The Longest Time
SKY NEWS
Climate pests ‘shut down’ political media events to lecture struggling Australians on energy bills
A group of climate zealots have bragged about trying to “shut down” multiple press events to rant about climate change and lecture Australians facing a cost-of-living crisis about the price of power.
GUARDIAN AUSTRALIA
A former Australian defence force chief has warned “the vandals in the White House” are no longer reliable allies and urged the Australian government to reassess its strategic partnership with the United States.
Retired admiral Chris Barrie spent four decades in the Royal Australian Navy and was made a Commander of the Legion of Merit by the US government in 2002. He is now an honorary professor at the Australian National University.
“What is happening with the vandals in the White House is similar to what happened to Australia in 1942 with the fall of Singapore,” Barrie said. “I don’t consider America to be a reliable ally, as I used to."
ABC
Try as he might to insist it wasn't a demotion, Anthony Albanese handed what many considered to be a poisoned chalice when he made Plibersek minister for water and the environment. It was quite the combination for an inner-city, Left faction MP whose greatest political threat was always going to come from the Greens.
Fast-forward to today and Plibersek finds herself in a government that will next week rush legislation through the parliament that will see her sidelined.
The legislation will effectively override Plibersek's environmental review of the salmon farming to ensure the survival of the industry.
SBS
NEWS
‘Hand over fist’: Wild way Donald Trump is about to impact Aussie economy
One of Donald Trump’s most shocking policies is about to hit Australia in a big way – and none of us will be immune from the aftermath.
THE NEW DAILY
‘$225 and dropping!’: Walz taunts Musk over Tesla
MACRO BUSINESS
The death of Australian industry is at hand
As we know, Australian industry has been dying for decades. So much so that we leading the OCED into industrial oblivion.
SPECTATOR AUSTRALIA
Last week, I noted that tariffs can be a policy tool to protect domestic industry from foreign competition or a negotiating instrument to change the behaviour of foreign governments. A week after the article was written, President Trump imposed 25-per-cent tariffs on Australian steel and aluminium. I get that this is lamentable. But can it actually turn out to be an example of tough love that forces Australia into a reckoning of its self-damaging policy framework?
The outbreak of Trump Derangement Syndrome after the US tariffs were announced revealed a blinkered analysis of the real cause of why Australian products might be priced out of the US market. On 11 March the Australian reported that 49 per cent of the costs of building a new house, including the cost of land, are made up of taxes, regulatory costs, fees and infrastructure charges. Many of these costs, fees and charges by federal, state and local governments have doubled in the last five years. Yet almost all the focus by both Labor and the Coalition is on Band-Aid measures to help young people climb the first rung on the ladder of property ownership while ignoring the big-ticket governance reforms to reverse the policies that have turned Australia into a highly taxed and over-regulated country with crippling red tape, green tape, DEI tape and the like.
CRIKEY
Five years ago Scott Morrison doubled JobSeeker payments, temporarily shielding millions from poverty. As costs rise and poverty rates worsen, why can’t the government do that again?


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