Why Trump shooting saves and dooms Biden
The shocking assassination attempt on Donald Trump has likely stopped Joe Biden from quitting the race, but it may have fatally damaged his campaign.
The shocking assassination attempt on Donald Trump has likely stopped Joe Biden from quitting the race, but it may have fatally damaged his campaign.
As Donald Trump arrived in Milwaukee for the Republican convention the mood will become more tense once the event begins, writes Tom Minear.
While Sir Keir Starmer and his Labour followers will celebrate, not everyone that voted for him will be dancing for joy, writes Julie Cross.
Voters stopped listening to Rishi Sunak and the Tories months ago and have just been waiting for their chance to kick them out, writes Sky News’ Laura Jayes.
People say they care about climate change – but they care about cost of living even more, writes Caleb Bond.
Finding the debate over nuclear power super-annoying? You’re not the only one, writes David Mills.
The blueprint into the future of Australia’s Navy is a good one but should have come earlier, writes Charles Miranda.
A collective insanity has taken hold and the search for the golden ticket – aka Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour tix – has turned normally reasonable parents into wild-eyed lunatics.
We are hearing first-hand from parents, schools, charities and community organisations about the benefits of the School Student Broadband Initiative, writes Michelle Rowland.
As Joe Biden trips over his words and his feet, voters wonder if he is too old to be the President. A scathing new assessment of his memory certainly won’t help.
For Anthony Albanese, an unscripted moment was particularly awkward given the mounting criticism of his travel schedule – 18 overseas trips in 18 months.
It was Anthony Albanese’s rare moment on the world stage. So why did his office try to hide part of it? Tom Minear argues it’s part of a depressing trend.
Ten’s decision to go with a new look MasterChef line up was the right call, says TV writer Lisa Woolford.
Opponents questioned the focus on The Voice when this was a crisis. I’m not convinced either way. But it might help trigger needed change, argues Matt Cunningham.
Original URL: https://www.thechronicle.com.au/news/queensland/ipswich/opinion/page/11