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Opinion

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I mentored the next British PM. Here’s what Australians need to know about him

Keir Starmer does not have the charisma of Boris Johnson or Tony Blair, but charisma in politicians is much overrated.

  • by Geoffrey Robertson

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Royce Hunt, Spencer Leniu and Connor Watson.

Is Connor Watson, pound-for-pound, the NRL’s most valuable player?

Salary cap management is all about value. So what price do you put on players who can change a game in 20 minutes?

  • by Dan Walsh
Catherine, Princess of Wales, made her first public appearance over the weekend.

Catherine gets it - being honest doesn’t always feel terrific, but it gets the job done

The princess’s glossy My Fair Lady return was a masterclass in not just doing what you do best to keep the masses happy, but in controlling the narrative.

  • by Kate Halfpenny
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Premier Li Qiang’s in Perth this week.

Pandas can’t paper over Australia’s differences with China

Premier Li Qiang’s visit was the culmination of hard work by the government to recalibrate the relationship with China. But it also exposed differences that cannot be papered over with diplomatic niceties.

  • by Lisa Visentin
Josh Giddey playing for the Boomers against Venezuela in Melbourne last year.
Opinion
Paris 2024

‘I was going to throw red wine in his face’: Boomers coach Goorjian’s staunch defence of Giddey

The national men’s basketball coach insists the point-guard has come out the other side of the scandal that has shadowed him this NBA season.

  • by Andrew Webster
Andrew Bragg and Max Chandler Mather

The unusual political pairing squaring up against Labor on housing

Max Chandler-Mather and Andrew Bragg have little in common - except for a shared conviction that the federal government’s agenda on housing is behind the times.

  • by Paul Sakkal
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Past and present Media Watch hosts. [L-R] Richard Ackland, Paul Barry, Stuart Littlemore, Monica Attard

Should Paul Barry be the last journalist to host Media Watch?

With Barry about to end his 11-year tenure in the hot seat, the ABC could hand over the task of keeping the outlets honest to someone outside the so-called media bubble.

  • by Calum Jaspan
If you’re a gun in the office, people might start chasing you up for all sorts of extra work.

The hidden cost of being too good at your job

Sometimes, less really is more when it comes to sustainable success and wellbeing, so try putting in a bit under 100 per cent.

  • by Shadé Zahrai
The Australian Public Service is moving to centralise merit lists for senior executive roles.

Should I be brutally honest in my exit interview?

Knowing when to hold back in an exit interview can be a valuable skill, but sometimes it’s worth speaking up.

  • by Jonathan Rivett
Tim Peck, former homicide detective who has returned from the brink of suicide.
Analysis
Naked City

He was a rising star in the police force, then it all came tumbling down

Making his mark catching crooks came at a heavy cost for Tim Peck, who ignored the warning signs until he crashed into them.

  • by John Silvester
Illustration: Simon Letch

Dutton’s nuclear plan contains a fib, but there’s also a fact in its favour

The opposition leader’s numbers seem plucked out of the air, but renewable projects aren’t coming anywhere near fast enough to fill Australia’s looming energy gap.

  • by David Crowe
The Horizon apartments in Sydney.

The apartments created by Harry Seidler that are like a ‘vertical village’

One of Australia’s most gifted architects, Seidler was always up for a challenge.

  • by Stephen Crafti
Jim Pavlidis
LETTERS
Letters

Delivering energy lost in transmission

Age readers find obstacles in the path of Peter Dutton’s nuclear proposal.

Opinion
Education

I hope my teachers don’t read this because they’re busy switching off

The right to disconnect is critical for teachers’ wellbeing – and that of their students.

  • by Jenny Allum
Peter Dutton’s opponents in Victoria are confident they can win the nuclear debate.

Dutton’s nuclear play is delighting his Victorian opponents

There remains a broad level of interest in nuclear technology in Victoria, but the evidence is that many voters remain undecided.

  • by Annika Smethurst
Anti-amalgamation signs near Mansfield Hospital.
Opinion
Healthcare

No hospital closures? Country Victorians can smell a dead rat

I can assure you, regional Victorians are not fools. We have a special relationship with our health services and we know the damage that funding cuts will wreak on our communities.

  • by Jan Beer
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Eddie Jones of Australia soaks during a press conference speaks Thursday, Dec. 14, 2023, in Tokyo. Jones was named as new coach of the Japan national rugby team on Dec. 13. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)
Opinion
Wallabies

Eddie Jones wants to smooth out the rough edges of his Wallabies story. But some spiky parts won’t budge

The recently departed Wallabies coach is back on the Test rugby scene with Japan this weekend. And so is Jones the podcast salesman.

