NSW budget: Winners and losers
Women, first-home buyers and western Sydney residents came out on top, while public servants and foreigners will be hit in the hip pocket.
Women, first-home buyers and western Sydney residents came out on top, while public servants and foreigners will be hit in the hip pocket.
Invoking the ‘courageous advocacy’ of Grace Tame, Matt Kean delivered a budget aimed squarely at women voters.
This year’s Queen’s Birthday Honours paid tribute to those Australians who’ve marched to the beat of their own drum.
Liberal leader Peter Dutton commits to supporting ‘any sensible proposal’ put forward by Labor to prevent suspected terrorists from returning to Australia.
High Court decision effectively opens legal door for up to 20 more convicted or suspected IS fighters.
The Perrottet governmen is at odds with the state’s corruption watchdog by refusing to make pork barrelling an offence.
After 99 days of hearings and $30m tipped into the pockets of lawyers, the de facto war crimes trial of Ben Roberts-Smith has come to a close.
The NSW corruption watchdog is to consider whether pork-barrelling is lawful or constitutes corrupt conduct under the state’s anti-corruption legislation.
China’s aggressive bid for influence in the Pacific will depend in part on the outcome of an epic struggle for power between Fiji’s rival strongmen.
China’s most influential state tabloid has launched a broadside at Australia’s new Foreign Minister Penny Wong, accusing her of trying to drive a wedge between China and Pacific nations.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/stephen-rice/page/55