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.
What if the right to an income was as basic as the right to vote?
If mainstream parties fail to provide 'fairness', socially destructive opportunists will step in.
The initial shock of Donald Trump's election win has already given way to a second-wave effect in Australia, with policymakers adjusting their stances, toughening their rhetoric, playing to prejudices once discredited.
"Australia has been making mistakes about the sort of people we've been letting in for quite a while now," Peter Dutton mused.
That whining noise in the background this week was mostly from politicians and businessmen trying to pretend that they have "got" the message from the election of Donald Trump as US President, and about what it means for Australians whom they have pissed-off.
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Labor frontbencher Anthony Albanese says the opposition must lift its primary vote and accept that it did not win the last election.
It is tempting to conclude that Bill Shorten watched the blue-collar backlash in the US last week and panicked, deciding to condemn foreign workers taking up Australian jobs.
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Quietly, Malcolm Turnbull began working on a solution to the intractable problems of asylum seekers, people smuggling, and indefinite detention, as a first priority of his new leadership.
Of the 133 cases across Defence that the taskforce referred to police, just one saw the inside of a courtroom and no conviction was recorded.
That unelectable weakling, Bill Shorten, has demonstrated to devastating effect that the combination of party unity and focus can take you very close to the top in politics.
The attacks against the Human Rights Commissioner are ill-informed.
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Australian populist-conservatives are suddenly enlivened, preaching with the certainty of someone who's just been tipped off about the second coming.
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President Donald Trump will declare economic war on our biggest customer, wipe unprecedented amounts off global stock markets, usher in extraordinary financial instability, and risk turning the the world's biggest economy into a basket case by pushing its national debt past 100 per cent of GDP.
Millions of Americans have said we want our country back and we couldn't care less about your global values.
This is a sad and pathetic day. A man so thick he believes he can play global politics with the likes of Vladimir Putin and skip free is plain dangerous.
From: Office of the Prime Minister
Malcolm Turnbull is governing based on Tony Abbott's agenda. Here's the evidence.
Of all the strange things about the US election - and strange barely begins to describe the current madness - the idea of voting on a Tuesday remains distinctly odd.
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There was a fair bit of weird rocket science around Parliament on Monday, and not all of it had to do with a visit by the second man to walk on the moon, Buzz Aldrin.
Malcolm Roberts seized his moment in the spotlight like a frenzied evangelical preacher at an exorcism/
Conservative weighting given to three vexatious racial discrimination cases tells you everything you need to know about the real motives behind much of the moral jaw-boning about Section 18C.
Rational debate, with its unspectacular promise of sensible compromise, is now discredited or rendered politically unfeasible
Dutton and Malcolm Turnbull have been so determined to wedge Labor by daring Bill Shorten to embrace this idea or be cast as a soft touch, just like all of his predecessors.
There's another massive deal you've never heard of.
Transition pain with the rollout of the national broadband network is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to accepting change.
The hurly-burly of the 2016 election campaign, as seen through the eyes of Fairfax reporters and photographers.