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Crikey is an independent news website featuring commentary on politics, media, business, culture and technology.

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Senator Ralph Babet (Image: Private Media/Zennie)

‘Demonic and deranged’: Should we be worried about our MAGA-pilled Victorian senator?

UAP Senator Ralph Babet was always quite weird. But lately he seems to be heading further down the MAGA-hole.

Rupert Murdoch in 1982 (Image: Alamy)

My flirtation with Murdoch only lasted two years before my moral compass became too dysfunctional

In this exclusive extract from his new book, Eric Beecher describes his first exposure to the subterranean world of media moguldom.

Donald Trump (Image: AP/Alex Brandon)

Harris has turned this from a rout into a contest, and The Donald is rattled

Kamala Harris’ candidacy has knocked Team Trump sideways, and the former president is responding with his worst, most obsessive bitterness and pettiness.

Whispers, keystrokes, fragile stories: What it’s like reporting on the Wieambilla inquest

Watching the Wieambilla inquest up close reinforced my faith in court reporting. But one part of the process left a sour note.

The Wieambilla inquest’s impossible task

Inquiries like the one into the Wieambilla shooting are designed to be as emotionless as possible. But inevitably the grief and pain seep through.

Masha Gessen (Image: Alamy/Jan Woitas)

‘Goodies for the war criminal’: Masha Gessen on Netanyahu, Trump and Rupert Murdoch’s influence in Australia

Ahead of their visit to Australia, acclaimed writer Masha Gessen talks to Crikey about their homeland of Russia, the war in Gaza, the upcoming US election, and reasons to be hopeful.

Adults don’t have to be competent to vote, so why not enfranchise young children?

A Cambridge academic says six-year-olds should get the right to vote, arguing democracy needs a jolt of radical change in order to survive.

Ray Lawler (Image: Currency Press)

Yes, The Doll is a great play. Now, Australian theatre companies need to rebuild the canon

Ray Lawler created one of the most playable works extant. There are others available, if we kick the addiction to ‘improved’ Shakespeare and German Shrieking.

A Rex Airlines worker looks on as a plane arrives (Image: AAP/Luis Ascui)

Rex is Labor’s chance to terrify Qantas and curtail its gouging, lying and rorting

A bailout of Rex Airlines is the perfect vehicle for the government to re-enter aviation and subject Qantas to real competition.

Just how cooked is the Australian media industry?

Things are looking bleak for the local news business. Crikey runs through some of the key numbers.

Watch Hong Kong (not Reno) to understand what News Corp is really up to

News Corp’s Wall Street Journal has sacked a reporter who was elected head of the Hong Kong Journalists Association. In doing so, the company has shown once and for all just which side it’s on.

Defence Minister Richard Marles (Image: AAP/Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire)

AUKUS is a fiscal crime — no amount of propaganda will change that

Have defenders of AUKUS actually bother to read the long list of scathing ANAO reports on how bad the defence department is?

International students are not to blame for the housing crisis

Education is a hugely successful export industry for Australia. So why is the Albanese government trying to kill it? 

The Australian oil and gas sector understood the danger posed by fossil fuel combustion back in the ’70s

In a new book, journalist Royce Kurmelovs look at the origins of the Australian petroleum industry, investigating what these companies knew about climate change when, and how they learnt to wield influence.

Can multiculturalism survive and thrive in the age of securitisation? 

Unless security and multiculturalism are put on an equal footing, without the agendas of the former subsuming those of the latter, there can hardly be an effective pathway towards social cohesion.

Independent MP Kylea Tink (Image: Private Media)

Hard Solo and human rights: Why Kylea Tink won’t go quietly

The teal MP says she’s ‘gutted’ that her seat is set to be abolished, but is determined to make the most of every single minute she has left.

Independent MP Andrew Wilkie (Image: Private Media/Zennie)

‘Like being king hit’: How Andrew Wilkie weaponises whistleblowing

The veteran crossbencher says he won’t enter any formal deals in future hung Parliaments. But he’s found a powerful way to use parliamentary privilege.

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Rupert Murdoch and his children (Image: Private Media/Zennie)

Rupert Murdoch’s ‘Project Harmony’ shows just how vulnerable Lachlan is

This action by Rupert underlines that no matter Lachlan’s achievements as CEO and successor, his position remains vulnerable. 

Prudence, Elisabeth and James Murdoch (Images: Alamy, Wikimedia, AAP)

Who are the other Murdoch siblings?

Who are James, Elisabeth and Prudence Murdoch, and why is Rupert trying to stop them from influencing News Corp’s future?

David Cameron in 2010 (Image: AP/Matt Dunham)

Austerity has broken Britain and imperilled the Tories. Coalition, take note

The likelihood of the next Australian election rehashing the core themes of the 2010 UK vote is rising. Yet we can see where this eventually leads: public ruin and electoral oblivion.

Former US president Donald Trump (Image: PA/Alamy)

Abortion rights could be a trump card for Biden in November

Two years since Roe v Wade was overturned, reproductive rights could affect the outcome of the US presidential race.

I’m one of countless young Australians at the mercy of a mental health system under strain

Will Crisfield has firsthand experience dealing with a health system that is struggling to keep up with demand.

Climate protesters Max O’Donnell Curmi, Matilda Lane-Rose and Laura Davy (Images: Facebook/Supplied)

Australia’s criminalisation of peaceful protest is a stain on our democracy

‘The health of our planet hangs in the balance while those entrusted with legislative power prioritise short-term political gain over the well-being of future generations.’

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen (Image: EPA/Olivier Hoslet)

What does the rise of the right mean for Europe’s Green Deal?

Dubbed Europe’s ‘man on the moon’ moment, the Green Deal has driven the EU to raise renewable energy targets and enforce stricter emissions reduction goals. Could it be under threat?