ACT cbinet make-up
Labor and the Greens have a deal. A deal what would seem to offer certain advantages.
Labor and the Greens have a deal. A deal what would seem to offer certain advantages.
I can only wish that I was one of those unemployed from the car manufacturing or coal power industries.
Opposition Leader Bill Shorten says he has to see the legislation.
The article by Julie Bishop and Bert Koenders states the two nations "work side by side in the UN".
There is no mention of Andrew Barr signing a light rail contract this term.
I am dismayed by the government's proposed legislation in which no asylum seekers, even those found to be refugees, arriving by boat since July 2013 can ever be resettled in Australia.
It is madness to contemplate spending more millions on another attempt to 'get' David Eastman.
Now we can see the real social re-engineering consequences of the ACT government's residential rates increases.
Bill Deane (Letters, October 25) does himself no favours by name-calling the staff of the Human Rights Commission.
Alistair Coe seems to think the Canberra Liberals' 15 years in the political wilderness is due to campaigning failures, rather than policies.
What was the justification for George Brandis' directive to Solicitor-General?
I suggest most pet owners are animal lovers. If their animals had received poor treatment they would be the first to complain about Dr Jan Spate.
Acting president of the ACT Vet Board, Dr Steven Roberts, suggests Dr Jan Spate's former clients are outraged at her losing registration for selfish reasons; because Dr Spate didn't charge much (Letters, October 23).
The front-page story "Pressure from all sides" (October 24) instilled little sympathy in me. What is new about a "sandwich generation"?
What about a tax on snacks full of salt and sugar?
May I remind everyone that if animals didn't have utility, they would have been wiped out long ago.
Local members of Amnesty International appreciate the CT editorial from October 20.
So David Lyonhjelm wants softer gun controls.
One matter the Canberra Liberals might care to ponder in their soul-searching is the party's failure to challenge Labor's assertion that it was "progressive".
I request that our new government reconsider its proposed residential intrusion of the West Basin foreshore.
ACTPLA's Neighbourhood Plan for Forrest promised to respect "its rich garden suburb legacy and its inner south location". Sadly that has not happened.
After watching the ABC Four Corners program about refugees on Nauru, I was ashamed to be Australian.
With no single commentator willing or able to predict an election outcome, Saturday was an evening of surprises for all.
It is now almost impossible to buy property without two incomes.
There is something wrong with our prevailing attitude to animals.
It appears Chief Minister Andrew Barr's "signature policy for urban renewal" – not applying tax cuts for developers who pick up windfall gains – does not apply to the developers of the Brumbies site.
One has to wonder at the true nature of Andrew Barr's urban aesthetic vision.
I am saddened and sickened by the number of people who think it's OK to drive over a live and injured animal.
Drawing a link with the Gold Coast project is flawed, readers say.
I visited Butters Bridge across the Molonglo River last weekend to see the much publicised views.