It has not been a terrific week for Brandis QC. But what's new?
Notable for their woeful behaviour were Tweedledum and Tweedledee of conservative boorishness, Ian Macdonald and Barry O'Sullivan.
Mark Kenny is Fairfax Media's chief political correspondent. A director of the National Press Club, he regularly appears on the ABC's Insiders, Sky News Agenda, and Ten's Meet the Press. He has reported from Canberra under three prime ministers and several opposition leaders.
Notable for their woeful behaviour were Tweedledum and Tweedledee of conservative boorishness, Ian Macdonald and Barry O'Sullivan.
How must Malcolm Turnbull feel? Every time he looks like getting any clear air, some slick operator in his team finds new ways to highlight incompetence.
In a bizarre circumstance where major party leaders all back same-sex marriage, the nation's political machinery cannot deliver.
Conservative credibility has been spent on a circus of partisan amateurism authored by people who not only should have known better but actually did.
To my mates and me, the acrid fumes from the automotive paint and subsequent baking booths merely provided enough cover for our most daring stunt yet – smoking cigarettes right under the nose of one of our most reviled and authoritarian teachers.
A call to sell one of Australia's most famous artworks in order to pay down debt is not merely financially stupid, it is artistically vapid.
The cabinet post of Attorney-General usually sits above the fray. Sober. Reasoned. Deliberately low profile. Not under this AG.
Federal Environment and Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg believes a meeting of the COAG energy council in Canberra on Thursday "couldn't come at a more important time" just one week after South Australia experienced a statewide blackout triggering a federal political war in its aftermath.
Fabulously remunerated bank executives no doubt feel they are on public trial as they front the first of Malcolm Turnbull's new annual hearings before the House of Representatives Economics Committee from Tuesday.
Voters are unconvinced by Malcolm Turnbull's move to drag bank executives before a parliamentary committee beginning this week, suggesting many regard it as an attempt to forestall a full royal commission, according to a new survey of community attitudes.
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