Budget fails to propel Turnbull, but it may yet pay off
The absence of a poll bounce may render the budget an expensive failure, but there is hope for the PM.
The absence of a poll bounce may render the budget an expensive failure, but there is hope for the PM.
With Labor implacably opposed, the Greens must play a positive role in the Senate.
The Queensland conservative is trying too late to distance himself from racist anti-Semites.
Scott Morrison's hit on banks shows his preference for stunts over meaningful policy development.
Scott Morrison is not one of Australia's more popular politicians and only 2 or 3 per cent of voters generally prefer him as Liberal leader.
Labor-lite the budget strategy may be, but the PM's calculus is that most voters live in the middle ground.
The Fairfax Ipsos post-budget poll shows a boost for the Prime Minister, but it is also hardly a disaster for Bill Shorten and Labor.
Unless we act seriously to preserve our threatened planet, all the budget's nuances will be meaningless.
The budget seems to have elevated hypocrisy and backtracking to new heights of shamelessness.
Spending will stay at or near record highs while revenue rapidly climbs to match.
NSW and Victoria have effectively stolen money and power from the rest of Australia for 60 years.
Why do politicians wait until they retire before they query our relationship with the US?
Labor has been stung by the Coalition's appropriation of the middle ground.
In politics as in life, you don't get a second chance to make a good first impression.
Australia has long had its share of minor party and independent voters, informal voters and non-voters.
You'd be hard-pressed to judge who had the worst job in the nation's capital on Wednesday.
Scott Morrison and Malcolm Turnbull have got back into the business of governing.
Of the government's four goes so far, this is its best budget. For a budget aimed squarely at improving Malcolm Turnbull's ailing political fortunes, its economics is much better.
The Prime Minister has given a few hints he might actually take up his last chance to survive.
The Coalition needs to undo John Howard's damage and tackle the government's tax shortfall.
A little more money, yes, but don't expect schools to improve. That's a much harder problem.
It's easy to whip up fear but we should be doing better.
Tony Abbott's term in office is now a smoking ruin.
State of origin still matters a great deal in federal politics, which isn't entirely a party v party contest.
There has rarely been such a gulf between insiders and outsiders; between what most politicians and what most people think that politics is about, writes Tony Abbott.
The PM has pulled off a surprising pirouette, wrong-footing his critics, and charting a course to middle-Australian households.
If the politics of education funding were a poker game, a David Gonski unveiling would be a royal flush.
Last week I sauntered to the sandstone loveliness of the University of Melbourne to talk about the coming federal budget.
Rein in the tax avoidance rorts, and cap government spending on contractors and consultants.
There is good and bad in the Turnbull government's measured university changes .
The hurly-burly of the 2016 election campaign, as seen through the eyes of Fairfax reporters and photographers.
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