Kiwis say ‘tanks for nothing’ Ardern
Realists know when former Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said she no longer had ‘enough in the tank’ to continue governing, she knew New Zealand had tanked, writes Piers Akerman.
Realists know when former Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said she no longer had ‘enough in the tank’ to continue governing, she knew New Zealand had tanked, writes Piers Akerman.
Despite claims to the contrary, the culture wars are not only alive, they are virulently raging at every level of society and 2023 will only see them increase exponentially.
The great Labor-Green renewables gravy train must be stopped before it derails the economy through blackouts and national bankruptcy, writes Piers Akerman.
The French sub deal was baggage Australia didn’t need to sign in 2016 and it certainly wasn’t necessary for Macron to bring it up six years later, writes Piers Akerman.
Labor is deserting the very people it was founded to serve, it’s policies on Covid-19 showing the party sees small business as merely collateral damage, writes Peter Gleeson.
Last week, a military court in another failed state sentenced Australia’s Dr Jamal Rifi, in absentia, to 10 years imprisonment for the ‘crime’ of ‘collaborating with the Israeli enemy’.
Empirical research doesn’t cut it with the Kumbaya crew protesting outside Parliament House as they are all barracking for an apocalyptic end to the world as we know it, Piers Akerman writes.
While our echo-chamber ABC is more concerned with toxic tweets, its “little brother” is showing it how public broadcasting is done – at a third of the cost.
There’s no doubt that the early vaccine rollout could have been handled better by the Commonwealth, but Labor leader Anthony Albanese is not helping — and it will backfire, writes Peter Gleeson.
The danger Covid poses is very real, but lockdown frustration is only going to increase — and governments are ill-equipped to deal with the blowback, writes Piers Akerman.
No wonder the Army has been called in to Sydney, we’ve been fed fear filtered by opportunists, Piers Akerman writes.
If we value our integrity, we have no choice but to help our Afghan friends, Piers Akerman writes.
Cancel culture now appears to apply to our democratic rights in some Labor states, writes Piers Akerman.
The political battle to statutorily install a body advocating for any particular group of Australians based on race is morally repugnant, writes Piers Akerman.
Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/blogs/piers-akerman/page/10