Pre-election prison paper’s eleventh-hour court win
The publishers of a pre-election newspaper have won an eleventh hour legal victory after the Corrections Department allowed a redacted version to be distributed to prisoners.
The publishers of a pre-election newspaper have won an eleventh hour legal victory after the Corrections Department allowed a redacted version to be distributed to prisoners.
Scott Morrison is on perilously thin ice but Labor is desperately hoping Anthony Albanese doesn’t make a fatal stumble, Paul Starick writes.
The Coalition might have the edge in the race for Geelong’s marginal seat, but polling revealed the race is far from over.
For the Hunter Valley, any divorce from coal would be much more than just a sentimental or political issue, writes Tim Blair.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison was given a batch of special federal election souvenir beer cans with “ScoMo’s Strong Economy”.
In our first Campaign Confidential column, we look at whether Albo’s other blunder will cost him the election. Plus the latest betting odds, and what ScoMo and Albo really have in common.
For the past six elections, a Boothby booth has picked the federal election winner – and an early analysis has left Scott Morrison with serious questions to answer.
A group of protesters chanting and wearing Hawaiian shirts have confronted the PM while Anthony Albanese has been heckled about Kimberley Kitching.
He’s happy to reel off the price of petrol, fuel and milk but Labor leader Anthony Albanese has spectacularly come undone on two economy questions. Here’s how it unfolded.
Anthony Albanese has told colleagues he “f***ked up” and it “won’t happen again” after Monday’s trainwreck press conference.
Labor women’s spokeswoman Tanya Plibersek has acknowledged the “very important federal responsibility” of family law, but not answered a question over whether her party will commit to a review of the embattled system.
Clive Palmer has walked back on a surprising election promise, insisting reports on his comments made on live TV were “fake news”.
Crossbenchers will decide who forms government in what is predicted to be a tight election result based on a string of key demands.
The pathway to victory will not be easy for the Coalition or the Labor Party as “both have a murky path ahead of them”. Here’s why. See the list.
Original URL: https://www.ntnews.com.au/news/national/federal-election/page/156