"Ignorant" Trump has his finger on the pulse
Donald Trump is raising several issues that go to the very heart of American politics in 2016. It would be a big mistake to say his growing appeal is simply due to racism and xenophobia.
Donald Trump is raising several issues that go to the very heart of American politics in 2016. It would be a big mistake to say his growing appeal is simply due to racism and xenophobia.
Celibacy breeds a culture of active dishonesty and cover ups focused around illicit sexuality. It renders church leaders uniquely susceptible to blackmail.
We might hope that merit gets someone into Parliament and onto the front bench, but it doesn't.
The re-elected Turnbull government is determined to get moving on a same-sex marriage plebiscite. The greatest challenge is to gain Parliament's support to hold the vote.
The political classes and their opinion minions are ignorant of how to connect with a disenfranchised electorate and scared because it would seem Donald Trump, Pauline Hanson and their ilk aren't.
The stand-off and final compromise to keep Kim Carr on the frontbench with the support of Bill Shorten's Right colleagues shows that Labor's structures are still broken.
"In this this election, there is only one candidate who will uphold the constitution," Newt Gingrich argues. Well, maybe not.
It's a fine line indeed between hipster cool and just drinking out of the nearest empty container.
Campaigners feel frustration as whatever happens final decision will still rest with those in parliament, writes Rodney Croome
Iceland wasn't meant to defeat England recently in the European soccer finals. After all, their coach only devotes part of his time to coaching. He otherwise practices as a dentist. And Wales wasn't meant to beat Belgium either. Their Its players and coach earn about 10 per cent of what their colleagues earn over at the defeated English team.
NSW MPs from across the political spectrum who have banded together to organise next month's Harm Minimisation Summit are to be congratulated.
Mediscare's first cousin Pharmascare has arrived. Blood sugar test strips which are essential to diabetes management are set to rise in price from $1.20 to $60 per packet.
There's an easy way for Malcolm Turnbull to deal with the problems Pauline Hanson represents: he needs to look back at how John Howard responded the first time around.
Welcome aboard everyone, and thanks for joining us on today's Big Bus Tour of Sydney's Most Over-Hyped and Over-Rated.
There are many highlights in the forthcoming SBS documentary about Pauline Hanson, quite apart from the realisation that the heroine's '90s wardrobe is now being worn by the hipsters of inner city Sydney and Melbourne.
Being father means "putting your shoulder to the wheel" of parenting. Richard Glover wonders if Jagger's shoulders will be able to bear the strain.
First there was a picture book for kids about the Bays Precinct. What could be next?
If you thought the shenanigans at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland were the weirdest thing happening in America this week, you would be wrong.
A lucky black man in the US seems like a contradiction in terms right now.
I see several of my friends who are staying in marriages because of children and are desperately unhappy as a result.
From a very young age, I have had to learn that my life and my rights are not the same as everyone else.
We need a property market that facilitates people to move to housing that best suits them. That's why I'm up to my 20th home.
To say the knives have come out for him would be wrong. Some never put them away in the first place
All the pictures of Malcolm Turnbull looking glum since Saturday night tell us a story we already instinctively knew: he fears he has miscalculated again.
Look around in Australia on the first business day after the country was supposedly rendered "ungovernable" by Saturday's election. On Monday the share market was up and so was the Australian dollar.
The election's big winners are those few who can't abide the gays being wed.
The underlying struggle was for the Liberals to build public trust in Turnbull, and for Labor to damage it.
Two international events of the last week highlight just how disappointing Australia's approach to same-sex marriage has been.
Who saw Bill Shorten being interviewed by Leigh Sales on 7.30 on Thursday evening?
On same-sex marriage, a potentially weakened Malcolm Turnbull is sitting on a powder keg.
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