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Guy Rundle  — Correspondent-at-large

Guy Rundle

Correspondent-at-large

Guy Rundle is correspondent-at-large for Crikey. He's a former editor of Arena Magazine and contributes to a variety of publications in Australia and the United Kingdom.

Registered Organisations Commission chief Mark Bielecki

Investigation into AWU comes down to Labor's factional unease

The Labor Right faction seeking a supermajority would be a good explanation for the latest "attack" on the Australian Worker's Union

Rundle: the mess in Batman shows Greens need serious change

With more internal leaks against Batman candidate Alex Bhathal, it's clear the Greens need major reshaping — whether they win the seat or not.

The Tasmanian Election Tally Room crowd. AAP.

Rundle: bring back the election night tally rooms of old!

The digital revolution has made the tally rooms unnecessary, and we are worse off for it.

Labor's Ged Kearney at last night's climate debate.

Ged Kearney won’t commit Labor to blocking Adani

At a climate Q and A, Labor’s Batman candidate did the Labor two-step on blocking the mine with environment law.

The great, undervalued fight of socialist-feminist Zelda D'Aprano

The secret history of much Australian progress was that Communism and Trotskyism are at its centre. With Zelda, the two sides of the hyphen "socialist-feminist" were equally weighted.

Rundle: blitzed in the side bar at Will Hodgman's monster's ball

The Liberal vote started well and crept up remorselessly through the evening. Lambie failed entirely. It was all pretty mundane. But Tasmania has surprised us before. It will again.

Rundle in Tasmania: The Gina Timmsiad

Door knocking with a Jacqui Lambie Network candidate exposes this kind of populism for its lack of depth and wealth of meaning.

Dark outlooks on Tassie's Dark and Dangerous Thoughts Festival?

David Walsh's Museum of Old and New Art conglomerate is expanding in Hobart, but decidedly not to Launceston.

Rundle: Tasmania could soon be Woolworths' island

Woolworths' pokies push strategy in Tasmania may sound dull and irrelevant but it will have national ramifications.

Is the Lambie Network headed to the slaughter?

Has Jacqui Lambie killed her state team's chances by backing the Liberals ahead of her 2019 Senate tilt?