Federal Politics

Malcolm Turnbull and Bill Shorten are both battling party in-fighting.

What is the point of politics?

Recently our three leading political parties were all simultaneously fighting – not each other, but themselves.

Bill Shorten's real purchase is the sense people have that they are going backwards.

Beware the neglected, vulnerable worker

It stands to reason that in the absence of convincing solutions to persistent problems, unhappy voters will seek alternatives, and look for someone to blame.

Alfred Deakin, the home handyman.

How a handsome young man with a silver tongue became PM

By 1888, when the centenary of the First Fleet's arrival was celebrated, Victoria was far and away the leading Australian colony and Marvellous Melbourne a world-class metropolis. Thirty-two-year-old Alfred Deakin was chief secretary, a political wunderkind who had been a member of parliament for almost a decade. Ned Kelly was already dead, hanged on November 11, 1880 for murdering a policeman. Deakin saw the hanging, most likely as a reporter for The Age, one of the 50 men allowed inside the Melbourne Gaol to witness the drop.

An innovative solution?

When the power goes out, so does civil society

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.