Federal Politics

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull during a press conference at Parliament House in Canberra on Tuesday 13 September 2016. ...

Report card: The first year of the Turnbull government

Wednesday marks the first year of the Turnbulll government. How has Malcolm Turnbull's team fared in key areas such as the economy, education, health, defence and immigration? Fairfax Media's reporters mark the government's successes and failures.

Port in a storm: Adam Giles, the former chief minister of Northern Territory toasts Ye Cheng, chairman of Shandong ...

'In time, this world will be China's'

In Australia, China's short-term game is to buy the government's silence on the South China Sea, making it clear there would be ramifications if it were to follow the US lead and send warships on freedom of navigation missions in the disputed waters.

Senator Sam Dastyari announces his resignation from the opposition frontbench.

Inside story: Dastyari knew on Tuesday he had to go

He had just given a train-wreck press conference. It was supposed to cauterise the week's worth of questions journalists had saved up for the uncharacteristically media-shy frontbencher but his failure to answer the key question about why he sent his personal bill to a Chinese donor to pay remained unaddressed.

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Turnbull following in Cameron's footsteps

The recently departed British Conservative prime minister, David Cameron, has left an ambiguous legacy, and one that Australia's Malcolm Turnbull might be well advised to contemplate. 

Labor senator Sam Dastyari says the donation has been declared.

The rules stink - we all know it

The public is crying out for change and Malcolm Turnbull has nothing to lose by seizing the initiative on donations reform.

The Turnbull Government's response this week to win over some of its backbenchers was to announce another inquiry.

Inside the Labor ambush

The plot was hatched under their noses, but they didn't see it coming. Not the ministers, who left the Parliament in blissful ignorance. Not the MPs, who did the same, or the party whips whose task is to instil discipline. And not the Prime Minister or his chief tactician, Christopher Pyne.