Albanese has a decision to make: Keep Rudd or sack him
Kevin Rudd has eight months before the US election to find his way into Donald Trump’s good graces but – in the meantime – Anthony Albanese must weigh the probabilities.
Kevin Rudd has eight months before the US election to find his way into Donald Trump’s good graces but – in the meantime – Anthony Albanese must weigh the probabilities.
We are hearing first-hand from parents, schools, charities and community organisations about the benefits of the School Student Broadband Initiative, writes Michelle Rowland.
A conservative think tank says fact checking agencies were overwhelmingly biased against the Voice to Parliament’s No campaign.
The former ABC presenter has revealed why he’s “grateful” he never waded into the Voice to Parliament debate.
NO babies have been kissed, no teens cajoled into selfies, shoppers feel free to go about their business unshaven and in tracksuits. What’s going on in Groom?
WHILE many agree Bill Shorten might have won the daily horse race — and launched the better scare campaign — Malcolm Turnbull’s approach to the election campaign may very well see him come through in the end. Here’s why.
OPINION: With less than 48 hours until the polls open, it’s full steam ahead for politicians in their final pitches to voters. In the case of the two major parties, they couldn’t be more different.
SENATOR Nick Xenophon is SA’s most popular politician — and his band of NXT candidates are the wildcard in Saturday’s federal election. But does Mr X deliver results or spin? The Advertiser analyses his record.
COMMENT: There has been no car crash, no train derailment, no political roof collapse, despite an eight-week campaign that delivered an abundant time frame for magnificent catastrophes to befall parties on both sides.
TALK of farmers being the engine room of the economy seems to have been forgotten as they deal with politicians’ indifference and falling prices, writes Ed Gannon.
IT may be boring – very boring – but that doesn’t mean this election won’t change history.
OPINION: Badly served by his staff or peak political sneakiness? Either way, Bill Shorten has come off second best in an attempt to attack Malcolm Turnbull on the issue of election promises.
LABOR faces the horror prospect of failing to pick up any extra seats in Queensland and may even go backwards as nervous voters return to the Government after the Brexit economic shock.
OPINION: There are many things in election campaigns which have become institutionalised and will remain forever mysterious. The whole “costings” argument is high on this list.
Original URL: https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/national/federal-election/analysis/page/40