When teeny-tiny political events have horrifying consequences
Unintended consequences are everywhere in politics. The rise of One Nation is one of them.
Annabel Crabb is a regular columnist, TV host and leading political commentator.
Unintended consequences are everywhere in politics. The rise of One Nation is one of them.
I lived through the great text-speak campaign of the early 2000s, and I'm not going to break now.
Five tips that will have you wielding power responsibly in no time at all.
The gossamer-thin membrane that separates real life from Celebrity Fantasy Island was rent irretrievably asunder on Tuesday.
The Senator personifies a long and dark tradition for dealing with immigrants.
One of the ancillary effects of our nation's current thing for vigorous prime ministerial crop-rotation is that the last guy to hold down the job for a full term – Mr John Winston Howard, private citizen – has smoothly assumed oracle status.
On Thursday morning, a woman whose name will mean nothing to you stepped over the threshold of Parliament House for the first time. Her arrival occasioned very little interest, aside from the slight challenge posed to Parliament's rigorous security guidelines by the fact that she carried no identification, and signed her admission form with an "X".
If the Parliament cannot take its own decision-making powers seriously, why should it be surprised when voters don't either?
The Olympics serve as a scorching quadrennial reminder of all the things most of us are not good at, like appearing publicly in Lycra, or throwing a pointy stick a really long way.
Nobody died here, to our knowledge. If you did die, please backdate your new census form accordingly.
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