Last Post, May 10
Bill Shorten is keeping Australians in the dark.
Bill Shorten is keeping Australians in the dark.
Penny Wong didn’t like what Simon Birmingahm said so she shunned him.
It is not ‘dishonest’ to pose questions about the cost of Labor’s climate and renewables policies.
We should see the virtue in Bill Shorten’s mother’s effort.
The Morrison government should pay heed to Graham Richardson’s advice.
The LGBTI lobby should examine its own shortcomings.
Costs of inaction do not make the case for drastic action
The cash refunds to retirees are not ‘gifts’
One would expect proper grammar from an English prince, wouldn’t one?
Scott Morrison singular style shows that he is authentic.
Footballers who abuse alcohol and drugs are soon back on the field, but Israel Folau is pursued for his beliefs.
Voters seem deaf to reasoned argument and blind to the implcations of a Labor government.
The penny has dropped on Zali Steggall.
The election offers a choice between prudent economic management or the likelihood of higher debt.
It’s all very well to feel virtuous about ending coal exports, but how would the economy deal with the loss of earnings?
When bipartisan economic modellers have their houses egged, democracy is under threat.
Bill Shorten’s response to economist’s modelling was disgraceful.
The black-throated finch saga plays into the Coalition’s hands.
Labor’s climate change policies don’t add up.
The truth about the Greens is that they are just virtue signallers.
The simple fact about Labor’s climate approach is that it won’t help the climate but will wreck the economy.
A Labor government would signal the start of economic decline.
Labor has made a mistake by putting a worthy candidate in an unwinnable spot on the Senate ticket.
Now that the polls have tightened, Labor probably can’t win without support of the Greens.
Holding out for the steak knives
But none could doubt his genius
Labor and the Liberals have opposite philosophies when it comes to money
Coal and iron will have to fund Bill Shorten’s spending spree.
Bill Shorten has taken profligacy to new heights.
Adani protesters should understand how miners support farmers and rural workers.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/letters/page/186