Nick Xenophon

Follow Crikey’s latest coverage of Nick Xenophon. Crikey’s Nick Xenophon coverage includes independent news, blogs and commentary.


Political snippets: The national poker machine party, organic food no healthier

The ALP and their pokie loving ways, and is organic food no healthier?

Political snippets: ACT Labor sells out of pokies

In Richard Farmer’s political bite-sized meaty chunks today: ACT Labor sells off pokies interest — which means anti-Pokies Senator Nick Xenophon, the man with balance of power, will be appeased.

The Media Monitors' Top 20: Hu gives Smith, Bishop and Crean a boost? Exactly

The Stern Hu arrest has unsurprisingly launched Stephen Smith, Julie Bishop and Simon Crean way up the list in the battle for political media airtime.

Nick Xenophon: why I won’t vote for the ETS

In the first in a Crikey series, Senator Nick Xenophon explains why he won’t be voting for the government’s Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme.

Wong’s cynical renewable energy play

The Government is happy to sacrifice its Renewable Energy Target for political expediency.

Will Woolies give Labor $20m for pokies empire?

With Labor now effectively declaring the pokies business was damaging its brand, Woolworths has come to a major fork in the road.

Politicians say the darndest things: Budget 09 in sound bites

Politicians know the power of a snappy sound bite. From “green weeds” to “Groundhog Day”, Budget 09 has given politicians the chance to introduce their latest catch phrases.

Kevin Rudd’s mid-air tantrum week

Stephen Conroy obviously the big mover, but still not all that high on the list from his usual subterranean profile.

Xenophon’s push to improve shield laws

Independent senator Nick Xenophon is working on a plan to force the federal Government to improve its proposed shield laws for journalists’ sources.

Mungo: have a nice trip Kevin, see you next fall

The Prime Minister might feel that even if the economic cycle is still clearly running against him, the political climate at least has changed for the better, writes Mungo MacCallum.

Keep your ETS Safe!

A handy guide

Xenophon’s deal turns water into gold

The Xenophon deal will cause a massive shock to the water buyback market, writes Bernard Keane.

Stimulus secured: A Xenophon stunt — on a massive scale

Today’s passage of the stimulus package is Nick Xenophon’s biggest stunt yet, writes Bernard Keane.

Koalas vs. The Media

The Truth!

Fielding the last man standing in stimulus fest

It’s hard to get excited about the unfolding drama of the Senate’s consideration of the stimulus package, writes Bernard Keane.

Fielding’s $4b stimulus hurdle

Steve Fielding is looming as the biggest threat to passage of the Government’s stimulus package through the Senate. And that’s exactly how the Government wants it, writes Bernard Keane.

Fielding the full sausage in stroganoff-gate

I do confess I have never tried the stroganoff, but the “Parliamentary Burger” – now, I fear, renamed something less creative – is a meal, not just a snack, writes Bernard Keane.

Getting to know the Senate

Maiden speeches from our new Senators…

Richard Farmer’s political bite-sized meaty chunks

Meaty snippets from the home of government, Richard Farmer writes.

The Media Monitors’ Top 20

Big movers of the week come from those pea in a pod South Australians, writes Patrick Baume.

Richard Farmer’s political bite-sized meaty chunks

Canberra’s new man of influence … Cash for trash at Family First … Getting good at this … First hand experience … The Daily Reality Check … The Pick of this Morning’s Political Coverage …

Take note AFL: pokies have undone the NRL

The AFL is increasingly reliant on gaming machine revenue. But it’s not the path to financial security, as the NRL would attest, writes Jeff Wall.

Everyone loves a moral panic

Booze. Gambling. Porn. It’s everywhere, at epidemic levels, apparently, but luckily our politicians are on the case, ready to shake their heads in dismay and demand tougher regulation of stuff that’s nobody else’s business, writes Bernard Keane.

The campaign cashpoint pays out

The votes have been totted up, and now the Electoral Commission is doling out the dosh. The final public funding figures were announced by the AEC yesterday, with seven parties and 15 independent candidates divvying up $49,002,638.51 between them, writes Christian Kerr.

The Senate comes through again for democracy

Four weeks after the election, we finally have the full Senate results. There were no surprises; the only state that was particularly close was Victoria, where the ALP beat the Greens for the last vacancy by about 17,000 votes, writes Charles Richardson.