Opinion | Comment & Analysis | The Age

We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable. We’re working to restore it. Please try again later.

Opinion

Advertisement
Illustration: Jim Pavlidis

Wanted: A Labor leader capable of capturing the imagination of voters

It’s been 37 years since Hawke promised to lift children out of poverty. In chasing the middle vote, it’s hard to imagine a politician doing the same today.

  • by Sean Kelly

Latest

The federal government is keen for super funds to invest in new housing.

Should big super get involved in tackling housing affordability?

Recent moves by major funds to invest in housing are welcome, but we shouldn’t expect the sector to have a significant impact on the wider property market.

  • by Clancy Yeates
LETTERS
Letters

If there are to be high-rises, this is what is needed

Age readers respond to proposals to add more high-rise precincts in the city.

Even Kim Kardashian has been deemed embarrassing by her four kids.
Opinion
Parenting

Why it’s time to give up on trying to be a cool parent

Aside from death and taxes, one thing is certain: children will always be embarrassed by their parents, even when you’re doing the coolest thing possible.

  • by Shona Hendley
MAGA, or make America great again, has become a shorthand term for Trump supporters.

Don’t mistake MAGA loyalists for ‘turning’ on Trump – they’re just hedging their bets

After months of discontent, some of Donald Trump’s most high-profile supporters are criticising his campaign. But they haven’t turned on him – yet.

  • by Dr Emma Shortis
Lithium, a key component of batteries for electric vehicles, has been falling in price.

Green dreams go bad: Why feel-good investing doesn’t make for good returns

“Green” investors have learned a harsh lesson on investing based on a feel-good narrative, instead of using fundamental or technical analysis.

  • by William Bennett
Advertisement
PERTH, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 17: Max Jorgensen of the Wallabies is tackled during The Rugby Championship match between Australia Wallabies and South Africa Springboks at Optus Stadium on August 17, 2024 in Perth, Australia. (Photo by Janelle St Pierre/Getty Images)
Opinion
Wallabies

He has played 33 minutes of Test rugby. But he could solve a looming Wallabies problem

Pumas flyer Mateo Carreras shapes as a major threat to the Wallabies, but Max Jorgensen may just have his measure if he gets the nod on the right wing.

  • by Paul Cully
Australia’s voting system was influenced by Alice in Wonderland author.
Opinion
Democracy

Australia’s a democratic wonderland. A vote of thanks to one rather strange man

Curiouser and curiouser. How did the author of Alice in Wonderland influence Australia’s electoral system?

  • by George Brandis
Mother Teresa, head of the Missionaries of Charity order, cradles a baby at her order’s orphanage in India in 1978.
Opinion
Religion

Why faith also involves some fear

If we trust in God, might we not be entrusted with a task we won’t like, one that involves hardship and sacrifice?

  • by Melissa Coburn
Les Boyd was a controversial addition to the Hall of Fame.
Analysis
NRL 2024

V’landys defends two-hour lunch meeting to pick Immortal, Hall of Famers

Questions have been asked about the selection process for rugby league’s Immortals and Hall of Fame.

  • by Danny Weidler
Bailey Smith will be on the move to Geelong in the off-season.
Analysis
AFL 2024

Why Bailey Smith is bound for Geelong

Unless there is an unexpected twist, or the trade founders on the rocks of recalcitrance, Western Bulldog Bailey Smith will be moving down the Geelong Road to play for the Cats in 2025.

  • by Jake Niall
The bad habits of these HENRYs is something all of us can be or are guilty of, no matter our income bracket.

Earn a lot, but don’t feel rich? You might be a HENRY

Before you pull out the world’s smallest violin for people bringing home the financial bacon, hear me out.

  • by Victoria Devine
Knowing what you’ll have available to you in retirement isn’t always the easiest calculation.

How can we work out how much pension we’ll get when we retire?

Knowing what you’ll have available to you in retirement isn’t the easiest calculation, but it’s worth getting on top of it ahead of time.

  • by Paul Benson
Anthony Albanese has taken only one overseas trip this year.

After being grounded ‘Airbus Albo’ readies for take-off

The idea that international travel is a prime ministerial luxury, akin to a relaxing holiday, is a tabloid trope of the most juvenile kind.

  • by Matthew Knott
More than two-thirds of Australians will be diagnosed with a skin cancer during their lives.

I’m a doctor who deals with the c-word daily. Yet a brief encounter on a busy day floored me

It’s been a challenging winter and I know my fellow doctors, nurses and paramedics are exhausted. A line from Spider-Man has been echoing in my mind.

