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.
Your personally curated news with six things you need to know before you get going.
Your personally curated news with six things you need to know before you get going.
If Treasury wants to start acting more like economists than accountants, a good place to start would be to urge its political masters to seize on the opportunity presented by the school funding "compact" proposed by the Grattan Institute.
It is an office that carries more than the usual political risk faced by ministers.
Given his wild campaign statements, anything is possible when it comes to how Trump may change America's foreign policy
The government has ignored the national interest in favour of simply doing 'something' by year's end.
Economic racism against Indigenous Australians hasn't yet been consigned to history.
It was the year a freshly recycled Liberal leader, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, took his Coalition to an election and suffered a near fatal gutser. Herewith are some of the awards for achievements – both above and mostly below the call of political duty in 2016.
Men will have to step into traditionally female roles and claim them.
Most weekends I flee the big city and drive for hours through country districts, streaming through forests, across wide plains and alongside coastal scrub, soothing my way back to where I came from long ago.
It is an unfortunate reality that the march of security measures tends to move in one direction only.
Standing inside the hallowed walls of Australia's Parliament, one of the last action heroes, learnt something.
The Coalition's treatment of Gillian Triggs was unjustified, though she isn't blameless.
As a protest, it was pretty lame, if loud and, for the demonstrators, satisfyingly disruptive.
Australia is giving away 85.5 million tonnes of LNG a year for free. Well, to be sold by fossil fuel companies to Japan, Korea and China.
This shambles was perfectly predictable and it makes you wonder about the quality of smarts in the government.
It was a rare glimpse of the huge forces within the black hole of the current Senate, and a tutorial in the revived art of governing for results by Malcolm Turnbull.
Forget the quaint view that the Senate is a retirement home for fogeys.
The responsibility for integrity assurance now moves to the Prime Minister.
Your personally curated news with six things you need to know before you get going.
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..
A plague on both your houses, Labor and Liberal, is the evidence of today's Farirfax Ipsos poll for the two main parties. Both have suffered a slump in their primary vote.
Your personally curated news with six things you need to know before you get going.
Forget post-truth. This is the era of post-hope, where the instinct of voters is to give the finger to an established order.
There has perhaps never been a more obvious, more protracted and more destructive public policy failure in the history of democracy than the war on drugs.
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 and sexually assaulting women?
If the prime minister and his government are to properly revive their fortunes in 2017 they need to become a whole lot better.
If he did what has been alleged, he ought to go.
Peter Dutton found himself in unfamiliar territory this week, cast as the victim of the "tricky language" of Bill Shorten.
Voters now understand that the 'real' Turnbull will never emerge.
The hurly-burly of the 2016 election campaign, as seen through the eyes of Fairfax reporters and photographers.
Save articles for later.
Subscribe for unlimited access to news. Login to save articles.
Return to the homepage by clicking on the site logo.