Channel 9’s man-made disaster – where they went wrong
The latest leaders’ debate must surely have come as blessed relief to those for whom whalesong or sleeping tablets just wouldn’t do the trick, writes Joe Hildebrand.
The latest leaders’ debate must surely have come as blessed relief to those for whom whalesong or sleeping tablets just wouldn’t do the trick, writes Joe Hildebrand.
It is impossible to analyse the election without looking at the effect such a massive and profound global event will have on it, writes Joe Hildebrand.
This debate revealed Peter Dutton and Anthony Albanese are fundamentally different political animals on a level much deeper than mere politics, argues James Morrow.
Last night’s debate was a chance to rev up this tedious election campaign. Unfortunately, we’ve seen higher stakes on Lego Masters, writes James Weir.
The Prime Minister will use the budget to try to bribe his way back to office but stop and consider everything that’s going wrong and how the government is making it worse, writes Peta Credlin.
Brace yourself Australia, your power bills are going up again and not for the reason the man in charge wants you to believe, writes Caleb Bond.
Treasurer Jim Chalmers’ transition to an old man should be seamless based on his recent behaviour, writes Matt Canavan.
Peter Dutton’s plan to make Australia safe again via a costly referendum to expel the handful of unworthy immigrants is straight out of the Trump handbook, writes Robert Schwarten. VOTE IN OUR POLL
There are three primary reasons that could explain the new position the Opposition Leader finds himself in, writes Samantha Maiden.
You can call me a heretic if you want but Australia’s mad approach to the climate crisis has to change, writes Alexander Downer.
Increasing the tax-free threshold by $10,000 for parents for every child they have, delivers a real solution, without the inefficiency of government handouts, writes Brian Marlow.
Those unable to afford batteries and solar panels will wind up footing the bill for those who do, transferring money from the working class to the wealthy, writes Cristina Talacko.
Voters have never been asked what they think about bringing in hundreds of thousands of people a year to pump up GDP and fill the coffers of the tertiary education sector, writes JAMES MORROW.
Readers have had their say on what they think about the Greens Party facing a federal election wipe-out. See the comments.
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