  • by Farrukh Tufail
Scooters can get you most places around the city and suburbs, regardless of bus routes or your personal level of fitness, making many car trips unessecary.
Opinion
Gadgets

Confessions of an e-scooter commuter

Many believe that e-scooters and similar devices will play a big role in how we get around in the future, but the path remains bumpy.

  • by Tim Biggs
Advertisement
Teal independents (from left) Sophie Scamps, Zali Steggall and Kylea Tink.

Be more civil, you racist: Why insults should not be banned in parliament

The teals want to raise the tone of debate, but they get the lowest political Scrabble score with the word “racist”.

  • by Parnell Palme McGuinness

Celia Pacquola dropped the F-bomb at the Logies. Will she be invited back?

The Aussie comedian may not have her name tattooed on Larry Emdur’s backside, but she did enjoy hanging out with her best friend Luke McGregor.

  • by Peter FitzSimons
Don’t put off talking about money with your spouse.
Opinion
Hip pocket

You’ve finally saved a house deposit. Now what?

You might feel like beelining for your closest weekend auction, but it can be prudent to take your time.

  • by Dominic Powell
Fixturing, the bounce and questions about the Brownlow Medal: Some of the things that should be on the agenda for the AFL in 2025.
Analysis
AFL 2024

What the AFL needs to fix for season 2025

This season has raised a multitude of issues for the AFL to address over the off-season. We look at what should be on the agenda.

  • by Peter Ryan and Jon Pierik
  No one was competing any more. We had settled into ourselves and accepted ourselves for who we are and where we have ended up.

Here’s what I learnt after attending my school reunion

A night at my 50-year school reunion reminds me what really matters in life.

  • by Jane Caro
LETTERS
Letters

There are perfectly good buses to use

Age readers respond to the continuing debate over the use of e-scooters.

Are there six more terrifying words than: You know who you look like?

The six words guaranteed to offend almost anyone

Is there a more terrifying question than “You know who you look like?”

  • by Thomas Mitchell
Harris could become the first US president who has worked at McDonald’s.
Opinion
Jobs

Kamala’s secret sauce: Working in fast food sets you up for success

Even if we end up working in an entirely different industry, the skills learnt working in fast food stay with us for life.

  • by Shona Hendley
Hawks players celebrate with a selfie after their thumping win over the Roos.
Analysis
AFL 2024

The Hawks are as good as any team in the flag race. They know it

These brash, young Hawks are as good as any team in it. Rarely will a club enter September in white-hot form and with their list in such strong health.

  • by Andrew Wu
World Cup broadcast rights money is the lifeblood of most cricket nations.

Cricket rights cash fight threatens lifeblood of the game

Star’s pursuit of a massive World Cup rights discount is life-threatening for the likes of Pakistan, South Africa and the West Indies. It will hurt Australia too.

  • by Daniel Brettig
Advertisement
Albanese

12 big ideas and six sitting weeks: It’s crunch time for Albanese

With an election looming, the Albanese government is running out of time to get a raft of reforms through.

  • by David Crowe
xx

In the coffin of All Blacks rugby, the Bledisloe Cup is in play

The implosion of the once-invincible All Blacks has Wallabies fans passing the popcorn and dreaming of a Bledisloe upset.

  • by Paul Cully
Ron Coote is rugby league’s 14th Immortal.

Bravo to you, Ron Coote, but this Immortals-mania needs to slow down

Further trips back through rugby league’s history is an exercise that best be avoided.

  • by Peter FitzSimons
West Coast have endured years of on-field hardship.
Opinion
AFL 2024

Why so many people are rejecting the Eagles’ coaching job

At least four leading candidates have turned their backs on approaches from West Coast for their senior coaching job, and the reason why is a warning to the AFL.

  • by Caroline Wilson
Put your hand down, buddy. Please.
Opinion
Comedy

Are you sure there’s no such thing as a dumb question?

The world is full of questions that should never be asked.

  • by Richard Glover
Inside Out 2’s new emotions include Anxiety, Envy and Ennui (voiced by French star Adèle Exarchopoulos).
Opinion
WordPlay

What this Pixar film gets so right about the human condition

Is this boredom I’m feeling, or ennui?

  • by David Astle
The gender pay gap may be improving, but women still earn nearly 12 per cent less than men.

Women work 50 days extra to equal men’s pay. Here’s a way to fix that

For every dollar an average man earns, the average woman makes just 89 cents. I don’t know about you, but that also makes me think: challenge accepted.

  • by Nicole Pedersen-McKinnon
Retirement is being redefined. It’s no longer about stopping work; it’s about managing and balancing your money, health and happiness in a way that suits you.
Opinion
Ageing

The truth about why we’re working for longer in retirement

Retirement is being redefined. It’s no longer about stopping work; it’s about managing and balancing your money, health and happiness in a way that suits you.

