Brace for chaos: Why America is on edge
The deadlocked race between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris is unlikely to be decided on election night – and the former president is again setting himself to contest the results.
The deadlocked race between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris is unlikely to be decided on election night – and the former president is again setting himself to contest the results.
This US presidential campaign is very different to previous ones and has the country in the grip of a mass panic attack, writes Tom Minear.
It’s safe to say that Albo will be accepted, but just to be ‘completely transparent’, here is the full application here, written by Patrick Carlyon.
Have you ever driven down Dick Ward Drive and seen the big dark blue building on the corner of Totem Rd and wondered if you could stop in for a beer? Now you can, writes Kate Dinning.
Right now Labor looks like a party more interested in winning back Nightcliff than winning back office, writes Matt Cunningham.
Fast forward to 2024 and those triangular stickers now stand for something quite different from hugging trees, writes David Penberthy.
It’s one thing to be loaded after decades in parliament but it’s another to flaunt it so close to an election, writes Samantha Maiden.
Tolerance is a core Australian value and the pro-Islamic terrorism demonstrations show none whatsoever if you disagree with them, writes Alexander Downer.
This week revealed about 68,000 reasons Australia has problem with people who simply cannot help themselves, writes David Penberthy.
Twitter censoring a story about Joe Biden’s son infuriated Donald Trump in 2020. Now, Elon Musk’s X is awash with pro-Trump misinformation, and Tom Minear can’t get over the hypocrisy.
It’s the biggest cause of arguments between parents and kids — how much time they spend scrolling on their phones — which is why it’s time the Government stepped up and helped, argues Julie Cross.
In 2018 I applauded Labor for introducing the alcohol floor price measure, because it was one that appeared to be based on evidence. Six years later, I’ve seen little evidence it has any significant impact, writes Matt Cunningham.
Australians understand that false claims spread at speed and scale on social media. Conspiracy theories go from fringe to mainstream in a matter of hours, and can put lives at risk, argues Michelle Rowland.
We’re meant to be the ones who stand up against political correctness and the incessant policing of language, writes Caleb Bond.
Original URL: https://www.ntnews.com.au/news/opinion/page/5