Michael West Media · AAP
Harry and Meghan reunite in Melbourne on day two of their Australian tour, with plans to engage with Indigenous culture and communities.
Two people who left the monarchy to escape the institution are back to soak up someone else's culture for the cameras. The Windsors have been doing that since 1788.
Michael West Media · AAP
March unemployment figures expected to show early economic fallout from the Middle East conflict, with analysts watching for signs of labour market softening amid rising fuel costs and supply disruptions.
March jobs data as the 'first glimpse' of war impact — mate, the petrol price told you three weeks ago and the Reserve Bank's been staring at the ceiling pretending it can't hear. We don't need the ABS to confirm what every trucking company from Wodonga to Wollongong already knows. The data will arrive, the economists will act surprised, and the policy response will arrive sometime around never.
SMH · Mike Foley
Albanese is leveraging food exports to Brunei to secure fuel and fertiliser imports, as up to half of Australia's grain growers face skipping the planting season due to soaring input costs.
Swapping wheat for fertiliser to grow wheat — the PM's reinvented the barter economy and called it food diplomacy. Half the grain belt won't plant a crop this season because the inputs cost more than the outputs, and Canberra's answer is a trade deal with Brunei that would make sense if this were 1426 instead of 2026. Jack Lang would have built a plant. We sent a delegation.
AFR · William Ton
Victoria Police sexual offences detectives are investigating claims of a historical assault in Melbourne in 2010 involving Katy Perry.
Victoria Police confirming an investigation is process, not spectacle. The rest of us can shut up and let the detectives do the detecting.
SMH · Matthew Knott
Defence Minister Richard Marles will release a 10-year defence spending plan amid warnings Australia is dangerously unprepared for modern warfare threats already at its doorstep.
'The threat is here now' and the response is a ten-year plan. Marles has diagnosed a house fire and ordered new smoke detectors from a catalogue. Every defence white paper since Dibb has said the same thing in increasingly urgent fonts, and every government has responded by commissioning the next one.
Spectator Australia · Michael de Percy
The Spectator Australia runs another editorial diagnosing Albanese government frailty, this time via a Brunei travel anecdote from conservative academic Michael de Percy.
The Spectator's discovered Albanese is weak the way a bloke discovers gravity after falling off a roof — late, loudly, and adding nothing to the physics. They've been running this headline since 2022 with different adjectives. Brunei gets a mention because even the critique needs a holiday.
Michael West Media · Kim Wingerei
Latitude Financial broke the law 2.7 million times and copped a $3.98 million fine — working out to $1.50 per breach, a penalty so small it functions as a cost of doing business rather than a deterrent.
Two point seven million breaches and a fine of a dollar fifty each — that's not a regulatory action, that's a loyalty program. ASIC's handed Latitude the kind of penalty you'd cop for returning a library book late. The whole enforcement regime has the deterrent power of a speed camera with no film in it. Somewhere in Latitude's compliance department, someone's already budgeted for the next round.
Crikey · Charlie Lewis
Pauline Hanson's repeated rides on Gina Rinehart's private jet attract little scrutiny, marking how normalised billionaire-politician cosiness has become in Australian politics.
Hanson built a brand on fish and chips and mortgage stress, and now she's wheels-up in Gina's Bombardier like it's an Uber from the pub. The battler's battler hasn't changed — the battler never existed. She was always the bunyip populist with one hand on the lectern and the other in the nearest deep pocket. The only shift is they've stopped pretending.
Guardian Australia · Nick Visser
Treasurer warns of global recession risk and prolonged high fuel prices through 2027, citing IMF forecasts while framing the economic pain as an unavoidable consequence of the Middle East conflict.
'Australians didn't choose the circumstances of that war' — no, but they did elect three consecutive parliaments that chose not to build a refinery. Chalmers reads the IMF report like a weather forecast, as though recession blows in from the sea and nobody left the windows open.
Spectator Australia · Constantin Eckner
Germany's temporary fuel price relief has been absorbed by market pricing, leaving motorists no better off and the treasury worse. The pattern mirrors identical failed interventions in Australia, the UK, and elsewhere.
Howard did it. Rudd did it. Albanese did it. Now Scholz has done it. Every government on earth reaches for the fuel excise cut like a drunk reaching for the lamp post — not for illumination, but for support. The subsidy goes in, the oil companies adjust their margins, and six months later the motorist is back where he started but the treasury's lighter. You don't need a PhD from Heidelberg to spot the pattern, mate — you just need to have been alive for any of the last four times.
Spectator Australia · Laura Powell
Eric Swalwell's gubernatorial ambitions collapsed after sexual assault allegations surfaced, but the real cause of death was electoral arithmetic — the party moved when the numbers moved, not when the story broke.
Swalwell got done by the same calculus that does them all — the allegations didn't sink him, the polling did. American politics has never sacked a man for what he's done, only for what it costs. The morality arrives after the focus group, mate, same as it does here.