Labor MPs deaf or defiant on RBA
This is an ill-disciplined political pile-on that reeks of desperation and is clearly fuelled by frustration.
This is an ill-disciplined political pile-on that reeks of desperation and is clearly fuelled by frustration.
If Anthony Albanese has realistic hopes of being returned to office with a majority, absolutely everything must go right for Labor. For the Coalition to pull off an upset victory, everything must go wrong.
A majority of voters do not believe Labor deserves to be re-elected, but they remain hesitant to swing behind Peter Dutton in sufficient numbers for the Coalition to win a majority.
Jim Chalmers has been privately telling Labor colleagues not to speculate on an interest-rate cut ahead of the RBA board meeting, in an effort to manage expectations of relief.
More than $600m has been shaved off the projected budget forecast for NDIS in the first seven months of the financial year despite almost 20,000 new participants joining the scheme in the past quarter alone.
The traditional generational split has become a multi-generational schism that has been gradually building over the past two years.
Treasury is monitoring the takeover of one of the nation’s biggest critical mineral companies, as the chair of Global Lithium Resources quit after losing a battle with a group of China-linked shareholders.
The political optics demand the PM secures a win on tariffs, not least of all to buttress attacks that he is a weak leader. The early signs are encouraging that he may well get there.
The PM clearly never envisaged a world in which he himself would have to deal with Trump as US President. Now he potentially has his own personal trade war to deal with.
The swing against Labor in the Victorian party’s heartland of Werribee will be sounding alarm bells in the national campaign office.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/simon-benson/page/11