Victoria Police succeeded in keeping nationalist and anti-racist demonstrations separate, but only by deploying immense violence against the left-wing rally as clashes erupted around the CBD.
The media gives Barnaby Joyce protected status as a maverick — but overlook that for many years he has been nothing but trouble for his own side.
The presence of renewables doesn’t always result in the absence of coal.
Trump and supporters express their fury at ‘No Kings’ by… depicting Trump as a king
The response to millions of Americans marching over the weekend has been as coherent and sane as you would expect.
The Pentagon’s new crackdown on the press has had an unusual ‘Australia mentioned’ moment. So what are the new rules and what has The Australian got itself into?
All that and more in this week’s political news.
Israel launches fresh attacks on Gaza after accusing Hamas of breaching ceasefire
The tentative ceasefire between Israel and Hamas has been broken after Israel launched a deadly wave of attacks throughout Gaza on Sunday in response to what it says was a ceasefire breach by Hamas militants.
The September jobs numbers have put pressure on the RBA to cut interest rates — but they’re not as bad as they look. Meanwhile the central bank its trying to improve its messaging.
Crikey’s media reporter Daanyal Saeed joins the podcast to unpack the Parliament Sports Club lobbying furore, from beginning to end.
Israel launches fresh attacks on Gaza after accusing Hamas of breaching ceasefire
The tentative ceasefire between Israel and Hamas has been broken after Israel launched a deadly wave of attacks throughout Gaza on Sunday in response to what it says was a ceasefire breach by Hamas militants.
Editors’ picks
The chorus of people congratulating buffoon Trump on Gaza peace deal are wrong, and here’s why
Donald Trump’s Gaza peace plan relies on ahistorical nonsense imposed on the Palestinian people, who are told they should be grateful. He deserves no applause.
A look at the arguments Labor is using to support its FOI reform
Labor’s ‘friendless’ proposed changes to FOI laws will be debated today. Here’s the government’s reasoning so far.
The enduring cult of Tony Abbott
Tony Abbott, for all the farce of his time in office, maintains a cult that no other recent prime minster can match. Crikey went to watch it in action.
1 in 3 parents will help kids get around teen social media ban, government privately warned
TikTok, Meta and Snap to face social media ban inquiry after no-show legal threats
Sportsbet guest lecturer at Monash university seminar prompts faculty review
A short history of voter suppression in America, as civil rights laws are attacked in the South
Fresh moral panic over ‘jihadi brides’ and their children shames Australia: Here’s how we can actually fix the issue
On gambling, Australia is a collection of banana republics — while our cowering government watches on
If you want brain rot, read the Financial Review (and leave gen Z out of it)
Young people are suffering from ‘brain rot’, claims the AFR, and it’s all due to social media. But there’s another reason why young people are so unhappy.
How I was targeted and intimidated by information arsonists
On two memorable occasions, I have been targeted in formal ways by key anti-wind players.
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For the Liberal Party, a split between traditional conservatives and hardcore right-wingers can’t come quickly enough.
Even before bailouts for heavy industry, the cost to taxpayers of Labor’s manufacturing fetish was surging — mainly to the benefit of male workers.
The Albanese government is considering using a power to definitively declare platforms like YouTube, Snapchat and TikTok are included in the ban, despite the companies’ plans to either challenge or get around it.
Plus, a one-time thanks to Avi Yemeni!
An alarming number of recent examples prove the international rule of law is dead. What was once an unprecedented act is now an almost daily occurrence.
Literally nothing good has come from any of it.
Two Australian companies bought dozens of mining rights and expect to invest big, but environmental threats concern local communities.
The uni’s plans to ‘streamline operational services’ by closing down its flagship institute dedicated to climate action and sustainability have sparked internal backlash.
The annual corporate tax transparency report gives us a glimpse into the finances of companies that usually keep things quiet.
In a reversal from April, ratings agency S&P says Australia’s fiscal position is sound. But cheerleaders for austerity and a punitive economy don’t want to know about it.
The Readers’ Choice Award received *a lot* of entries.
Crikey’s list of our worst companies is dominated by oligopolists, reflecting Australia’s disease of market concentration. It gives us lazy managers and dud boards — but, perversely, we all benefit from it.
This French funhouse mirror politics is just the latest in a crisis that has been lurching on since at least 2024.
Consternation over how Trump’s ‘deal’ has been struck seems only to have permeated circles of Palestinian people and their allies who actually care about the meaning of equal rights for all.