Federal Politics

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull: Problems threaten to dog him to the next election.

Right voice, wrong answer

There is a growing sense around the halls of power that Malcolm Turnbull is finally starting to get somewhere, writes Mark Kenny.

Premier of South Australiia Jay Weatherill has a reputation for bold and often unorthodox policy solutions.

Political force with uncommon gentleness

Politicians normally avoid airing their dirty linen in public but for Australia's longest governing leader, it was actually a laundry incident that nearly brought him undone.

The federal and ACT parliaments are inquiring into the need for, and form of, anti-corruption agencies for their ...

Nothing to see here, move on

The federal and ACT public services say they have no serious integrity problems. But who's actually looking?

Past Aboriginal leader the late Sir Doug Nicholls.

Why Indigenous Australia will reject a minimalist referendum question

If the politicians have cooked up a "done deal" for mere minimalism on constitutional recognition, Aboriginal people will say no. Substantive reform, or nothing at all. That was the clear message relayed at the Victorian dialogue in Melbourne this weekend. It is a message we, as convenors of the gathering, support 100 per cent.

Pauline Hanson meets her party supporters in Perth on election eve.

Fragile on the fringe

The party will need to separate itself from Pauline Hanson if it wants to succeed.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull during his tour of the Snowy Hydro Tumut 3 power station.

Malcolm's power surge

When Malcolm Turnbull assumed the mantle of a nation-building prime minister this week, evoking the vision and courage of those who delivered Australia's biggest engineering project, he could have offered a silent prayer to his Liberal predecessors.

Opposition Leader Bill Shorten.

Shorten needs union law breakers like a hole in the head

Just as dwindling unions and, by association, their parliamentary champions, were thrown a lifeline by the prospect of a WorkChoices-style campaign to protect weekend penalty rates, a union leader reminds voters what they hated about the old model of industrial relations: strikes, intimidation, and belligerent lawlessness.