Abbott v Turnbull: the fight for the Liberal Party's soul
The question isn't whether Turnbull survives. It's whether in the long run the Liberal Party does.
Waleed Aly is co-host of Ten's The Project and is a lecturer in politics at Monash University. He writes fortnightly for Fairfax.
The question isn't whether Turnbull survives. It's whether in the long run the Liberal Party does.
Terrorism is terrorism irrespective of the perpetrator's reason for carrying it out.
Terrorism does not end simply because we decide it's time.
After Malcolm Turnbull pledged to raise the level of policy debate, it has all been shelved to strike a pose.
Coal is a dying industry for reasons that aren't merely environmental.
Turnbull is facing twin disillusionments. If you're angry, you go to One Nation. If you're just disappointed, you go to Labor.
What matters is that any welfare cuts the government proposes will immediately be measured against its tax cuts for business. And the government will lose that contest.
Trump can only do this – after taking it to a never-ending election campaign – because the cultural environment exists to receive it as some version of common sense.
The greatest hallmark of the Coalition's baked-in streak of climate denialism is the extent to which it will contort itself not to have a credible policy.
When the next crunch comes, there will be plenty of vulnerable, dispensable people.
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