Vote counting - why so long?
The votes are cast, but counting them is no simple task. Peter Martin explains the process - and why it takes so long.
The votes are cast, but counting them is no simple task. Peter Martin explains the process - and why it takes so long.
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.
If Australia is to support the setting up of a tribunal investigating the MH 17 disaster it should be more than a political witch-hunt.
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The cabinet post of Attorney-General usually sits above the fray. Sober. Reasoned. Deliberately low profile. Not under this AG.
Great Leaping Litigants! Imagine the fees. Two Queens Counsel and a Senior Counsel locked in furious dissent.
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 RSL will hold an independent investigation of consulting fees paid to national president Rod White and three NSW colleagues while they held voluntary positions.
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Your personally curated news with six things you need to know before you get going.
As Ian Narev fronted the first annual grilling of the banks, who held the power was clear. And it wasn't the government.
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.
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It's likely that by week's end, there will be more questions on bank behaviour rather than less. And that could make for some very tricky politics.
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George Christensen agreeing with Sarah Hanson-Young. Labor defending wealthy private schools. What on earth is going on?
It's not too late to steer clear of this costly catastrophe.
Newspapers, said the Prime Minister, are a "wonderful romantic business".
The Auditor-General's report on immigration contracts reveals the dangers of pursuing dubious objectives in secret and at reckless speed.
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The shift towards 'non-ongoing' staff contracts erodes merit and encourages patronage.
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In the months since the July 2 election, Malcolm Turnbull and his ministers have relied heavily on the claim that Australia's voters handed them a mandate to hold a plebiscite on whether same-sex marriage should be legalised.
Decision-makers for Australia's diplomacy are scrambling to urgently imagine life in the Trump universe.
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Just as governments depend upon the public service, political parties depend upon their bureaucrats, party officials, campaign directors and ministerial staffers.
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A crazy idea that looks like getting up was based on the notion that government could give small business a much-needed boost by cutting their company tax.
There is blame enough for all sides in this ridiculous stand-off. Meanwhile, same-sex couples are left in limbo, altar in sight but out of reach.
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The hurly-burly of the 2016 election campaign, as seen through the eyes of Fairfax reporters and photographers.