Credlin: Albo is not cut out for the top job as PM
Anthony Albanese is affable and seems genuine but he’s not up to the job as PM as his gaffe-prone campaign — and litany of misjudgments and mistakes — prove, Peta Credlin writes.
Anthony Albanese is affable and seems genuine but he’s not up to the job as PM as his gaffe-prone campaign — and litany of misjudgments and mistakes — prove, Peta Credlin writes.
Malcolm Turnbull doesn’t seem grateful the Liberal Party once gave him the prime ministership. What’s with these entitled grandees thinking their personal political preference is all that counts? Peta Credlin asks.
Three years on we have another Mother’s Day before an election. Will it prove as decisive as the last, wonders Peter Gleeson.
Labor traditionally railed against elites and the ruling class but it no longer fights for the underdogs who were once the soul of the party, writes Vikki Campion.
Tony Abbott is a hunted man, under savage attack because he holds the most important seat in this election. And it’s because his enemies know how drastically a topple in Waringah will change Australia, writes Andrew Bolt.
Whatever happens elsewhere in the country, the Liberal Party looks set to be crushed in Victoria on Saturday, and there will be plenty of finger pointing when it happens, writes James Campbell.
There are countless factors that will influence the outcome on Saturday, but here are just 10 that have stuck in the public’s mind the most.
After a sometimes fiery, sometimes dull election campaign, Australians finally go to the polls on Saturday. Our experts add their prediction – and their humour – on what will happen.
Scott Morrison and Bill Shorten passionately agree on probably just one thing — tomorrow’s election is a clear choice between vastly different policy agendas which will shape Australia over coming years.
In the 2017 Grand Final, Crows fans felt we had one hand on the trophy. Then it all went awry. The election has all the same hallmarks of the favourites losing at the last minute, writes Christopher Pyne.
In recent years we have seen chaos and division in the House of Reps, but it’s the Senate where the real freak show has been underway, writes Kate Ellis.
Another national poll tells roughly the same story as all previous polls — that Labor is on track to form government, and there are eerie parallels to Gough Whitlam’s 1972 victory, writes James Campbell.
The only way to have lower taxes and more jobs is to vote Liberal this Saturday, says SA Liberal Senator Simon Birmingham.
It’s a problem hitting families across the country, and it could decide the election — especially in this massive region, where it’s crippling thousands.
Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/national/federal-election/analysis/page/16