Fundraiser for Kelly O'Dwyer sponsored by NAB

James Massola and Heath Aston   A major bank is helping to foot the bill for a glitzy pre-election political fundraiser to be fronted by Treasurer Scott Morrison and his deputy Kelly O'Dwyer.

Latest political news

Greens back rise in refugee intake to 50,000, 

Sarah Hanson-Young: "If we give people a viable alternative, they will take it.''

Michael Gordon   Australia's refugee intake would increase to 50,000 a year, including 10,000 via a new "skilled refugee" category, under a policy to be announced by the Greens.

Turnbull urges South China Sea restraint

Malcolm Turnbull with  Li Keqiang

Mark Kenny and Philip Wen   Malcolm Turnbull has called for restraint by all countries involved in South China Sea tensions, as Beijing becomes increasingly strident and the US stations more planes in the Philippines.

Scientists push for more research funding

Dr Krystal Evans: ''We're being asked to do more with less.''

Jane Lee and Marcus Strom   Australian scientists are calling on the Turnbull government to move beyond innovation slogans and invest in long-term scientific research in the budget.

Turnbull government MP bursts into tears 

Herbet MP Ewen Jones breaks down during a press conference with Employment Minister Michaelia Cash.

Michael Koziol   Ewen Jones breaks down during a press conference alongside a senior cabinet minister.

Church confronted gay CEOs over marriage

"It's really about equality": Qantas CEO Alan Joyce at the marriage equality breakfast.

Michael Koziol   The Catholic church lobbied two of Australia's most prominent gay chief executives to stop their companies' support for marriage equality.

Fears for refugee's safety over abortion

Refugee.

Bianca Hall   A PNG couple were jailed for five years for causing the death of their unborn child, in a case that raises serious questions about Australia's decision to send a Nauru rape victim there for an abortion.

High Court challenge to fall on budget day

Senator Bob Day outside Parliament House in Canberra.

Jane Lee   Senator Bob Day's legal challenge to the Turnbull government's senate voting changes will be heard by all of the High Court's judges on the day of the federal budget.

Nauru refugee fined for suicide attempt

Prosecutors had sought to have the man jailed over the attempted suicide.

Nicole Hasham   A refugee at Nauru has been convicted and fined $200 for attempted suicide in a move island authorities say is designed to "stamp out the practice".

Morrison shifts on tax rises after dire warning

Treasurer Scott Morrison will hand down the budget on May 3.

James Massola   Tobacco taxes will rise in the May budget, becoming the first public tax shift after an unruly debate that has dogged the government.  The move follows a warning that Australia could risk losing its AAA credit rating.

Abbott abandons Bishop prior to preselection

Abbott and Bishop in happier times.

Latika Bourke   Mr Abbott once described himself as the "love-child" of Bronwyn Bishop. But on Thursday he confirmed he would not support her in her preselection battle.

Comment & Analysis

Death in black and white

Illustration Andrew Dyson

Michael Gordon   Imagine if a royal commission was held into a matter of national shame, and it spent tens of millions of dollars, produced a vast report, but the headline indicators of that shame went backwards.

Comments 35

PM's election pitch stamped 'Made in China'

Peter Hartcher dinkus

Peter Hartcher 7:53 AM   Our economic 'transition' is central to Malcolm Turnbull's election campaign. And China is the key to that transition, happy to play up to the 'all powerful' image.

Comments 178

Australia, why do you hate big ideas?

The signature side for the new $5 banknote.

Judith Ireland   It is a much-honoured national pastime to shoot down ideas and resist even the slightest hint of change. We might be surrounded by sea, but we are also girt by the status quo.

Comments 5

Against the odds the stars line up for Labor

Waleed Aly dinkus. Dinkus

Waleed Aly   Increasing inequality has allowed Labor to start doing something it hasn't done for decades - articulate a worldview.

Turnbull primed to shine in China

Malcolm Turnbull says the budget will include tax changesdesigned to generate jobs and growth; and promote investment, ...

Mark Kenny   The Prime Minister has assembled a crack group of advisers for his China visit but they're playing to a tough audience.

Comments 23

Very Fast Train - the mother of all projects

Air and road transport operators have opposed development of very fast trains in Australia.

Peter Knight   In less than a decade and at a price we can afford, a high-speed link could transform the nation, if only politicians weren't so lily-livered.

