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    Politics

    Federal

    Today

    US Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral Lisa Franchetti, Chief of the Royal Australian Navy, Vice Admiral Mark Hammond AO, and the UK Royal Navy First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Staff, Admiral Ben Key KCB CBE ADC during an AUKUS event in Perth.

    ‘Not a coherent word’: Keating slams PM, Marles over AUKUS

    Former prime minister Paul Keating says there has been no proper debate about AUKUS’ impact on Australia’s defence settings, as a new report backs the delivery schedule.

    • Tom Rabe

    Yesterday

    Keating: AUKUS hijacking national accountability

    Letters from readers including former prime minister Paul Keating on AUKUS; the Paris opening ceremony; whether Jabiluka should be mined and the retirement of AFR Editor-in-Chief Michael Stutchbury.

    Prime Minster Anthony Albanese and his new ministry

    New ministers target CFMEU, people smugglers and Greens

    Murray Watt cited a CFMEU clean-out as his number one priority, Clare O’Neil refused to yield to the Greens on housing, and Tony Burke headed to Indonesia to talk tough on people smuggling.

    • Phillip Coorey
     Governor-General Sam Mostyn, centre, and Anthony Albanese with the new ministerial team after they were sworn  in.

    Revolving door of PMs embarrassed Australia: Albanese

    Anthony Albanese has acknowledged Labor’s contribution to the chaos that blighted Australian politics for almost two decades.

    • Phillip Coorey
    Barnaby Joyce has used language about climate change “XXXXX” Anthony Albanese said.

    Joyce’s talk of bullets and ballot boxes enrages PM

    Anthony Albanese called on Peter Dutton to dump Barnaby Joyce for using “completely unacceptable” language at an anti-offshore wind rally.

    • Jessica Gardner
    Advertisement
    Keep the Sheep campaigners say a live export ban would devastate WA farming families and their communities

    The grassroots campaign targeting a Labor weak spot

    Keep The Sheep has raised close to $450,000 since it was founded earlier this year, and is promising to target federal Labor seats in Perth.

    • Tom Rabe
    EnergyAustralia’s Mark Collette says the government’s energy policy will not deliver fast enough.

    Why east coast energy woes won’t hurt green industry plans

    Many projects in the new industries can be located where they are welcomed, and away from the current grid.

    • Rod Sims
    The Sydney Harbour Tunnel's toll concession deed is due to expire next year.

    Why beating up on private motorway companies is short-sighted

    Privately owned motorway companies must provide a superior service to motorists, or they simply go out of business.

    • Tony Shepherd

    This Month

    Anthony Albanese’s reshuffle is a deft piece of political management

    O’Neil jumps from the frying pan to the fire in deft reshuffle

    Anthony Albanese’s reshuffle is a deft piece of people management. No-one can really argue they’ve been demoted, and it plugs holes that needed to be plugged.

    • Phillip Coorey
    Tony Burke and Clare O’Neil take on two areas critical to the government’s electoral fortunes.

    Albanese guts Home Affairs in pointed reshuffle

    Anthony Albanese has gutted the Home Affairs department and moved aside the two ministers responsible for the troubled Immigration portfolio, in a modest but pointed reshuffle.

    • Phillip Coorey
    The two ministers responsible for immigration, Clare O’Neil and Andrew Giles, have gone to sideways.

    Will Albanese’s ‘no losers’ reshuffle be enough?

    The former workplace relations minister who let the law-breaking CFMEU off the leash by abolishing the Australian Building and Construction Commission has been put in charge of policing the nation’s borders.

    • The AFR View
    Max Chandler-Mather and Clare O’Neil.

    Now its O’Neil v Chandler-Mather on housing

    Clare O’Neil will take on selling the government’s housing agenda, which pollsters say has been drowned out by the Greens’ precocious spokesman Max Chandler-Mather.

    • Jessica Gardner
    Australia Day

    Multicultural report buries Australia’s British past

    The institutions that Britain brought – parliamentary democracy, the rule of law, an independent judiciary and a free press – are the very institutions which have allowed multiculturalism to flourish. This report ignores them.

    • James Curran
    na

    Martin Indyk, Australian diplomat who pursued Middle East peace, dies at 73

    Raised in Sydney’s Castlecrag, the diplomat who helped steer Middle East policy under two US presidents, has died. “He’ll be remembered for his commitment to the cause of Israeli-Palestinian peace, which in the end broke his heart.”

    • William Branigin
    Advertisement
    Building Bad, an investigation into Australia’s construction union.

    Albanese is responsible for the monster that is the CFMEU

    A friendly political environment created by the Labor government allows the lawless union to thrive.

    • Aaron Patrick
    ASIC chairman Joe Longo wants ASX to benchmark its CHESS technology upgrade against international standards.

    Inside the push to break up ASIC

    ASIC chairman Joe Longo says the corporate cop is finally turning a corner, but there are plenty of critics who think the only answer for ASIC is ‘radical change’.

    • Ronald Mizen
    The US Navy Virginia-class submarine USS North Carolina in Fleet Base West, Rockingham, Western Australia.

    Is Perth ready to welcome nuclear submarines?

    Officials are publicly confident Perth is ready to host nuclear-powered submarines. Others are worried by slow progress.

    • Andrew Tillett
    .

    Albanese kills uranium mining at Jabiluka

    Anthony Albanese has ended a decades-old dispute over uranium mining in the NT by ending the mineral lease on Jabiluka and pledging to add the mine site to the Kakadu National Park.

    • Peter Ker and staff writers
    Universities say a proposed independent commission is not going according to plan.

    The uni reform that has vice chancellors in rare furious agreement

    The first piece of reform under the universities accord is not going to plan, says vice chancellors.

    • Julie Hare