Bill Shorten should meet Malcolm Turnbull halfway
Without sensible deal-making on business tax cuts, same-sex marriage and climate change, nothing much will happen in this parliament.
Without sensible deal-making on business tax cuts, same-sex marriage and climate change, nothing much will happen in this parliament.
Turning away from innovation because the Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and his government messed up the messaging would be a grave mistake.
We know businesses will soon see that female sport offers enormous potential for sponsorship.
Sydney residents know all too well the costs of the easy option, increasing urban sprawl: the loss of the Sydney basin's green lungs as farming land is resumed for dwellings, and a never-ending need for more motorways.
The Syrian crisis is so complex, the civilian suffering so great and the options beyond sending in ground troops so limited that this peace plan is worth pursuing, even if the chances of success are slight.
But risks remain, and any move to extend bottle shop opening hours could worsen domestic violence.
Some argue it has taken 12 months for the Prime Minister to do nothing much at all. While partly accurate, we note a few achievements.
The case for a national sports integrity commission to cover racing and all football codes is growing stronger by the day.
Barack Obama exiting Air Force One by the back stairs because the Chinese failed to provide the red carpet front stairs customary for a presidential visit was not the take-away image China had in mind for the recent G20 summit in Hangzhou. Indeed, Chinese officials did their best to stop the picture being taken.
Governments should be looking at big changes to tax breaks as well as increased supply to help more Sydneysiders into affordable homes.
Three-year-old William Tyrrell vanished without trace from outside his grandmother's house at Kendall, on the NSW Mid North coast two years ago on Monday. Little boy lost is a fear that has resonated deeply within the Australian psyche since the earliest days of settlement when Europeans moved into the unfamiliar bush. But in more recent times, the spectre of paedophilia involvement in such disappearances haunts those who await loved ones and those who search for them.
The Greater Western Sydney team's achievement to finish fourth in only its fifth year is remarkable.
Sydney needs a mayor who can counter excessive power in Macquarie Street.
There is speculation these Paralympics will fall short of London four years ago, when ecstatic crowds marvelled at the extraordinary feats of differently abled athletes.
Lifeline's "accidental counsellor" courses teach you the key skills you need to help prevent suicide, beyond asking R U OK?
We simply cannot trust the political class to write the rules on donations, gifts and expenses or meet community expectations. That's why we need a national integrity commission.
Opal and a deep well of data that flows from it opens a vast array of new opportunities.
The exposure of the darker side of masculine culture slowly and thankfully forced changes in Australian fatherhood.
Bill Shorten has given the Prime Minister a bloody nose by taking advantage of his shaky and dishevelled government. But there are risks for Labor too.
The best thing that can be said about the increase in NSW road fatalities is that they are coming off a low base.
The Labor senator has displayed poor judgement and reckless disregard for voters.
Premier Mike Baird is wrong when he says the Operation Spicer report "ends a very sad chapter in the history of NSW politics". The chapter is not over until voters can be sure similar rorts will not be repeated at a state or federal level.
The Prime Minister should explain to people that he plans to get things done through compromise - no matter the risk to his leadership.
The former ABC boss and NSW Education Minister Adrian Piccoli could be a formidable force to drive real change in the state's schools.
Government support is essential, but the system can also be a significant deterrent to mothers working more hours.
The problems are mounting in health, police and land grabs for a state Coalition government that can otherwise claim good economic and budget management.
Too many Australians laugh off the Territory's corruption and injustice, notwithstanding the suffering involved and the wastage of national taxpayer funds.
For more than half a decade Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce has been the public face of the airline's difficulties. To celebrate now that Qantas is flying high again would be only human.
We know better than to be surprised, yet we can still be shocked at the culture of harassment and bullying exposed within the Australian Federal Police
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