  • by Iain Payten
Peter Dutton announces the Coalition’s nuclear policy

Coalition’s nuclear utopia could put renewables on ice

When the opposition leader unveiled his plan to give nuclear power primacy in the nation’s energy mix, certainty for investors in wind, solar and battery assets vaporised.

  • by Elizabeth Knight
    Julia Gillard, Baz Luhrmann and Jane Austen.
Opinion
Psychology

The only life coaches I’d hire are long dead or too busy

It seems you can’t swing a cat without hitting a life coach these days. They’re everywhere, jacked up on positivity and self-love.

  • by Cherie Gilmour
Studies show that workers who switched to a four-day workweek are more productive.
Opinion
Jobs

How much work do we actually need to do? Less than you think

We spend around one-third of our lives at work. Have you ever stopped and asked why?

  • by Tim Duggan
The outcome of the elections will reflect America’s new political reality.

Mountains of debt: Finances of US, Europe and China are deteriorating

Widening government debt in the US, key European economies and China and the spectres of Donald Trump and Marine Le Pen are increasing the threats to global financial stability.

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz
Hawthorn first-year forward Nick Watson.
Opinion
AFL 2024

He’s a villain after just seven games. But this young Hawk will be a star

Nick Watson is only 19 and has kicked 5.15, but I’ve seen enough to be convinced he will, in time, become one of the most marketable sports stars in the country.

  • by Kane Cornes
Two of the world’s most recent nuclear plants, Vogtle 3 and 4 in Georgia, were 7 years behind schedule and cost $US14 billion more than anticipated.

Dutton didn’t put a price on nuclear power plants. The world shows they come at a cost

Peter Dutton admits the cost of his nuclear policy will be “big”. So big that it could cause enormous problems to the federal budget.

  • by Shane Wright
A new round of cuts in late May made Tesla’s Model S sedan cheaper than ever.
Opinion
Renewables

Your Tesla could make your toast. Why doesn’t it?

One of the most important technologies for a clean power grid is sitting idle in your garage.

  • by David Fickling
Latrell Mitchell.
Opinion
NRL 2024

Attack, X-factor and experience: Why NSW will win Origin II

This Blues side is a more dangerous team than the one in Sydney. Throw in Latrell Mitchell and NSW are primed to square the ledger in Melbourne.

  • by Andrew Johns
Artwork: Dionne Gain

Peter Dutton is crazy brave to the point of being reckless. He’s also outsmarting Anthony Albanese

What times we live in, when the adoption of nuclear energy, which John Howard’s government outlawed, actually stands a chance of being implemented.

  • by Shaun Carney
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Letters
Letters

Fear, loathing and other nuclear questions

Readers respond to Peter Dutton’s unveiling of the locations for nuclear power plants around Australia.

Opinion
Motherhood

Is my biological clock faulty, or is motherhood just not for me?

It’s not that I hate kids. I just don’t want one of my own.

  • by Genevieve Novak
Police investigate a fire and criminal damage at Labor MP Josh Burns’ electoral office.

Just after 3.20am, six masked people started smashing my office

The escalating attacks over the Middle East conflict show that our problem is not on the other side of the world, it is here.

  • by Josh Burns
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton.

Seven nuclear sites and two big black holes: Why voters deserve better than this

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has announced a bold plan with almost no detail, leaving cynics to draw only one conclusion.

  • by David Crowe
Liberal leader Peter Dutton has announced his nuclear power plan.

‘Cheaper, cleaner, more consistent’: Do Dutton’s claims on nuclear stack up?

The opposition leader has promised a “bold, visionary” nuclear program that lowers energy prices. Here is a fact check of his major claims.

  • by Mike Foley
Donald Trump’s proposal has been described as a prescription for “the mother of all stagflation”.

Weird Trump idea would shut America off from the world

Donald Trump floated a truly bizarre plan during a private meeting in Washington last week.

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz
Ex-AFL chief Gillon McLachlan is the new Tabcorp CEO.
Opinion
Gambling

Does something stink about Gil McLachlan’s new appointment? You bet!

The former AFL chief’s appointment as head of gambling giant Tabcorp illustrates the cosy, symbiotic relationship between broadcasting, gambling and sporting bodies.

