Business, farmers welcome free trade talks with Latin America
Australia is one of the first countries to pursue a free trade agreement with the Pacific Alliance.
Pick a card. The chance of a recession is 1 in 5
Australia faces a "small but non-zero" chance of a recession in the next two years according to the BusinessDay expert forecasting panel.
Bill Shorten moves onto election footing, prepares for the Turnbull government to implode
Bill Shorten is ready for the Turnbull government to implode and has moved Labor to an election footing.
Chief executives returned to four-year temporary visa list
Business groups have welcomed the return of chief executives to the skilled occupations list.
The age of the party faithless
Tony Abbott and Lee Rhiannon say they're protecting the ideological purity of their respective parties. But are they the ideal rebel messengers?
Tree Tories versus the watermelons: the battle tearing the Greens apart
Five years ago, Greens leader Bob Brown proudly declared he led "the most cohesive and happy party room" in federal Parliament. Locked in a power-sharing deal with Julia Gillard, the Greens were giddy after helping to pass the carbon and mining taxes into law.
Young ex-servicemen most at risk of suicide, major study reveals
At least 325 serving and former Australian Defence Force personnel committed suicide between 2001 and 2015, a major new report has found, shedding light on factors that could make certain veterans especially vulnerable to mental illness.
Sick of defending, Australia's cyber force will attack
Australia's cyber intelligence agency will be given the power to launch offensive operations to shut down foreign criminal networks, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has announced.
Abbott's former ally tells him to 'stop rewriting history'
Concetta Fierravanti-Wells reprimanded Mr Abbott after he released an alternative election manifesto.
'Liberal Pride': Pyne adviser leads gay pride group
One of the Turnbull government MPs pushing for the introduction of same-sex marriage will launch a new Liberal Party gay pride group that is by a top adviser to minister Christopher Pyne.
'Australians expect pragmatism': Turnbull government willing to make major concessions on university funding
The Turnbull government is prepared to significantly water down its plan to increase university fees and slash the HECS repayment threshold in a bid to pass higher education savings through Parliament.
Tony Abbott praises "fine man" Cardinal George Pell
Australia's best-known Catholic politician, Tony Abbott, has defended the character of his long-standing friend, Cardinal George Pell.
Prime Minister's public servants lay down their arms
Prime Minister and Cabinet public servants finally agree to new workplace deal.
Beware regional threat from Islamic State, US Admiral warns
Australia's neighbourhood faces a "substantially" increased threat from Islamic State with the current battle against militants in the southern Philippines serving as a sharp wake-up call, head of the US Pacific Command Admiral Harry Harris has warned.
Marise Payne rebukes Tony Abbott, as former PM goes nuclear on submarines
A fresh round of Coalition infighting has broken out, with Defence Minister Marise Payne sharply rebuking Tony Abbott for suggesting Australia should consider buying nuclear-powered submarines.
Rare cancer sufferers given reprieve with new subsidy
Sufferers of a rare blood cell cancer will get cheap access to a new drug after an unprecedented move by the Turnbull government.
More factional fighting looms as Greens resist reform push
Greens senator Lee Rhiannon and her hardline supporters in NSW will resist a federal push to reform the party's rules, setting the stage for more bitter infighting in the divided party.
Tony Abbott's nuclear ambitions surface in call to rethink submarines
Australia should fundamentally rethink its submarine program and consider buying nuclear-powered boats, Tony Abbott says, to better arm the Royal Australian Navy at a time when regional rivals such as China and Russia are expanding their fleets.
Tensions erupt over Liberal links to Gonski campaign
Factional warfare in the Victorian Liberal Party has reignited after a senior official was accused of being involved in a Catholic schools campaign against the Turnbull government's Gonski 2.0 education funding reforms.
Thousands of new public service jobs
March of public service casualisation reversed. In one department at least.
Australia's most enduring political mystery
A court case taking on Buckingham Palace could soon reveal the final, still unknown details about the 1975 dismissal.
Di Natale says Rhiannon has not been penalised
Greens leader Richard Di Natale has insisted that the decision to suspend rogue NSW senator Lee Rhiannon from party room debates is not a penalty, but an attempt to improve "a consensus-based decision-making process" within the party.
Pyne apologises for 'damaging' same-sex marriage speech
Government minister Christopher Pyne has apologised for his "unhelpful and damaging" same-sex marriage speech
Penalty rate ploy could bring 'chaos'
Reversal of the Fair Work Commission's decision to reduce Sunday penalty rates in industries including the hospitality and retail sectors could lead to industrial "chaos" and reduce wages to a political "plaything" experts warn.
PM and a warlord praise Australian military mission
Former prime minister, John Howard, has described Australia's leadership of the so-called RAMSI mission to stabilise the Solomon Islands, which come to an end this week after 14 years, as one of Australia's and his government's greatest foreign policy achievements.
Lee Rhiannon suspended from Greens party room
Senator Lee Rhiannon has been suspended from taking part in any contentious decisions in the Greens' party room until her NSW wing reforms.
ATO public servants vote yes in a landslide
Another public service agency lays down its arms.
Universities attack government funding cuts after Gonski 2.0 delivers schools boon
The university sector has attacked the government for pushing through the biggest set of school funding reforms in a generation while slashing funding to their institutions and hiking student fees.
George Brandis clears out 'infuriating' Administrative Appeals Tribunal
Attorney-General George Brandis has cleared the decks of the troublesome Administrative Appeals Tribunal, making more than 60 appointments including several people with Liberal Party links.