While Malcolm whacks Bill, the menacing crocodile is waiting to strike
Turnbull grabbed the slapsticks and got busy on Shorten to show the Libs he can prevail against Labor.
Peter Hartcher is the political editor and international editor of The Sydney Morning Herald. He is a Gold Walkley award winner, a former foreign correspondent in Tokyo and Washington, and a visiting fellow at the Lowy Institute for International Policy. His latest book is The Sweet Spot: How Australia Made its Own Luck and Could Now Throw it All Away. His 2005 book, Bubble Man: Alan Greenspan and the Missing Seven Trillion Dollars, foresaw the collapse of the US housing market and the economic slump that followed.
Turnbull grabbed the slapsticks and got busy on Shorten to show the Libs he can prevail against Labor.
It's the remark that tells you all you need to know about Donald Trump's world view.
Malcolm Turnbull might find that the alliance is not dead but, at 65 years old, it could be ready for a bit of a rest.
Expressing vicarious outrage through the medium of the Prime Minister might be emotionally satisfying but it's fated to be futile.
It was a British reporter who dubbed Canberra "the coup capital of the Western world" as one prime minister after another was brought down not by the voters but by their colleagues.
After losing 14 seats at the election and with serial blunders since, Turnbull is fast losing the confidence of his colleagues.
If Trump wants a fight with China based on ideological phantasmagoria, Australia can't stop him. But we'd be crazy to abet him.
The cause of cleaning up Canberra is an inevitable one. The only question is who will best do it, and whether the energy will be channelled constructively.
While there has been a global outpouring in response to the election of Donald Trump, we've heard no real response from the world's second power, China.
The Chinese didn't imagine that the US would walk away from global leadership so readily. But it has happened, in plain view. On Friday.
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