news.com.au
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.
news.com.au
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.
Spectator Australia · Aaron Shuster
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.
Spectator Australia · Joe Shalam
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.
Spectator Australia · Jonathan Sacerdoti
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.
Spectator Australia · Matthew Gould
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.
news.com.au
A financial expert lists nine legal techniques to shuffle assets and boost age pension entitlements — turning the means test into a planning exercise.
Nine legal ways to hide your money so the taxpayer keeps topping up your pension. The means test was meant to direct the pension to people who need it; instead it's spawned a cottage industry teaching retirees how to look poorer than they are. Menzies designed a safety net. We've turned it into a tax-planning seminar with a dress code.
news.com.au
A tragic fatal stabbing between two eighteen-year-old footy mates has culminated in an extraordinary act inside a packed Sydney courtroom.
Two eighteen-year-old mates, one dead, and the courtroom does what courtrooms were built to do — contain grief without resolving it. The cameras call it extraordinary. It's not. It's what happens every time the law is asked to carry weight the law was never designed to lift.
Spectator Australia · Rebecca Weisser
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.
SBS News
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.
Guardian Australia · Petra Stock
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.
Michael West Media · Michael West
Hanson takes a plane from Rinehart, Albanese rolls over for the gas cartel, and a royal commission can't bring itself to say the word everyone's thinking. The owners are different but the lease arrangement is the same.
Hanson's flying around in a jet courtesy of Gina, Albanese's signed the gas cartel's permission slip, and the Bondi inquiry's tiptoeing around the G-word like it's the bloke's name at a wake. Different rorts, same landlords. The donors get the lease, the public gets the inspection report.
SMH · Jacqueline Maley
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.
SMH · Rob Harris
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.