  • by Bec Wilson
Executive coach Mark Hodgson says he was grateful for the redundancy as it allowed him to re-think his career.
Analysis
Side hustle

Lost your job? Maybe it’s time to re-invent yourself

The jobs market can feel turbulent, so it might be time to turn a long-held passion job into a money-spinner.

  • by Emily Chantiri
When asked about reports that Peter Dutton was seeking legal advice, Zali Steggall said it was “part of the playbook”.

Is ‘rip him a new one!’ really necessary for robust democratic debate?

The teals are inviting us to see the cacophony as something else – stupid, harmful to social civility and, above all, unnecessary.

  • by Jacqueline Maley
Advertisement
Opinion
Censorship

Elon Musk saying civil war is inevitable is not inciting violence. Here’s why

Beware the online-harm brigade, or we’ll have police on our doorsteps as fast as we can say boo online.

  • by Josh Szeps

Trump out-Foxed: The most telling thing about Kamala’s pyjama party

Donald Trump phoned in to Fox to offer his critique of Harris’ acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention. They duly put him to air, initially ...

  • by Peter Hartcher
The consumer data right is intended to make it easier for customers to compare prices and switch banks or energy providers.
Opinion
Scams

Why Australian banks are better at stopping scammers than British banks

Winning the war against these international criminal gangs can only be achieved through a collective show of strength from all parts of the scams chain.

  • by Anna Bligh
Matt Golding
LETTERS
Letters

This behaviour in parliament wouldn’t be tolerated at kinder

The poor behaviour in federal parliament of politicians draws censure from readers.

“Thank you, thank you”: Kamala Harris receives a rapturous welcome to the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.

Jubilant Kamala Harris makes the choice clear: freedom or chaos

In accepting her nomination as the Democratic presidential candidate, the US vice president highlighted all the ways her rival Donald Trump would take the country backwards.

  • by Farrah Tomazin
A happy team at Hawthorn.
Analysis
AFL 2024

Inside the ‘war room’ that sparked Hawthorn’s stunning rise

Hawthorn had just finished barely above the bottom four despite having one of the league’s oldest lists, so something had to give.

  • by Marc McGowan
Opinion
NRL 2024

Immortals heaven is filling up fast. When will the ‘Full House’ sign go up?

The game’s administrators are happy to kick these questions down the road until a future generation is forced to close the border.

  • by Malcolm Knox
What will happen to emergency call access in country areas when the 3G network is switched off?
Tony Wright’s Column
Regional Australia

Mobile phones, 3G and the coming sounds of silence in the bush

The approaching closure of the 3G telecommunications service means an unknown number of mobile users will no longer be able to connect with emergency services.

  • by Tony Wright
Doing business in China is becoming a less attractive proposition for foreign companies.

China can’t rescue the global economy this time

The global economy is sputtering and an “enormous error” in the US just ramped up the pressure. We can’t rely on China to fix things.

  • by Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Sam Walker, Jarome Luai and Luke Brooks.
Analysis
NRL 2024

Finals of fortune: The dollars, deals and reputations up for grabs in September

Several halves - from the biggest earners to unlikeliest match-winners - are stepping out of the shadows and into the NRL spotlight.

  • by Dan Walsh
Advertisement
Former first lady Michelle Obama speaks to Democrats in Chicago on Tuesday night (US time).

I jumped up and down when I heard Michelle Obama utter one amazing word

I am not getting dewy-eyed here, but I see signs that Americans – across the political divide – are reviving a graciousness that had lain dormant.

  • by Julia Baird
FILE - JULY 17: Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck reportedly obtained a marriage license on July 16 in Clark County, Nevada. VENICE, ITALY - SEPTEMBER 10: Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez attend the red carpet of the movie “The Last Duel” during the 78th Venice International Film Festival on September 10, 2021 in Venice, Italy. (Photo by Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images)
Opinion
Divorce

Whether you’re Jenny from the Block or a suburban matron, divorce is not a spectator sport

Sure, celebrities trade privacy for fame. But I’d rather revel in their clothes or babies or weddings, not the death of something they believed was forever.

  • by Kate Halfpenny
Opinion
AI

I asked AI to write this column. Trust me, I have nothing to fear

Satire and emotion were lost on that silicon scribe.

  • by Anson Cameron
g
Opinion
AFL 2024

Sunday showdown: Blue heaven or hell for Carlton

On the final day of the 2024 AFL home and away season, Carlton will take the field against St Kilda with a straightforward equation: Win and they will play finals.

  • by Jake Niall