theage.com.au

A small ABC radio station received an unusual phone call from the Prime Minister on Tuesday morning

Regional independent Rob Oakeshott could be on the verge of a dramatic return to Parliament.
theage.com.au

A split has emerged in the Coalition over how MPs would vote in the wake of a successful plebiscite on same-sex marriage, with several intending to abstain or vote in line with their electorate rather than the nation.

A split has emerged in the Coalition over how MPs would vote in the wake of a successful gay marriage plebiscite.
smh.com.au

Cartoon of the Day: Alan Moir with Battle of the Porkies. More political cartoons here http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/cartoons

صورة ‏‎Australian Politics - Fairfax‎‏.

Most families using childcare would be better off over the next two years under Labor's policies, a new independent analysis has found.

The detailed modelling, by the Australian National University's Centre for Social Research and Methods, finds lower income families and those on very high incomes would be better off under Labor.
smh.com.au

The number of apprentices across Australia has plunged since the Coalition took office, government figures show, with some of the steepest falls occurring in high-unemployment marginal seats still up for grabs at Saturday's election.

Labor is expected to seize on the documents to call into question Malcolm Turnbull's commitment to jobs and growth.
smh.com.au

Tonight, Peta Credlin
1) Predicted the legislation to allow a plebiscite could fail to pass Parliament
2) Said that would mean MPs would have to vote
3) Warned that could trigger a Coalition war
4) Said that war would rival the 2009 dispute that brought down Malcolm Turnbull's leadership

Bill Shorten remains close but his chances of snaring an unlikely against-the-odds victory appear to be fading, with the major issues gaining attention in the final days of the campaign playing more to Malcolm Turnbull's advantage.
One of Australia's most experienced and respected pollsters, has combined the 11 major polls over June to create a survey group of some 19,500 electors to find the Coalition is ahead on a 50.3-49.7 two party preferred basis, after preferences.
That represents a swing away from the government of 3.2 per cent since 2013 - an insufficient swing to give Labor the seats needed to form a majority.

Former Liberal Party darling Jackie Kelly is trying to derail the party's chances in the bellwether Sydney seat of Lindsay.
The skirmish highlights the continued fallout from the deposition of former prime minister Tony Abbott.

Rancour in the fight for New England has plumbed new depths after Tony Windsor claimed a Nationals television ad implies he cheated on his wife.
Mr Windsor demanded the withdrawal of the "offensive gutter ad" which he said left his wife Lyn "deeply upset".
He then appeared to accuse Nationals incumbent, Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce, and his campaign chairman, James Treloar, of their own philandering.

It was the single most damaging attack on Bill Shorten during the entire campaign, and it was delivered by Julie Bishop.

There's no danger of Julie Bishop changing colours. Nor it seems, of her seeking to move vertically (in either direction) any time soon.
smh.com.au