Clever fix goes to waste in Aussie gas dilemma
With a little ingenuity, an unglamorous resource could help solve a big problem for Australia, writes David Gillespie.
With a little ingenuity, an unglamorous resource could help solve a big problem for Australia, writes David Gillespie.
The pressure is getting to the Prime Minister, writes Samantha Maiden, after a very shaky week under the shadow of an anti-Semitism storm.
This weekend proves those demonstrations in support of Hamas and Hezbollah and their puppeteers in Tehran were in vain, writes Alexander Downer.
Only a delusional government believes that you can run an economy using part-time and unreliable power, writes Opposition Leader Peter Dutton.
The shocking assassination attempt on Donald Trump has likely stopped Joe Biden from quitting the race, but it may have fatally damaged his campaign.
As Donald Trump arrived in Milwaukee for the Republican convention the mood will become more tense once the event begins, writes Tom Minear.
While Sir Keir Starmer and his Labour followers will celebrate, not everyone that voted for him will be dancing for joy, writes Julie Cross.
Voters stopped listening to Rishi Sunak and the Tories months ago and have just been waiting for their chance to kick them out, writes Sky News’ Laura Jayes.
This wasn’t a competition; it was a wipe-out. But there was something Donald Trump did that left Biden appearing frail, confused and dazed, writes body language expert Katia Loisel.
The bigotry on display against Jerry Seinfeld across Australia and a despicable attack on a Labor MP leave no more room for excuses, writes David Penberthy.
The first US presidential debate was a disaster for Joe Biden. It was so bad that, for the first time, his allies finally began to speak publicly about their panic, says Tom Minear.
I’ll always believe that Morant was following orders and that he became a scapegoat of empire – but he was also a war criminal, writes Peter Goers.
You can blame journalists or Labor’s inability to make an argument stick if you want, but there’s only one word to describe this “indefensible” furore, writes Samantha Maiden.
Too many frail elderly Aussies like my dad are forced to take up a hospital bed while they wait for aged care, writes Sue Dunlevy. And some are still waiting after six months.
Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/tweed-heads/opinion/page/13