Federal Politics

US President-elect Donald Trump visits US President Barack Obama in the Oval Office of the White House last week.

Trump backer says US refugee swap deal is 'dead on arrival'

Canberra's get-out-of-jail card on the future of the hundreds of Australia-bound refugees on Nauru and Manus Island may have a very short shelf-life, with the head of a prominent US anti-immigration think tank warning: "this is the kind of thing the Trump administration will nix on Day 1."

Turnbull defends Dutton and Morrison against 'vicious attacks'

Immigration Minister Peter Dutton and Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull announce the deal.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has used the breakthrough refugee resettlement deal with the United States as an opportunity to heap praise on Immigration Minister Peter Dutton and his predecessor in the portfolio, Treasurer Scott Morrison, whom he says have been unfairly maligned.

Trans-Pacific Partnership dead, before Trump even takes office

An anti-TPP protest last year in Atlanta, Georgia

Eight years in the making, the giant Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal between Australia, the US and ten other regional powers is as good as dead after the Obama administration walked away from its plan to put it before the "lame duck" of Congress ahead of Donald Trump's inauguration as president.

Everything you need to know about the US refugee resettlement deal

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull announces a resettlement option for refugees to the United States of America with Peter ...

In a one-off deal, the United States has agreed to take resettlement referrals for refugees residing at the Nauru and Manus Island offshore detention facilities. The opportunity is only available to those who have already arrived and will not be offered to people who do not attain refugee status or come in future.

Forget 18C, this is the real threat to free speech

Attorney-General George Brandis has argued that people should be able to get a court to stop a story being published if ...

Some of the biggest alleged free speech champions on the right of Australian politics have used the defamation law to protect their own reputations even though they are trying to remove the "insult and offend" protection in the Racial Discrimination Act.

We can do business, PM says after call to Trump

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has talked up Donald Trump as a deal-making businessman who is more pragmatist than ideologue as Canberra repositions for the President-elect's still unpredictable administration.