Pathbreaker with mind of an outsider
There was never any silver bullet to explain Rupert Murdoch’s success. It was a function of a creative mind, a tenacious spirit and a massive work ethic.
There was never any silver bullet to explain Rupert Murdoch’s success. It was a function of a creative mind, a tenacious spirit and a massive work ethic.
The political motive is embarrassing in its transparency. It’s ‘fix-it’ politics guaranteed to do more brand damage to the government.
Rupert Murdoch was never satisfied with the status quo. He was always looking for the next big idea. Even as he got older, at an age when most people would be retired, he was a change agent.
The history is clear: the more significant the reform, the more difficult the referendum. That’s why the passage of the voice will break the mould. It will mean Australia has changed fundamentally.
Australian democracy is about to be shaken up. Jacinta Nampijinpa Price’s alternative vision issues a challenge for the elites.
The former RBA governor’s theme seems clear: politicians must lift their game, recognise the limits to monetary policy and confront structural obstacles stifling wages and living standards
Anthony Albanese ignored the wise steps needed for a successful referendum. Now Australia is heading towards a dangerous political showdown on October 14.
The train wreck represented everything Labor is supposed to reject: exploiting travellers, protecting Qantas from its rivals and putting customers at the end of the line
As Australia faces its rich nation dilemma, Jim Chalmers has put his ambition up in lights and in the process increased expectations about the delivery. The gap between the challenge and the response cannot be missed.
Jim Chalmers must act on the grim outlook in the latest Intergenerational Report.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/paul-kelly/page/16