What the Trump leak reveals about Malcolm Turnbull
We learnt some important new things from the transcript of Malcolm Turnbull's explosive first phone conversation with US President Donald Trump.
We learnt some important new things from the transcript of Malcolm Turnbull's explosive first phone conversation with US President Donald Trump.
"I'm sorry to wake you, Mr Prime Minister, but there's been a development overnight."
You don't need to be one of those wild-eyed doomsday preppers who bury steel containers in their backyards and fill them with canned food to recognise we're a stalled power plant away from chaos.
Just because a story is sexy doesn't make it fake and blaming the media won't save you if your ship is going under.
The stakes in the looming same-sex marriage showdown within the Coalition may be higher than you think.
No matter how this proceeds, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has lost control. It is a bizarrely weak position for a prime minister.
How unfair is this? The Mooch has already mooched off.
This is worse than unacceptable. It is a betrayal of each institution's clear responsibility - or duty of care - to students.
"Credit repair" companies prey, like vultures, on vulnerable people in an unregulated environment.
There's a risk in releasing policies well ahead of an election.
Every living Liberal treasurer but the latest has wanted to tighten the tax treatment of trusts.
Australia's volume of coal exports is undermining its foreign policy aims in the Pacific.
Nothing could be more democratic than asking the people directly, right?
Labor's own factional system remains a vexed thing for the party leader.
Appointing experts, not politicians, to cabinet could lead to more evidence-based decision-making.
Little more than an hour into Labor's annual conference factional rancour and insult trading has erupted on the issue of former NSW Labor general secretary, minister, numbers man and practitioner of "whatever it takes politics", Graham Richardson's key address at the conference overshadowing the morning proceedings.
While the ACT government is going to help people keep their heater on, the federal government is doing its best to keep them shivering.
If it weren't for the extraordinary circus in the Trump White House, Australian politics would strain credulity right now.
If we must go retro, let us at least learn from the past and avoid its mistakes.
Australia has a right to demand the full-blooded allegiance of its dual citizens.
The public is so sick of the self-serving political gravy train that eight-year senate terms would not be a goer.
When Labor officials eyed one of Sydney's most dedicated medicos for a marginal seat, they faced a curious hurdle.
The top 1 per cent of Australians own more wealth then the bottom 70 per cent combined.
Confusion over section 44 of the constitution threatens to obliterate confidence in the finely balanced 45th Parliament.
Experts say it would be "highly irregular" for an adult to gain Italian citizenship without actively participating in the process.
Political party democracy battles are driven by self-interest and altruism, writes John Warhurst.
Had it been a lower house MP, the outcome might well be catastrophic.
There is no evidence that this expansion will create muscle; the danger is that the bloating will result in more fat.
Anthony Scaramucci's appointment is the American equivalent of Malcolm Turnbull suddenly putting Peta Credlin in charge of sharpening his public message.
Australia is caught between a government unable to conjure the "jobs and growth" it promised, and an opposition proposing a fast-fix via wealth redistribution.
The hurly-burly of the 2016 election campaign, as seen through the eyes of Fairfax reporters and photographers.
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