Federal Politics

Minister for Defence Senator Marise Payne holds a press conference in Sydney after Indonesia ceased all military ...

Payne moves to restore trust, not a moment too soon

"The worst we can do is to take this partnership for granted," Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono declared more than six years ago, when he became the first Indonesian president to address Australia's parliament in 2010.

This cartoon by David Pope published on the front page of the Turkish national daily paper Cumhuriyet comments on the ...

David Pope and the cartoons that defined 2016

From the death of David Bowie to the rise of Donald Trump to whatever you call what Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull spent the year doing, here's how Fairfax Media cartoonist David Pope captured some of the key events and issues of 2016.

Illustration John Shakespeare

A right turn-off: the year in politics

The election campaign, which culminated in the nation reluctantly re-instating Malcolm Turnbull as Prime Minister, was loudly decried as too long and too boring.

David Morrison, 2016's Australian of the Year choice, copped criticism from some quarters for being too activist.

Who represents us matters more than ever

Who we are as a nation and having representatives who are one of us are closely related ideas. From now until Australia Day there will be increased reflection on these questions.

Treasurer Scott Morrison and Finance Minister Senator Mathias Cormann released the MYEFO on Monday.

Why I'm sorry our credit rating wasn't downgraded this week

There is no good reason any sovereign Australian government – federal or state – should allow a few American for-profit businesses to dictate how much it should or shouldn't borrow (nor engage in hugely expensive ways of disguising the true extent of its liabilities).

A worried looking Malcolm Turnbull may have a more furrowed brow after MYEFO is released on Monday

Turnbull's chance for a fresh start

Malcolm Turnbull will play the lead role in his own re-make of Mission Impossible in 2017, complete with a cast of villains and traitors and no end of unpredictable subplots.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Opposition Leader Bill Shorten are both trying to come to grips with the fact that ...

How to be an outsider when you're already an insider

When people switch on the television news, or open a newspaper or website, invariably the story of the day in federal politics is reported as one politician besting the other, or putting the other in his or her place.