Political debate has turned back to policy, as calls for a spill die out.
Joe Hockey has taken the stand in his defamation proceedings against Fairfax.
How will sales of The Australian Financial Review and The Australian look in 13 years? Let's do the sums, with as much rigour as Joe Hockey applied to his much-touted IGR ...
For much of its 40-year history, the Press Council has been overly adversarial in how it approaches the media, its new chairman tells Crikey.
Fairfax has issued a possibly unprecedented front-page apology to the Melbourne teenager the paper misidentified as a terrorism suspect.
Australians are tiring of leadership speculation as the media continues to stoke the flames.
The ongoing war between the national broadsheet and the press council heats up -- not that The Oz's editor-in-chief is worried.
There is an echo of the 2011 Seven West deal that is slowly emerging to haunt Seven and Stokes.
Volumes much lower this week, with much of the media moving on quickly from the no spill result to get onto more pressing matters like the cricket World Cup, but in terms of political coverage it remains all about Prime Minister Tony Abbott, the PM receiving five times as much coverage as his nearest rival […]
Australian newspapers are losing more and more revenue from their declining print circulations. When will publishers say enough is enough and take steps to staunch the bleeding? Glenn Dyer and Myriam Robin report.