PM’s friendless agenda is put out of its misery
The centrepiece of Anthony Albanese’s second-term election agenda has just been taken out behind the Senate shed and quietly put down.
The centrepiece of Anthony Albanese’s second-term election agenda has just been taken out behind the Senate shed and quietly put down.
A majority of voters expect a hung parliament at the next federal election, as Labor’s primary vote falls and the Coalition increases its primary vote lead.
Despite taxpayer-funded wage rises, income tax cuts and energy rebates, and hints of more handouts to come, support for Labor continues to soften.
Newly independent ‘no-strings attached’ senator says – Palestine-related or not – she wants to scrutinise the motion first, amid the news that ‘preference whisperer’ Glenn Druery will be her CoS.
As vile as the Iranian ambassador to Australia’s comments about Israel may be, there are unfortunate strategic reasons why we can’t punt him.
A game of chicken now appears to be evolving between the central bank and the federal government, a day after the RBA’s implicit warning about public sector overspend.
Instead of cutting back on the carbs, the Treasurer has simply changed the scales to get headline inflation back within the 2-3 per cent range by Christmas.
Jim Chalmers’ big-spending approach may well end up being the right one, as circumstances conspire to create an environment that suits Labor’s predetermined agenda.
Having failed to deliver the voice and left politically damaged from the experience, Labor crawled into a hole on Indigenous policy leaving the prospect of pursuing the rest of the Uluru statement a diminished hope at best.
The RBA is likely to keep rates on hold next week after the inflation data, but Jim Chalmers and Anthony Albanese are now unlikely to get a rate cut before the election.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/simon-benson/page/22