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The stench of corruption from Morrison is becoming all-pervasive in Canberra

If Scott Morrison and Alan Tudge thought the scandal of rorting hundreds of millions of dollars of taxpayer money had been left behind, they had a rude awakening this week. And their efforts to escape the perception of corruption were laboured at best.

Former Palmer United and One Nation candidate Teresa van Lieshout (Image: YouTube)

The inside story: how homegrown ‘true patriots’ sharing conspiracies on a Zoom call sparked police raids across three states

Police raids across the country earlier this week highlight how online chatter about conspiracy theories can mutate into real-world consequences.

News Corp splashes the cash, talks Foxtel ‘options’ — but silence on YouTube ban

Awash with capital, News Corp is weighing up its options, primarily the future of Foxtel.

Sadly, the young and the restless will have to wait for their truths to be told

Articles that go viral lead to book contracts. But Bridie Jabour's scathing brilliance in the original piece does not translate across to this volume.

New strains, fake authors, and cancel culture alive and well…. in heaven!

Do you love the news? Prove it! Take Crikey's Question Time news quiz and test your mettle.

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Our Columnists
Secondary school students arrive at school during the pandemic (AAP Image/Daniel Pockett)

Dear Year 12: a letter about you, the pandemic and your future

Remember: your future is in your hands, so how you learn from this COVID crisis will be the making of you — and of Australia's future.

(Image: AAP/Lukas Coch)

OK, it may not be a race. Let’s just call it a competition for the harshest lockdown

Five weeks of spin, stats and political rhetoric about the pandemic from NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian, and her state — not to mention the rest of the country — is starting to feel the strain.

Afterpay co-founders Nicholas Molnar and Anthony Eisen (Image: Supplied)

It’s a Square deal: Afterpay proves the critics wrong and Canberra will benefit

It's a hugely lucrative arrangement for Afterpay's Australian founders, but it's hugely lucrative for the federal government's coffers too.

Australian Olympian Kyle Chalmers (Image: AAP/Dave Hunt)

Let’s not start believing ancient techniques will cup-grade your performance

Viewers of the Olympics will have noticed cupping bruises on the bodies of our swimming champs. Is it a valid form of alternative medicine or just potentially dangerous woo-woo?

Hillsong founder Pastor Brian Houston (Image: AAP/Paul Miller)

What do we know, and what can we say, about the charges against Scott Morrison’s spiritual mentor?

Brian Houston, one of Hillsong's most powerful players, has been charged with concealing child abuse. It's a crime that carries a five-year prison sentence.

Donald Trump (Image: AP/John Raoux via AAP)

Some people don’t want the truth — they are happy to be ruled by an authoritarian

Does truth matter to us because democracy is based on truth and democracy matters, or would we rather someone else does the thinking for us? Leslie Cannold looks at both sides.

Australia’s media is failing western Sydney — again

The western Sydney Delta outbreak is the first real-life test case of how an increasingly national news media will manage big moments in Australia’s suburbs. So far? It’s an F.

(Image: AAP/Steven Saphore)

Modelling versus the real world. The case for the latter over the former

The Grattan Institute's 'Race to 80' report sets ambitious goals for guiding Australia's eventual reopening to the world — probably too ambitious. It warrants further analysis than it has received.

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Bruce Pascoe and the making of myth: beyond the culture war, what does it all mean?

A new book offers a forensic unmasking of Bruce Pascoe's work and suggests he is devaluing the true history of Indigenous Australia. Can the issue be investigated without becoming mired in the culture wars?

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Bruce Pascoe has become too big to fail — almost impossible to question

Even before questions surrounding Bruce Pascoe's scholarship were raised, it's hard to ignore that Dark Emu has become big business — not least for the companies that support him.

Michael Mansell (Image: Private Media)

‘The truth is the truth — and should not be hidden because of right-wing agendas’

Lawyer and Indigenous rights activist Michael Mansell has found that trying to raise criticism of Bruce Pascoe leads to being lumped in with right-wing reactionaries like Mark Latham.

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‘The world was waiting for Bruce’s book.’ Yes, but can the literary establishment cope with the fallout?

Australia's cultural institutions were quick to embrace Dark Emu, but now some say they bought into a 'myth' that desperately needs to be revised.

Anthropologist Peter Sutton and archaeologist Keryn Walshe (Image: Private Media)

Why trust an expert? Bruce Pascoe v the establishment

Pascoe always fuelled the narrative that the academic world would seek to quash his renegade scholarship. And it's exactly what happened.

