![Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull with Health Minister Greg Hunt on Friday.](http://web.archive.org./web/20170725202552im_/https://www.fairfaxstatic.com.au/content/dam/images/g/w/3/c/l/1/image.related.landscape.120x80.gw3atk.png/1494986345530.jpg)
Going for gold in the backflip olympics
The budget seems to have elevated hypocrisy and backtracking to new heights of shamelessness.
Mark Kenny is the national affairs editor for the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, based at Parliament House
The budget seems to have elevated hypocrisy and backtracking to new heights of shamelessness.
The first serous poll since the big-spending budget reveals the Coalition still trails the Labor opposition.
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.
The PM has pulled off a surprising pirouette, wrong-footing his critics, and charting a course to middle-Australian households.
There is good and bad in the Turnbull government's measured university changes .
Obviously Westpac's public 'un-friending' of new coal is a body blow for the Adani Carmichael project.
PM had been sliding to this outcome all along, given no comfort by gas industry insouciance.
Malcolm Turnbull's inexorable shift to the right has failed to convince Bernardi that the conservative tradition is being represented.
Companies write off interest payments for the borrowings of offshore subsidiaries, study claims.
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