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

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Anthony Albanese and Housing Minister Clare O'Neil (Image: AAP/Dan Himbrechts)

Labor is ‘staring down’ the annoying Greens on housing. But is that smart politics?

The Albanese government is reportedly giving away ‘nothing’ in negotiations with the Greens on housing. It might be smarter to give an inch.

A Sportsbet ad featuring AFL media figures Tony Jones, Damien Barrett, Sam McClure and Kane Cornes

‘People will swim through shit for a dollar’: A list of AFL stars and journos on the gambling payroll

You can’t escape sports gambling advertising, especially in football. How deep does it go? Crikey lists as many AFL media personalities as we could find who are publicly involved in the betting industry.

TNT Radio CEO and host Mike Ryan (Image: TNT Radio)

TNT Radio, a network for conspiracy theorists and fringe politicians, is shutting its doors

‘Because we’re a free speech platform, what we found is that no-one really wants free speech,’ said the network’s CEO and flagship host.

Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz hugs his son, Gus Walz (Image: EPA/Justin Lane)

What Tim Walz’s version of masculinity can teach the right

Public displays of affection between Tim Walz and his teen son have been criticised as ‘weird’. But right-wing critics could learn much from this version of masculinity.

Reality continues to come apart following *another* attempt on Trump’s life

Within hours of the incident, the hashtag #StagedAssassinationAttempt began to trend on X.

Former Test captain slams ‘mainstream media’ for silence over Fox Sports cricket chief’s secret account

‘I thought that is a very big story. I wonder what mainstream media’s got to say about it. Crickets,’ said former Australian men’s captain Tim Paine.

(Image: Private Media/Zennie)

Why did we call Peter Dutton racist? And does it matter?

Calling out Peter Dutton’s racist remarks was as much about mapping the growing role of white grievance as about examining his character.

A Victorian Electoral Commission official sorts ballot papers (Image: AAP/James Ross)

Truth in political advertising laws work. Why don’t all states and territories enact them?

South Australia, having operated its political advertising law since 1985 without impeding freedom of speech, is an inspirational example, one researcher said. 

NIMBYs are making our cities uglier

These eyesores are the product of a system built to appease NIMBYs.

An installation view of Leslie Eastman's "The Cave, The Flood", 2024. This image, edited by Crikey, shows how the installation appears during the day (left) and at night when the exhibition is closed (right) (Image: Hayden Gallery/Supplied)

‘I’m no supporter of Hamas’: Artist defends exhibition against News Corp’s article

An exhibition in a Melbourne gallery has been accused of ‘legitimising a terror group’. The artist tells Crikey nothing could be further from his intention.

The Murdoch family tree (Image: Private Media/Zennie)

The Murdoch succession drama kicks off this week. Here’s everything you need to know

The future of a media company. A family trust. Sparring children. This isn’t Succession — it’s a Murdoch family legal stoush. Crikey explains what’s unfolding this week.

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump (Image: AAP/EPA/Caroline Brehman)

Speaking to Republicans in the Wheat Belt, for whom Trump is the lesser of two evils

In a small community outside Fargo, North Dakota, hardly any of the people Wanning Sun met were fans of Donald Trump. Many will end up voting Republican despite him.

Max Chandler-Mather (Image: Private Media/Zennie)

People think Max Chandler-Mather is annoying. Does he care?

The Greens housing spokesperson annoys the hell out of Labor. He reckons he’s speaking for the majority.

Reader reply: The media’s silence on the shocking police violence at Land Forces is shameful

‘In volatile situations, good policing aims for de-escalation. What I witnessed and experienced on Wednesday was the antithesis of this.’

Independent MP Zali Steggall (Image: AAP/Private Media/Zennie)

Zali Steggall stands by telling Dutton to ‘stop being racist’, yet is no Green on Gaza

Independent MP Zali Steggall tells Crikey she wasn’t planning to call the opposition racist but did so after heckling.

Kate Chaney (Image: Zennie/Private Media)

Against the odds: Chaney believes the government could still change its mind on gambling

How does the member for Curtin maintain her optimism when the government won’t even pass gambling reforms backed by a Labor-chaired committee?

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7 logo (Image: AAP/Scott Barbour)

The biggest perpetrators of misinformation and privacy breaches will escape new laws

Social media misinformation and doxxing will be subjected to new laws while the worst offenders and privacy breachers will escape scrutiny.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers (Image: AAP/Lukas Coch)

Time for the Financial Review to be honest: It wants a punitive recession

The AFR should stop misleading its readers and be upfront about what it wants: a recession to inflict misery on workers.

Rupert Murdoch and Elon Musk (Images: AAP/Private Media)

Murdoch to Musk: How global media power has shifted from the moguls to the big tech bros

Are we better off with tech bros who assert their influence brazenly, or old-style media moguls who exert influence under the cover of journalism?

Russian President Vladimir Putin (Image: EPA/Sofia Sandurskaya/Sputnik)

Russian propaganda talking points would be very familiar to News Corp audiences

The Murdoch media has an enormous impact on Australian political discourse. But where are its ideas coming from?

Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance (Image: AP/Matt York)

Why ‘pronatalist’ politicians want voters to have more babies

It’s not just JD Vance, and it’s not just the US. Almost 30% of countries globally now have pronatalist policies — up from 10% in the 1970s.

France's newly appointed prime minister, Michel Barnier (Image: AAP/Stephan de Sakutin)

Macron’s new PM takes French politics from emergency to farce

History may in fact remember Macron as a handmaiden to the far-right.

Reserve Bank governor Michele Bullock (Image: AAP/Lukas Coch)

The weak economy is at a painful turning point, one that might finally prove to be unspinnable

The government’s economic critics want it both ways — complaining it’s not doing enough to lower inflation while also not doing enough to support growth.

A Bunnings store in Sydney (Image: AAP/Stephen Coates)

Bunnings is no longer the beating heart of the Wesfarmers whale

New homes are rare and that means fewer trips to hardware shops.

Proteters outside NDIS Minister Bill Shorten's office (Image: Patrick Marlborough)

‘This protest is now a public funeral’: Disability ‘sicko’ activists picket Shorten’s office over NDIS

‘I can’t go on doing this. I can’t fill out any more forms. I can’t keep having to prove that I’m sick, that I need help.’

Anthony Albanese and NDIS Minister Bill Shorten (Image: AAP/Lukas Coch)

NDIS and aged care: It’s not just about fiscal sustainability

Reducing the rate of growth of the NDIS isn’t just about the cost to the budget — the workforce for disability care can’t keep up.

Anthony Albanese and WA Premier Roger Cook (Image: AAP)

Toxic cost of Labor’s WA obsession just keeps growing

The Albanese government is governing in the West Australian interest, not the national interest. And that means giving control of policy to some of the worst corporate actors in the country.

Bob Brown, then Greens leader, in 2009 (Image: AAP/Alan Porritt)

How everything became about the Greens blocking the CPRS in 2009

Labor reminded the Greens yesterday of the party’s rejection of the carbon pollution reduction scheme in 2009. It wasn’t the first time.