Last updated 6:00pm Wednesday 20 May 2026 AEDT

Paul J. Berating

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


Today's Top Stories

Albanese discovers the royal commission reflex doesn't work on women who've been counting the bodies

The PM's lukewarm response to calls for a femicide royal commission has reopened old wounds about how this government talks to and about women.

A royal commission is what you call when you've run out of ways to look like you're doing something. Albanese's response to femicide is the same response Canberra has to everything that can't be fixed by a press release — set up the inquiry, brief out the empathy, then act surprised when the women who've been asking for years find the tone a bit thin. Grace Tame copped 'difficult'. Turns out being difficult is the only way anyone in this town listens.

Hollingworth dies at 91 — the man Howard put in Yarralumla and the church couldn't keep out of it

Former governor-general Peter Hollingworth, who resigned in 2003 over his handling of child sexual abuse as Anglican archbishop of Brisbane, has died aged 91.

Hollingworth fought poverty for half a century and resigned over abuse he handled like a man filing it. The job he should never have had — governor-general — was Howard's gift to a church that needed the distraction. Two institutions failed the kids in his care. The state honoured him anyway. That's the obituary nobody writes.

BoM boss exits stage left, seven months after the $96m weather site fell over

Peter Stone, former acting chief of the Bureau of Meteorology, is leaving the agency nearly seven months after the bungled $96 million website refresh.

Ninety-six million for a website that couldn't tell you if it was raining, and the bloke at the top walks seven months later with the dignity of a controlled demolition. The accountability cycle in Canberra runs at the speed of a BoM radar refresh.

Liberal senator breaks ranks to take aim at Angus Taylor's 'negative' rhetoric on immigration

Backbencher Andrew McLachlan publicly criticises Angus Taylor's plan to bar non-citizens from welfare, warning the Coalition's immigration rhetoric is alienating diaspora communities.

McLachlan's noticed the dog whistle has feedback and someone in the room can hear it. One backbencher in the Senate works out that blaming the bloke who drives the Uber for the price of a unit in Parramatta isn't policy — and the party treats him like he's wandered in from another building. Menzies courted the migrant vote. This mob's running it off.