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    Politics

    Federal

    Yesterday

    Why universities are headed for a reckoning

    Half the students at Sydney and Melbourne universities are now from overseas. A decade ago, this figure was 25 per cent. But cuts are coming, and for some it’s a matter of survival.

    • Updated
    • Julie Hare

    Glen Le Lievre cartoons for 2023-24

    See all of Glen Le Lievre cartoons for 2023 and 2024.

    • Updated
    • Glen Le Lievre
    Federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers: A future treasurer will have to look beyond comparisons with the opposition.

    Someone will have to bite the bullet and raise taxes

    It’s delusional to think that we can find large new areas to spend money on without the overall cost of government going up. But whoever raises taxes first will have an advantage.

    • Laura Tingle
    A Taiwan Coast Guard member monitor Chinese navy vessel operating near the Pengjia Islet north of Taiwan on Thursday.

    China warplanes conduct second day of drills off Taiwan

    Taiwan is tracking dozens of Chinese warplanes and navy vessels off its coast. Follow updates live.

    • Updated
    • Tom Rabe
    King Charles III, the yardstick for the talent queuing up to take the ARM’s top job.

    The republican crown needs a new head: who will step up?

    The Australian Republican Movement throne need not be empty for long considering this shining array of talent.

    • Rowan Dean
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    The superannuation sector has become a reverse Robin Hood, taking more from poorer Australians and giving to the rich.

    There’s a super-sized hole in the budget. Here’s why

    The forecast bounce in the tax take on superannuation will not happen because we’ve massively overdone the concessions that take from poorer and give to richer Australians.

    • Chris Richardson

    This Month

    No time for ‘denial and delay’: PM starts second-term pitch

    Anthony Albanese will use his second anniversary in office to urge voters to stick with Labor for another term, rather than vote for the Coalition and return to the era of conflict fatigue.

    • Phillip Coorey
    Immigration is again poised to play a lead role, not because the boats are coming, but after Peter Dutton used his budget address-in-reply to conflate it with the housing crisis.

    Both sides are pushing buttons on migration, one is being more subtle

    Migration long ago became a lazy method, adopted by both sides of politics, to generate growth in the absence of any reform or productivity agenda,

    • Phillip Coorey
    Jason Falinski on the campaign trail: not doing that again.

    Jason Falinski won’t run in McKellar – but James Brown will

    While some ousted Liberals are raring for another go at the teals, others have attempted to move on.

    • Updated
    • Myriam Robin

    China sends warships, jets to ‘punish’ Taiwan

    Chinese fighter jets have carried live missiles and warships encircled Taiwan in a show of force to “punish” the self-ruled democracy’s new president.

    • Andrew Tillett and Jessica Sier
    The National Farmers’ Federation has warned proposals to cap migration will exacerbate agriculture’s workforce challenges and there are better ways to address the housing crisis.

    Labor and Coalition warned against ‘quick fix’ immigration cuts

    The Coalition will have to cut visa places for health, education, aged care and tourism sectors as part of efforts to slash overseas arrivals.

    • Tom McIlroy and James Hall
    South Australia is the only state to exempt dentists operating in large medical centres.

    New tax hit could push up cost of your dentist visit

    Patients accessing dental services in large medical clinics around the country face possible price hikes from new payroll tax liabilities being imposed by state governments.

    • Tom McIlroy
    International students would be allowed to work 30 hours a week under a Coalition proposal.

    Dutton’s plan to let international students work more could backfire

    Experts say Peter Dutton’s promise to allow overseas students to work 30 hours a week would trigger a fresh wave of visa abuse.

    • Julie Hare
    Opposition Leader Peter Dutton wants to introduce nuclear power generation in Australia.

    Gas to firm renewables until nuclear is ready: Dutton

    Peter Dutton has countered claims his plans for nuclear energy were a front to keep coal in the system for longer.

    • Phillip Coorey, Tom Rabe and Gus McCubbing
    Australia is expected to buy its first Virginia-class submarine in the early 2030s.

    The real reason for spending $1b on PsiQuantum

    Defence planners have long worried how vulnerable military information systems are to GPS being taken out by an adversary.

    • Tom Burton
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    Taiwanese President William Lai speaks outside the presidential palace in Taipei.

    China launches military drills around Taiwan as ‘punishment’

    China launches military drills surrounding Taiwan in response to its new president. NSW saves Origin’s Eraring coal plan. How the day unfolded.

    • Updated
    • Campbell Kwan

    Universities brace for foreign student cuts of up to 95pc

    Both sides of politics say the reductions are needed to relieve housing pressure and both plans would deliver a huge shock to the $48b industry.

    • Julie Hare
    Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is backing local battery-making.

    Albanese powers ahead with Australian-made battery plan

    Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will launch a National Battery Strategy on Thursday for the $523 million for batteries in last week’s budget.

    • Ronald Mizen
    A sustainable NDIS depends on delivering forecast savings.

    Advancing digital transformation of public services

    How can we drive service transformation and digital leadership at all levels of government?

    Over 70 per cent of lawyers were born in  Australia.

    Hedge fund betting on class actions banks on $135m profit a year

    The fund behind largest litigation deal in history expects to make about $135 million a year from the deal, illustrating the huge profits up for grabs for investors.

    • Ronald Mizen