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Commissioner Dyson Heydon during the 2014 Royal Commission into Trade Union Governance and Corruption (Image: AAP/Oculi.com.au, Jeremy Piper)

Funny how the ‘rule of law’ crowd was deathly silent when the government was trashing it

'Rule of law' is the new 'free speech': something you defend when convenient and trample if it gets in your way.

Christian Porter and the alleged victim at a formal debate team dinner, Sydney University, January 1988 (Image: provided)

Here’s one for an independent inquiry: did recovered memories target Christian Porter?

The idea of 'recovered memories' has a very complicated and controversial history.

Rupert Murdoch is far from dead. He’s almost 90 — and still kicking arse

The ageing patriarch has had a new lease of corporate life, and it looks like none of the kids want his crown.

Aged care royal commission identifies same old problems, calls for new solutions

Getting aged care right means addressing longstanding workforce issues. Can this government do any better than those that came before?

Core argument: nuclear energy is neither saviour nor sinner — just one for the mix

Australia's anti-nuclear power argument is driven by emotion, while the pro-nuclear camp has its head in the clouds. How do we resolve the fisson?

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(Image: Unsplash/Daan Stevens)

Aged care will stay broken until our leaders show heart and humanity

It's easy to promise reform, but good policy only come from leaders who understand those who are subject to it.

ABC chief political correspondent Laura Tingle (Image: AAP/Lukas Coch)

Press gallery A-team captures the mood of the nation — and they’re all women

The PM's 'smug silence' is no match for the likes of Samantha Maiden and Katharine Murphy.

(Image: Mitchell Squire/Private Media)

If he were a teacher, would you be happy for him to keep teaching your kids?

In some respects Christian Porter's role is one of a higher public trust than that of the prime minister. He is also accused of committing a heinous crime. That, like it or not, hangs over his head.

(Image: Adobe)

When it comes to pandemic spending, Australia’s got the goods

The pandemic halted Australia's services consumption in its tracks. Instead, we've just been buying lots of stuff.

(Image: Supplied)

The JobKeeper gravy train is stopping at a station near you — even though some passengers have jumped

Crikey's corporate welfare awards continue. Which companies managed to turn JobKeeper into shareholder cash — and who has had a crisis of conscience?

(Image: Tom Red/Private Media)

COVID quack Craig Kelly jumps before the Liberals push him

Scott Morrison is likely to be pleased that, while Craig Kelly's move to the crossbench will make legislating more difficult, he will no longer have to answer for the backbencher's otiose pronouncements.

(Image: AAP/Dean Lewins)

Does success at controlling the pandemic mean you don’t have one?

John Pilger recently criticised Australia's 'COVID scaremongering in a pandemic-free society'. Did he have a point?

(AAP Image/Mick Tsikas) NO ARCHIVING

From silence to gobbledygook: the non-lies that politicians use to lie to us

Scott Morrison has learned their tricks from every leader that's came before.

(Image: Lukas Coch)

Everyone agrees reputations need protecting. But for the AG it’s an obsession

Christian Porter's almost fanatical defence of people's reputations has been cast in new light.

(Image: Tom Red/Private Media)

Porter shredded the rule of law. He shouldn’t hide behind what’s left of it

Christian Porter insists he must not step aside in order to protect the rule of law. Yet as attorney-general he has trashed that very thing.

Attorney-General Christian Porter addresses media in Perth over historic rape allegations (Image: AAP/Richard Wainwright)

Trial by media: Porter’s big claim exposes media faultlines from Perth to Canberra

Does the attorney-general seriously suggest — and believe — that journalists shouldn't ask questions about serious allegations?

Christian Porter and the alleged victim at a formal debate team dinner, Sydney University, January 1988 (Image: provided)

‘We’ve been stonewalled’: friends of allegedly raped women support inquiry

Friends of the woman at the centre of the Christian Porter rape allegations say they have been stonewalled and ignored by the prime minister and the attorney-general.

Photos taken by members of the Australian Defence Force during the 'children overboard' affair. (Image: AAP/Defence PR)

Straight-faced and bald-faced: the lies that hoodwink an unsuspecting public

Why do politicians keep on lying? Because it works — and because even if they're called out the mud doesn't stick for long.

Nine CEO Mike Sneesby (right) with Nine chairman Peter Costello (Image: AAP/Dean Lewins)

Give Nine chairman Peter Costello credit where it’s due

Suggestions that Peter Costello is behind the recent chaos in Nine's boardroom should be taken with a grain of salt.

Nine CEO Mike Sneesby (right) with Nine chairman Peter Costello (Image: AAP/Dean Lewins)

Nine finally finds a new CEO but not before hitting the Fairfax mob for four

Infighting at Nine has culminated in Mike Sneesby being appointed CEO, effectively ending the old Fairfax Media regime.

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg (Image: AAP/Lukas Coch)

Australian media policy: of the mates, by the mates, for the mates

The news media bargaining code is part of the grand tradition of media policy being run in the interests of media proprietors — and with no heed given to the public benefit.