Federal Politics

David Kalisch says the Bureau does not have the resources to undertake all the activities that falls within ins ...

ABS prepares to cut critical surveys

A decade ago in the leadup to the global financial crisis the Bureau of Statistics dimmed the lights. It suspended its job vacancies survey and slashed its employment survey by a quarter.

Former Defence Minister John Moore is one of four former MPs who launched a High Court bid for better taxpayer-funded ...

Old MPs try to pull the other one

If you got 10 free flights a year, an annual pension of somewhere between $80,000 and $120,000, plus large bonuses if you happened to be have been anything but a bog-standard backbencher, you'd reckon you'd take your good fortune to a sun-kissed beach somewhere and giggle crazily as you waddled in your board shorts all the way to the nearest ATM and back.

Moving on: Holden engineers are being offered new opportunities abroad, as well as outside the company.

Goodbye to a country that once built cars

To my mates and me, the acridĀ fumes fromĀ the automotive paint and subsequent baking booths merely provided enough cover for our most daring stunt yet ā€“Ā smoking cigarettes right under the nose of one of our most reviled and authoritarian teachers.

The collapse of transmission lines led to the shutdown of SA's entire power network.

What's really going wrong with electricity?

The extreme weather conditions and 80,000 lightning strikes that thrust South Australia into darkness last week was extraordinary enough; the disingenuous debate it sparked about Australia's changing energy system has been something else again.

The Prime Minister's annual inquiry into the banks will itself come under scrutiny.

Pollies on trial as much as bankers

Fabulously remunerated bank executives no doubt feel they are on publicĀ trial as they front theĀ first of Malcolm Turnbull's new annual hearings before the House of Representatives Economics Committee from Tuesday.