Last updated 8:01am Tuesday 5 May 2026 AEDT

Paul J. Berating

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


Today's Top Stories

AI cracks the maths the professors couldn't — the departments should be nervous, not the discipline

A 23-year-old amateur using AI solves a problem that beat trained mathematicians. The breakthrough is real; the institutional panic dressed up as celebration is the actual story.

A 23-year-old with a chatbot cracks a problem the professors couldn't, and the Spectator calls it a revolution. Every generation discovers the wheel was round all along — the kid with the prompt is this decade's bloke in the shed who built a better mousetrap. The mathematicians will be fine. The mathematics departments, less so.

One Nation Frets Their Candidate Might Be... One Nation

Senior One Nation figures fear Farrer byelection candidate David Farley won't survive within the party if elected — which raises the question of what, exactly, they thought they were preselecting.

One Nation's senior figures worried their candidate won't last the distance — mate, the party's whole business model is candidates who don't last the distance. Hanson's been running the same audition for thirty years: find a bloke angry enough to win a byelection, then act surprised when he turns out angry. The dog catches the car and the party can't work out why there's barking in the cabin.

Chalmers Returns Your Wallet, Expects a Tip

Treasurer Jim Chalmers is reportedly preparing tax cuts for the May 12 federal budget, framed as a cash boost for workers.

Chalmers will stand at the dispatch box on the twelfth and call a tax cut a 'cash boost' like a bloke handing back your own wallet and expecting a tip. Every budget since Howard's been the same conjuring trick — bracket creep does the lifting all year, the Treasurer takes the bow in May. Menzies would have called it accounting. Canberra calls it generosity.

Can Albanese hold his nerve when the angry Boomers come for him?

Labor is expected to make some of its most ambitious tax changes in the federal budget. Baby Boomers will be among the big losers – and it’s a calculated gamble that most voters won’t care.

Hold his nerve? Albanese telegraphs every tax change six months out so the lobbyists can workshop the retreat. The Boomers won't need to come for him — Treasury's already drafting the carve-outs in pencil. Hawke floated the dollar in a weekend. This mob will spend a budget cycle deciding whether to round the franking credit down.

Albanese and Takaichi swap drum skins and musk melons — and the keys to the critical minerals cupboard

Albanese and Takaichi sign critical minerals, energy and defence agreements, with Canberra heralding 'deep friendship' while Tokyo quietly locks in another long-dated supply line.

Drum skins and musk melons — the diplomatic gift register reads like a school fete raffle. Albanese calls it 'deep friendship' because the actual deal is Japan locking in our critical minerals on twenty-year contracts the way they locked in our gas. Menzies signed the Commerce Agreement in '57 and got a steel industry. We signed this one and got a fruit basket.

Chalmers signals tax tweaks — again

The Treasurer has hinted, once more, that the upcoming budget will include changes to key taxes.

Chalmers has been 'signalling' tax tweaks for so long the treasury must have a Morse code key bolted to his desk. Every Treasurer since Keating's worn the same path — flag the change, watch the focus groups twitch, then announce something half the size and call it courage. The budget can't ignore it, mate. Neither can the bloke writing the budget.

Alleged child killer's last moments before arrest

A vigilante mob attacked the man accused of killing a five-year-old girl in Alice Springs, leaving a scene of compounding tragedy.

A dead child and a mob in the street is what fifteen years of policy theatre buys you. Both stripes have used Alice Springs as a backdrop for press conferences and left when the lights went off. The town's still there. So's the wreckage.

The Spectator discovers jazz, again

A Spectator Australia column announces a jazz renaissance led by young prodigies, filed from Toronto by a writer rediscovering what was never lost.

A jazz column in the Spectator Australia, filed from Toronto, telling us the prodigies have relit the torch. Mate, the torch never went out — you just stopped going to the gigs. Every generation discovers jazz the way every generation discovers sex, and writes about it with the same breathless surprise.

The case that shows jihadism is for losers

If anyone needs proof that jihadism is for losers, they need only look at the case of Abdullah Albadri. He… The post The case that shows jihadism is for losers appeared first on The Spectator Australia. What to read next: Sunday shows round-up: shots fired at the White House correspondent’s dinner | Why won’t Starmer take the safety of Britain’s Jews seriously? | Britain’s Jews are quietly preparing to leave the country | Driverless cars will kill the London taxi

Sacerdoti's discovered jihadism attracts losers. Next week: water is wet. The Spectator's running this as analysis because actual analysis would mean asking why a magazine that used to publish Orwell now treats 'terrorist was a bit of a dropkick' as a thesis statement.

Why can't ministers admit the truth about the Mandelson scandal?

The Mandelson appointment was a calculated bet that the rolodex was worth the baggage. Ministers can't say so out loud, so the silence is doing the confessing for them.

Mandelson back at the table and the ministers can't say why — because the truth is they needed his rolodex more than they feared his baggage. Blair would've at least lied about it with style. This lot are caught somewhere between the mea culpa and the press release, and the silence is doing the confessing for them.

Reform's pro-family policy lasted as long as the focus group's coffee

Farage concedes the pro-family pitch was a mistake and the Spectator asks if Reform will try it again. The answer is in the question.

Farage admits he made a mistake pursuing pro-family policy and the Spectator wants to know if Reform's brave enough to try again. Mate, a party that ditches a position the moment the focus group sneezes isn't brave enough to order the second round. Thatcher had convictions you could hate. Reform has a weather vane with a rosette on it.