SMH · James Massola
Albanese faces pressure over the fuel crisis, with commentators framing it as a leadership-defining moment — though the structural vulnerability predates his government by decades.
The press gallery has one play left: declare every crisis a PM's 'defining moment' and watch him either seize it or fumble. But the fuel shortage isn't a test of character — it's the invoice for thirty years of strategic negligence by both sides, arriving at a door Albanese happens to be standing behind. Calling it his 'COVID moment' flatters both the crisis and the response: COVID required improvisation, this one required foresight we never bothered having.
SMH · Shane Wright
The OECD projects Australia among the world's fastest-growing economies this year, but persistent inflation threatens to keep the Reserve Bank from cutting rates, tempering the good news.
Being the fastest-growing economy in a war-battered world is like winning a foot race in a hospital ward — technically impressive, entirely contextual. The OECD hands us a gold star while the Reserve Bank sharpens the interest rate knife, which is the economic equivalent of being told you're the healthiest patient in intensive care. Growth with inflation isn't prosperity — it's a fever the government's mistaking for a healthy glow.
SMH · Nick Newling
The Albanese government has submitted a real-wage increase to the Fair Work Commission for millions of workers, positioning itself between the ACTU's larger claim and employer resistance.
Labor asks for a wage rise big enough to claim credit but small enough to avoid blame — the Goldilocks school of industrial relations, where the porridge is always someone else's problem. The ACTU wanted more; business wanted less; the government split the difference and called it courage. A real-wage increase 'despite inflation fears' is how you describe a bloke crossing the road despite traffic — technically brave, mostly just necessary.
Michael West Media · AAP
The Albanese government says it wants to balance wage rises for low-paid workers against inflation pressures, a framing that treats decades of structural wage stagnation as a scheduling problem.
The government says it wants wages to rise but not prices — the economic equivalent of wanting rain but not wet roads. This isn't a dilemma; it's the inevitable result of thirty years of wage suppression followed by a cost-of-living crisis nobody in Canberra planned for because planning requires admitting the model was broken. 'Striking a balance' is what you say when you've decided to do nothing and want it to sound deliberate.
Crikey · Anton Nilsson
A parliamentary inquiry will examine long-standing complaints that the National Anti-Corruption Commission has avoided public hearings, raising questions about whether the watchdog was designed to bark quietly.
You build an anti-corruption body, staff it, fund it, give it a name that sounds like a sneeze — then let it conduct its business in the dark like a poker game in a sacristy. The NACC was supposed to be the torch; instead it became the room the torch was locked in. Now parliament wants to investigate the investigator, which is less oversight than it is an admission that the original design was a padlock sold as a window.
Michael West Media · AAP
Rising interest rates and cost-of-living pressures are hammering renters, but the deeper problem is a tax and policy architecture that treats housing as an investment vehicle rather than shelter.
The headline says landlords are squeezing a tight market. That's like saying gravity is squeezing a man off a cliff — technically accurate, cosmically beside the point. We built a tax system that treats shelter as a speculative asset class, then act surprised when the speculators behave like speculators. Negative gearing didn't create a housing market — it created a casino where renters pay the cover charge and never get to play.
SMH
Daily editorial cartoons interpret the political news cycle, increasingly serving as the sharpest commentary in Australian media.
They run the cartoon roundup daily now, which tells you the illustrated summary of national affairs has become more reliable than the written one. Parliament produces theatre; the gallery produces transcription; the cartoonists produce diagnosis. When your sharpest political analysis requires no sentences, the sentence has failed as a unit of accountability.