  • by Charles Livingstone
Alan Joyce left the company shortly after being hauled before a Senate inquiry last year.

Should the Qantas board cut Alan Joyce’s pay deal down to size?

The airline has enlisted an influential governance expert to advise on whether to claw back up to $16 million from the former CEO’s performance-based pay entitlement.

  • by Elizabeth Knight

The public has voted on the next Media Watch host, and you’re in for a shock

With a couple of notable exceptions, the permanent hosting role usually goes to an older white man towards the twilight of his career. Not this time.

  • by Antoinette Lattouf

Trump 2.0: What four more years mean for Australia and the world

In the first of a five-part series, international editor Peter Hartcher examines why Donald Trump is more inclined to like a US enemy than a friend if he wins a second term as president.

  • by Peter Hartcher
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Diversifying investments is important, but it can be difficult to determine the best way to go about it.

What’s the best way to invest half-a-million dollars in international shares?

Investing in international shares can sometimes be a headache, so it’s worth considering options closer to home.

  • by Noel Whittaker
Just because you have a high-earning job doesn’t make you automatically better with money than those who earn less.

Why you don’t need to earn lots to be good with money

You went to school, studied hard, landed a good job, and hustled for promotions. That’s the road map to financial success, right? Not so fast.

  • by Paridhi Jain
Knowing exactly how much super you’ll need in retirement is a difficult calculation, but there’s ways to start planning early.
Analysis
Super Fit

How do I get my super when I retire? And how much will I need?

We save our whole lives to build our retirement income, but how do we actually get it once the time comes around?

  • by Bec Wilson

Sport fans want gambling ads reined in. Politicians should listen

A gradual and transparent approach to freeing sporting bodies from reliance on gambling advertising makes sense.

  • The Age's View
Leader of the Opposition Peter Dutton.

By dumping 2030 targets, Dutton reveals a worrying truth about the Coalition

From businesses to teachers and local footy teams, targets are how we measure performance. But the Coalition still won’t come to the party.

  • by Shane Wright
There’s a reason Paris is known as the City of Love.

What my unforgettable Paris adventure taught me about dreams

Twenty-three years ago, my husband and I crashed a wedding proposal on the Seine. All these years later, I often wonder about that Irish couple.

  • by Jo Stanley
Coach Billy Slater talks tactics with Reece Walsh during a Queensland Maroons State of Origin Training Session at Brisbane Broncos on May 28, 2024 in Brisbane, Australia.
Analysis
NRL 2024

Cleared and unafraid, Reece Walsh’s best is yet to come

The Maroons’ marquee man has declared himself ready for Origin game two. And a key tweak could make him even more dangerous.

  • by Nick Wright
Letters
Letters

Are you still cooking with gas? It’s a dirty habit

Readers react to attempts to wean households off the use of gas in their kitchens, and the behaviour by Chinese officials.

NSW Blues coach Michael Maguire.

Mind games and sledging: Madge has drunk the sky-blue Kool-Aid

You’d have more luck getting Michael Maguire into a headlock than getting a headline out of him. That is, until he embraced State of Origin’s oldest rule.

  • by Dan Walsh
RBA governor Michele Bullock admits uncertainty is clouding the direction of interest rates.

‘Uncertain’ times: Why the RBA’s interest rate decisions are getting harder

The RBA has found itself in uncertain times, as it tries to bring inflation down without driving the country into a recession.

  • by Shane Wright
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Apple got an AI boost last week that briefly made it the world’s most valuable company.

The AI bubble might blow up in our face

All AI bubbles to date have ended in a “winter”, and the next one may be the chilliest of all.

  • by Andrew Orlowski
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Sky News presenter Cheng Lei.

Chinese officials were rude and belligerent. Why did that take Albanese so long to say?

After a night to workshop his response, Albanese seemed to generously imply the embassy officials who tried to block Cheng Lei were little more than bumbling buffoons.

  • by Matthew Knott
 RBA governor Michele Bullock.
Opinion
Employment

If the RBA does its job, we might all hold on to ours

If Michele Bullock and the RBA board are committed to ensuring unemployment stays under control, the first move to lower interest rates should not be as far off as some fear.

  • by Millie Muroi
The late Andrew Findlay and his former partner Liz Kemp, who has launched proceedings in the Supreme Court over his multimillion-dollar estate.
Opinion
Death

Please do this before you die. I just did and it nearly killed me

We shouldn’t be fearful about making a will. We should be terrified about what happens when we don’t make one.

  • by Jenna Price