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The kinship question: Bruce Pascoe and the long search for his mob

Bruce Pascoe's claims of Indigenous heritage have made a credible and compelling platform for the rise of Dark Emu, but many Aboriginal elders and experts have called them into question — if not rejected them outright.

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‘Without truth, no democracy can stand’: why we are calling out the prime minister

Today Crikey publishes an uncomfortable but important investigation that exposes the prime minister as a systemic, consistent and unremitting public liar.

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A national leader with a readiness to lie and a reflex to do so when under pressure

Scott Morrison lies. A lot. And it's particularly true when he's feeling the political heat.

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The truth is precious. Let’s not take it for granted

It’s easy to be cynical about politics and politicians, but we mustn't forget how important the truth is to a functioning democracy.

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Lies, truth and the law: is the legal system any help when tackling a powerful dissembler?

It’s one thing to prove that what Morrison said was untrue, incorrect or exaggerated. But there are several possible explanations for that, only one of which is that he deliberately lied.

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Morrison’s lies cover up a lack of substance and interest in governing. Any solace? He’s not alone

While Scott Morrison lacks the theatricality of counterpart liars Boris Johnson and Donald Trump, he shares the same hollowness, a lack of substance covered by incessant deception.

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Talking tactics: we analyse just how Scott Morrison manipulates the narrative to get his own way

Outright lies are only the half of it. A linguistic analysis reveals how other aspects of the PM’s methods — bluster, bullying, evasion, feigned ignorance — all serve to damage political culture.

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My lockdown diaries: retail therapy, social media fame and takeaway cocktails

As lockdown strikes again, we present the diary of a recently single extrovert trying to stop the existential dread from setting in.

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Mental health is getting worse during lockdown, but not for everyone

While Australians' mental health has been negatively impacted by the pandemic, research shows some people with prior mental health issues fared better than expected.

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian and Prime Minister Scott Morrison (Image: AAP/Dean Lewins)

Not all COVID recessions are equal. We couldn’t have avoided last year’s, but if we go again, it’s all yours, Gladys and Scott

The failure of the NSW government to get on top of the Sydney outbreak is threatening Australia's economic growth beyond the September quarter, further complicating with policy and political challenge of 'living with COVID'.

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Labor moves on car park rorts, but government uses same line of defence: the people voted for us, didn’t they?

Despite Labor moving its 'anti-rorting bill' and Alan Tudge back in the spotlight about the $660 million car parks slush fund, the government is confident it won’t face any real consequences for pork-barrelling.

Anthony Albanese receiving a COVID-19 vaccine (Image: AAP)

Labor: from blood donor to bleeding out?

Labor's cash-for-vaccination plan suggests the party is losing the most basic ability to think through political challenges from within its own social democratic traditions — and the Coalition will benefit.

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It’s as cold as charity for Australian not-for-profits facing the Coalition’s hostility

The Morrison government's war on charities rages unabated and proposed legislation gives it more firepower. But what's really behind its wrath?

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Sky News ban shows that Turnbull was right: News Corp threatens more than democracy

YouTube's decision to take down pandemic misinformation spread by Sky News illustrates how News Corp is not merely dangerous to democracies, but a threat to health and safety.

Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce (Image: AAP/Lukas Coch)

Feeding on myth, the Nationals play the media off a break

The National Party might be good at getting sound-bites out there, but their hold on both the ground and on the media is starting to deteriorate.

Alan Jones (Image: AAP/Warren Clarke)

In defence of Alan Jones: he’s still resonating — but with anti-lockdown and anti-vax viewers

A peak at the metrics confirms that Alan Jones doesn't need The Daily Telegraph to reach an increasingly global — and increasingly fringe-dwelling — audience

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We must learn to see the corruption that pervades Australian public life, and restructure it

Australians, and especially our governing class, have normalised soft corruption. If we want things to change, we need to bring back the outrage.

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How to end corruption? First break down the code of silence allowing it to thrive

The culture of silence that permits the soft corruption and alleged abuse witnessed in Parliament cannot be allowed to endure.

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Solutions to corruption: a voters’ strike to end political donations?

Refusing to vote? Maybe. But there are other ways to clean up Australian politics.

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Money talks, and political donors know they’ll be heard loud and clear

There appears to be consensus among Crikey readers: donations to political parties are a serious flaw in our democracy.

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Campaign finance is a big problem — here’s how we could go about fixing it

Reforms could help quell the dark impact of money in Australian politics — but even if we could we get them done, would our elected officials want to?

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Zones of corruption: how property development inherently challenges democracy

It's one of the longest-standing and most pervasive forms of soft corruption in Australian politics: local, state and federal.