State
Daniel Andrews
Purist Greens have no desire to govern
Daniel Andrews In just over two weeks, voters in the Victorian state seat of Melbourne will have the chance to vote for the person and party who they believe can best deliver for them.
Cameron Nolan
To stub out smoking, ban cigarette sales to anyone born this century
Cameron Nolan Imagine cigarettes did not exist. Now imagine that some plucky upstart - let's call him Philip Morris - invented them and asked regulators for approval to sell his product.
Tom Switzer
Bald fact is US power is waning
Tom Switzer With the US election just four months away, the American political and media class is focusing on mundane issues such as debt, jobs and taxes.
Phillip Coorey
Jakarta on Abbott's to-do list but no one has told the Indonesians
Phillip Coorey Should Tony Abbott win the next election, his first week in office, by any measure, is going to be a busy one.
Niall Ferguson
Asia stands to gain as Barclays loses its head, and London loses its credibility
Niall Ferguson London's reputation as the world's financial centre is teetering.
Gerard Henderson
Old hatreds resurface in party afraid of a hiding
Gerard Henderson Politics, like much of life, is replete with mythology. A current myth, much embraced by journalists, is that Julia Gillard is prime minister today due to support from the Greens.
House price 'plateau' still out of reach for most
Sarah Toohey Reading Ross Gittins' article earlier this week ("Houses hit affordability ceiling, the price plateau is here to stay") I started to think that perhaps my dinner party crowd is a little different to...
Bob Brown
Last woman standing
Bob Brown Both Labor and Liberal have abandoned voters in the Melbourne by-election.
Tim Soutphommasane
The real lesson from Obama's victory is his leadership style
Tim Soutphommasane Yes, he did. In some ways Barack Obama's re-election as United States president this month was as significant as his victory in 2008.
Craig Reucassel
No laughing matter
Craig Reucassel Laws that prevent Parliament from being satirised on TV make little sense and restrict freedom of speech.
Michelle Grattan
Labor playing with fire in its rush to burn the Green witch
Michelle Grattan Suddenly Labor, or at least many in it, have decided they must burn the Green witch. Prominent players have been stoking the fire all week, tossing the vitriol like kindling onto the pyre.
Richard Ackland
Nothing to hide - just ask them
Richard Ackland Wasn't it Georges Clemenceau who said, ''Military justice is to justice what military music is to music''?
Sympathy for the devils we know
Mike Carlton We must hope Tony Abbott is lying when he says he will turn back the boats. If he is not lying and actually means it, he is ignorant, foolish and reckless. Let me count the ways.
Peter Hartcher
They can't stonewall forever
Peter Hartcher What do slavery, wife beating and child labour have in common? All were once mainstream practices in Western countries. Today, they are unacceptable violations of rights.
Leslie Cannold
Opening the gates to a better deal for women
Leslie Cannold This past Thursday, I 'live tweeted' highlights from London's Family Planning Summit.
Michael Buxton
Planning for disaster
Michael Buxton Hopes have faded that the Baillieu government would continue the moderate approach to land use of former premier Sir Rupert Hamer. Instead this is government in the Jeff Kennett style.
Michelle Grattan
When Melbourne goes national ...
Michelle Grattan When a government is in trouble, there is nothing like a byelection to send a frisson of excitement through the political system.
Jake Niall
Time to have a whack for sinking Baillieu
Jake Niall Ted Baillieu needs a crisis. It need not be a natural disaster, like the storm that came to President Barack Obama's aid, but as a leader who is careful and deliberate, rather than swashbuckling in...
Michelle Grattan
A byelection defeat for Labor will cause shock waves in Canberra
Michelle Grattan When a government is in trouble, there is nothing like a byelection to send shivers up its spine and a frisson of excitement through the political system.
Neil Brown
Abuse inquiry doomed to fail
Neil Brown Questions persist about what sort of inquiry into allegations of child abuse would be best. The state government seems adamant that a parliamentary committee is good enough.










