Last updated 1:30pm Sunday 3 May 2026 AEDT

Paul J. Berating

Australian Politics, Unfiltered. Sardonic Commentary Inspired By Australia's Greatest PM 🤬🇦🇺


Today's Top Stories

Three hundred million in legal fees and counting

The government has spent $318 million investigating war crimes allegations against around 230 soldiers, with little to show but lawyers' invoices.

Three hundred and eighteen million chasing 230 soldiers through a legal labyrinth that's produced more press conferences than convictions. The Brereton inquiry was meant to be a reckoning; it's become a billing cycle. Somewhere in Canberra a KC is buying a second beach house and calling it accountability.

Trump to review Iran's new proposal, warns of renewed US strike

US President said he "can't imagine that" Iran's latest proposal "would be acceptable".

Trump'll review the proposal the way a bloke reviews the wine list at a restaurant he's already decided to walk out of. The threat of a strike was the policy; the negotiation's the press release. Tehran knows it, Washington knows it, and the only people pretending otherwise are the diplomats who get paid to keep a straight face.

Canavan swags it in Farrer while the Coalition outsources its preferences to Hanson

Allan needles the Liberals over their One Nation dependence in Victoria as Canavan defends preferencing Hanson above an independent in the Farrer by-election.

Canavan's been in a swag for ten nights and reckons that's the qualification for Farrer — mate, sleeping rough doesn't make you a senator, it makes you a backpacker. Meanwhile he's preferencing One Nation above an independent because 'socialists always go last,' which is an interesting framework when the independent's a local irrigator and the One Nation candidate couldn't find the Murray on a map.

We love to blame the Boomers. But intergenerational warfare may be a distraction

There’s another element in this particular conflict – one the budget won’t affect.

Maley's onto something. The boomer-versus-millennial bunfight is the magic trick — watch the left hand while the landlords count receipts. Negative gearing doesn't ask your birth date, it asks how many properties you own. Two generations brawling in the lounge room while the bloke who owns the house quietly raises the rent.

The front line was a church hall in Cabramatta the whole time

Universities have let Southeast Asian language enrolments collapse while migrant-run weekend schools carry the load — and Labor's now calling that a strategic pivot.

Universities let Indonesian wither on the vine while migrant mums in church halls kept Bahasa alive on weekends with biscuits and goodwill. Now Canberra's discovered the weekend schools and calls it a strategic pivot. Forty years of cultural cringe outsourced to volunteers, and the reward is a press release calling them the front line.

Spectator finds the unified field theory of grievance

Stephen Fyson argues that leaders who can't define a woman can't be trusted to run the NDIS, yoking culture war and welfare policy into a single column.

Spectator op-ed yokes the woman question to the NDIS like it's a syllogism. Mate, one's a culture war bumper sticker, the other's a thirty-billion-dollar scheme bleeding rorts because nobody costed it properly. Conflating the two isn't analysis — it's a bloke at the bar who's read one Quadrant article and reckons he's cracked the code.

Bowser relief comes with a use-by date

Petrol prices have eased briefly, but global oil markets will push them back up in the coming weeks.

Bowser relief with a use-by date stamped on it. Brent goes up, the pumps go up; Brent goes down, the pumps take a sabbatical on the way. The whole Australian energy debate is a bloke checking the weather forecast to decide whether to fix the roof.

One Nation talks up Nepean as Liberals stroll through their own backyard

A Mornington Peninsula byelection being framed as a state-election bellwether, with One Nation claiming it's close in a seat the Liberals have held forever.

One Nation reckons it's competitive in Nepean — on the Mornington Peninsula, where the median house clears two million and the closest thing to a working-class hero is the bloke who details the boats. The Liberals are favoured because the Liberals have always been favoured here. The whole byelection is a focus group with a tally room.

Sky reads Camilla's handbag like a State Department cable

Sky News Australia turns a royal goodbye to the Trumps into front-page diplomacy, because the actual diplomacy is too boring to cover.

Sky News Australia has rolled out the chyron for Camilla's farewell wave to Melania like it's the Treaty of Westphalia. A handbag, a smile, and three hundred words of breathless inference — the diplomatic correspondents have been replaced by a bloke who used to do bridal magazines.

Palaszczuk's partner Reza Adib charged with three counts of rape

Reza Adib, partner of former Queensland premier Annastacia Palaszczuk, has been charged with three counts of rape following a police raid on a Burleigh Heads unit.

Charges have been laid and a court will hear them — that's how courts work. Sky's headline leads with a former premier who hasn't been accused of anything, because her name sells the click. The presumption of innocence is alive and well; it just doesn't fit in a chyron.

Stefanovic fielding offers while Nine sharpens the axe — the talent eats first

Karl Stefanovic is being courted by a rival as his podcast numbers climb and Nine signals fresh job cuts across the network.

Stefanovic's podcast booms while Nine swings the axe at the people who actually make the news. The talent gets the offers, the producers get the redundancy letter, and somewhere a consultant's calling it 'rightsizing'. Television's not dying — it's just feeding itself, organ by organ, to the bloke at the desk.

Albanese 'absolutely' wants a third term, having done absolutely with the second

Anthony Albanese marks a rough first year of his second term by declaring he wants a third, framing absorption of public anger as the substance of the role.

A bloke one year into a tough second term announcing he 'absolutely' wants a third — like a publican who's burnt the last three roasts asking if you'd like to book Christmas. Absorbing the nation's grief is the job, mate. Doing something about it was meant to be too.

The path to change in Iran: pressure, patience, and the people

Sun Tzu, the Chinese strategist of the 6th Century BC, teaches that the highest form of victory is achieved without… The post The path to change in Iran: pressure, patience, and the people appeared first on The Spectator Australia. What to read next: Who needs the Department of Climate Change anyway? | How does the fall of the regime in Iran benefit Australia? | Iran at a crossroads: Australia’s opportunities and pitfalls | The foundations of Iran

Sun Tzu, regime change, and a byline in Sydney — three things that have never been in the same room. The Spectator keeps commissioning these pieces because nothing fills column inches quite like other people's revolutions.

How power from the people carbon-dates the opposition

Energy demand is up and prices are down. How does that work? And why is the Coalition still not on board?

Demand up, prices down, emissions falling — and the Coalition's still rummaging through the cupboard for a nuclear costing they wrote on the back of a beer coaster. Menzies built the Snowy. This mob can't tell the difference between a rooftop and a relic.