Wording aside, the voice will end in tears
It’s fine for the PM to choke up in announcing the proposed question, but voters are entitled to know whether the voice will cause tears all around
It’s fine for the PM to choke up in announcing the proposed question, but voters are entitled to know whether the voice will cause tears all around
The government’s new cultural policy is an exercise in replacing identity politics for aesthetic judgment
The government’s proposed definition of super’s purpose creates enormous scope for further mischief.
The moral responsibilities associated with freedom of expression become even more pressing when government sponsorship is involved, as is the case with Adelaide Writers Week.
Although the NBN was always set to make large losses, Malcolm Turnbull helped prevent it becoming an absolute disaster.
The road to peace lies through victory, not by submitting to Vladimir Putin’s aggression.
Unless the Reserve Bank is held to clear, well-specified objectives it will continue to fail the community.
Two recent cases pose a question with distant roots about prosecutors’ accountability for the exercise of their responsibilities
Unless Jim Chalmers shows a capacity for credible and dispassionate analysis, including of Labor’s own errors, past mistakes will be repeated.
Symbolic politics, which confuses illusions for solutions, won’t cure Indigenous Australia’s woes. Rather, it has done so much to create the mess we’re in.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/henry-ergas/page/14