Federal Politics

Senator Pauline Hanson is not as happy as she appears on her Christmas poster.

Diversity in One Nation, where views collide

One Nation is a very democratic party. So democratic, indeed, that its parliamentarians apparently don't discuss with each other what the party's stance might be on legislation, and then publicly disagree..

The ripples of Donald Trump's victory are challenging long-established norms of western politics.

We've fallen from the audacity of hope to the audacity of grope

How many votes do you reckon Kevin Rudd lost when it was revealed he had gone into a seedy New York strip club known as Scores in a drunken manhattan bar crawl? Or what about Donald J Trump? How many do you imagine he lost from the notorious bus tape where he was recorded boasting of preying on andĀ sexually assaulting women?

'As an exemplar of calm reason and restraint, Peter Dutton is about as convincing as Tony Abbott would be leading ...

When words fail

Peter Dutton found himself in unfamiliar territory this week, cast as the victim of the "tricky language" of Bill Shorten.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull speaking at the NSW Liberal Party State Council meeting in October.

Slowly but unsurely, Turnbull picks his way forward

A handful of wins towards the end of the year have rescuedĀ the Turnbull government from the near certainty of a difficult summer, but progress must be maintained if the government is to recover its balance and make something of 2017.

Former prime ministers Bob Hawke, Paul Keating and Julia Gillard.

Keating not the architect of reform

A close examination shows that Keating was not primarily responsible for any of the major reforms that contributed to Australia's lauded economic growth.