Silence will destroy our democratic values

Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders talks about the growing divide between the rich and the poor in the US ...

Greg Barns   Around the world politicians are raising issues of fairness, equality and social values – so why have Australians gone quiet?

Marriage debate is not about equality

Marriage traditionalists see the connection between heterosexual intercourse and pregnancy as more than just a brute ...

Jeremy Bell   If governments make laws about marriage, they must define what marriage is.

Shorten's royal commission call a poll stunt

Peter Reith

Peter Reith   If Bill Shorten was seriously wanting a royal commission into the banks, he could have voted for it last year when the Greens put up the idea.

Comments 29

Beauty of science lies in unexpected moment

The discovery of the double-helix structure of DNA was the result of the pursuit in pure science.

Surendra Verma   The CSIRO's pursuit of science will be hampered by the naked hunt for cash.

Better teachers? Better at what, exactly?

Teachers try to give students one-on-one instruction but the size of classes makes this impossible.

Ned Manning   We all know it is bureaucratic procedures, lack of funding and poor pay rates that hold back educational standards, not bad teachers.

Bill Shorten a dud no more

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Tim Dick   Abbott, Abetz, and Andrews are the triple-A batteries of Australian politics: each started full of power, but not as much as they thought.

Gonski opposition doesn’t add up

Jane Caro dinkus

Jane Caro   The voters love Gonski. Astonishingly, every educational sector – public, Catholic and Independent – are also in favour.

Comments 32

Why our new subs should be built at home

Amanda Vanstone.

Amanda Vanstone   On this project, we should be wary of the Japanese.

Turnbull snookered by populist bank probe

Malcolm Turnbull's once-commanding poll lead has been eroded.

Mark Kenny   Tell me it isn't so: the more furiously the banks resist public scrutiny of their ultra-profitable dealings, the more their long-suffering customers feel such a probe is justified.

Robb pushes aside pessimism, backs China

Peter Hartcher dinkus

Peter Hartcher   On the eve of Australia's largest ever trade mission to China, the nation's 'best trade minister' Andrew Robb still has unfinished business.

Special features

Political dinosaur's days are numbered

Chris Johnson Looking back, Clive Palmer's spectacular fall from grace was inevitable from the outset.

Malcolm Turnbull in China

Malcolm Turnbull visits China for the first time as Australian Prime Minister and Andrew Meares is on hand to capture the historic trip.

Australia, why do you hate big ideas?

It is a much-honoured national pastime to shoot down ideas and resist even the slightest hint of change. 

Turnbull sets fire to footy, all the way from China

Tony Wright The Prime Minister has entered the eternal debate on which football code is the best, and his verdict has ruffled feathers around the nation.

Barnaby is running the country! What a time to be alive!

Tony Wright When Malcolm Turnbull steps on a plane for China on Wednesday night, he leaves Barnaby Joyce in charge. 

Very Fast Train a very pre-election promise

If Australia's high speed train is as reliable as the rate at which it is promised by politicians, it will be a truly remarkable service.

Who is more agile now?

The PM's problem, or one of them, is that none of his big gambles has yet paid off. Not one.

Transport package more to do with politics than rigour

Malcolm Turnbull likes to present himself as a man of sound economic principles.

How the conservatives ended the age of entitlement for all but themselves

The age of entitlement is far from over. It's alive and close to home.

Andrew Robb pushes aside pessimism and backs China

On the eve of Australia's largest ever trade mission to China, the nation's 'best trade minister' Andrew Robb still has unfinished business.

Higher education fees, how did we get to this?

How much to charge students, when to apply the debt and all manner of detail over how a higher education loans scheme should work has long been fodder for heated political debate.

Shorten finds his voice at last

The "zingers" have dried up. The awkward singsong cadence is vanishing. Bill Shorten has employed a voice coach as he hones his communication skills for the election.

Whyalla wipeout looms but carbon tax not to blame

Finally, sadly, pathetically.After all the shameful point-scoring and reckless scare-mongering, politicians, business leaders, unions, and workers are as one. 

If the CSIRO won't do research who will?

Australian society will be the biggest loser if the organisation is forced to abandon its blue-skies work.

Turnbull in cruise mode, steers into the slow lane

Glacial decision-making and negligible policy action gives the impression of a government going nowhere.