Paul Sheehan

Paul Sheehan

Paul Sheehan is a columnist and editorial writer for The Sydney Morning Herald, where he has has been Day Editor and Washington correspondent. He is the author of two number-one best-sellers, 'Girls Like You' and 'Among The Barbarians' and been published in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The New York Times and numerous anthologies.

Nationals in no rush with a welcome mat for Joyce in NSW

Paul Sheehan

Paul Sheehan OK. A federal election in June. Kevin Rudd against Tony Abbott.

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PM in snake pit with no antivenom

Paul Sheehan At 6.02 pm last Wednesday I received a text sent from Parliament House in Canberra. It said: ''I'm hearing Labor has been asked to stay in Canberra on Friday.

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Odds shorten on PM's little mate

Paul Sheehan

Paul Sheehan The media's obsession with Kevin Rudd may be missing the point. Shorten may be the better bet.

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All not quiet as PM tackles western front

Prime Minister Julia Gillard

Paul Sheehan For the benefit of the democratic process, the broadcast of Parliament in Australia is mandated by law and much of the proceedings are televised.

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Paul Sheehan

Overkill in the name of Islam threat

Geert Wilders

Paul Sheehan On Monday, in Dhaka, I received a friendly rebuke from the Bangladeshi Minister for Civil Aviation and Tourism, Faruk Khan. I had described Bangladesh as a moderate Muslim nation.

Paul Sheehan

Changing captains will not save this side from a proper walloping

Paul Sheehan

Paul Sheehan Julia Gillard should stay where she is. The Labor Party has run out of party tricks. The federal government's perceived unpopularity is a collective effort, an effort that began with Kevin Rudd, who...

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Paul Sheehan

We'll reap what we deserve

illustration

Paul Sheehan We now know why the Prime Minister has instigated the longest election campaign in political history.

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Paul Sheehan

Fear doesn't need a visa, and it's on tour already

Paul Sheehan

Paul Sheehan Two of the films nominated for best picture in the coming Academy Awards, Argo and Zero Dark Thirty, contain warnings, with plenty of creative licence but also plenty of historical accuracy, about...

Comments 158

Paul Sheehan

Thomson caught in the political spin cycle

Paul Sheehan

Paul Sheehan When Craig Thomson rose to speak in Parliament for the first time, on February 19, 2008, within 90 seconds he thanked three key Labor machinists: Mark Arbib, Karl Bitar and Sam Dastyari.

Paul Sheehan

Free speech dogged by politics of difference

Paul Sheehan

Paul Sheehan The obvious question is, what are they afraid of? Is it fear of violence, or vandalism, or simply fear of association?

Paul Sheehan

Peris must rise above kneecapping

Paul Sheehan

Paul Sheehan For several years the second-most famous Aboriginal woman in Australia, after Cathy Freeman, was Nova Peris-Kneebone and her fame was greatly helped by her delightful name.

Paul Sheehan

We cannot slow down and it is at our peril

Paul Sheehan The future is accelerating. It is racing towards us faster than ever in our collective lives. How can that be known, you must ask, given that the future hasn't happened yet.

Paul Sheehan

Meanwhile, life goes on but mind the speed bumps

Paul Sheehan

Paul Sheehan A law firm sent the following advice to its clients in December, which, in keeping with so much advice from government bureaucracies, local councils and human resource departments, was unnecessary,...

Paul Sheehan

Racial hatred bill offers open slather to obnoxious

Illustration

Paul Sheehan Researching one book required me to sit in courts for months and go out and interview dozens of people.

Paul Sheehan

Dance clip delivers funky case for peace

Singer PSY

Paul Sheehan 'Oppan gangnam style

Paul Sheehan

Divided advocates huff and puff as Labor scorns small business

Paul Sheehan

Paul Sheehan The Punch and Judy Show is not the defining struggle in Australian politics. Something much bigger will decide the next federal election.

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Paul Sheehan

Labor patronises women and burdens business

Paul Sheehan

Paul Sheehan JULIE COLLINS used to sit in the slot where the government always placed a couple of young women MPs, preferably good-looking, behind the Prime Minister so that they are visible on TV during question...

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Would-be leaders preen but the women have the numbers

Paul Sheehan dinkus

Paul Sheehan Even though Malcolm Turnbull is being ostentatiously loyal to his leader, he cannot abstain from remarking on the fact that he is very popular without actually saying he is more popular than his...

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Paul Sheehan

Rinehart's vision puts the north at the top

Gina Rinehart

Paul Sheehan A long line of people waited patiently in the ballroom of the Four Seasons hotel in Sydney on Thursday night.

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Paul Sheehan

Muddying waters on way to polls

Michael mucci illo

Paul Sheehan It was no doubt keenly noted in the Prime Minister's office that even though Barack Obama enjoyed a decisive 55 per cent to 45 per cent advantage over Mitt Romney in this year's presidential...

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