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Opinion

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Elon Musk.

Elon Musk needs an exit from his ill-timed Twitter bid

You don’t have to look hard for the reason for Elon Musk’s decision to put his $US44 billion bid for Twitter “temporarily on hold.”

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz

Latest

The future of under-siege Bulldogs coach Trent Barrett will be discussed by the club’s board on Monday.
Opinion
NRL 2022

Trent Barrett is gone - who should coach the Bulldogs?

It would require a supercoach to turn the broken Bulldogs around.

  • by Andrew Webster
Which leader is about to get personal experience of the meaning of insecure work?

Will first home buyers be better off using the Liberal or Labor low-deposit schemes?

First home buyers are being offered a chance to buy a home on a low deposit through a Coalition program. Labor will match it and offer its own, where it co-purchases with the buyer. Which is better for aspiring homeowners?

  • by Elizabeth Redman
Murray Tualagi try
Analysis
NRL 2022

NRL round 10: Key takeouts from Magic Round at Suncorp Stadium

Everything we learned from the annual rugby league extravaganza in the Olympic city.

  • by Phil Lutton, Christian Nicolussi, Adam Pengilly and Dan Walsh
More must be done to help young people in the Kimberley.

Victims of crime flirt with vigilantism while the Kimberley kids known as ‘ghosts’ are left behind

Locals whose houses have been broken into or vandalised are flirting with vigilantism. This isn’t small talk about giving a kid a hiding if they trespass on private property; we’re talking open discussions around gun use and electrifying fences.

  • by Anonymous
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - MAY 14: Owen Franks of the Hurricanes warms up ahead of the round 13 Super Rugby Pacific match between the NSW Waratahs and the Hurricanes at Leichhardt Oval on May 14, 2022 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Jason McCawley/Getty Images)
Tight Five
Super Rugby

The NRL doesn’t sell what you need to win a Rugby World Cup

Before Rugby Australia start chasing league targets for 2027, they should look at the 34-year-old who beat up NSW at Leichhardt Oval. And has won two World Cups.

  • by Paul Cully
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Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese has backed a wage rise of 5.1 per cent.

Corporate chiefs should back wage hikes - because cheating customers ain’t smart business

The business community risks shooting itself in the foot by opposing wage increases.

  • by Ross Gittins
Rough sleepers in central Melbourne on Tuesday.

Make no mistake, poverty is a policy choice

The question we should be asking those running for public office is how many Australians will come out of poverty if they win?

  • by Travers McLeod
AFR FIRST USE ONLY. 081002. portrait of RUPERT MURDOCH ac gives a speech at the boyer lecture 2008 at the sydney opera house. Photo by ROB HOMER SPECIALX 95185

Could this be the election in which News Corp’s impotence is exposed?

All media outlets are guilty at times of outbreaks of stupidity, errors of fact and judgment and egregious omissions. News Corporation is in a different class. But is it having an impact?

  • by Margaret Simons
Taking over: PM Scott Morrison and Labor leader Anthony Albanese both had a background in politics

Why women should vote for the Coalition

Female voters should take a hard look at the track record of both parties before casting their ballot at the federal election.

  • by Roshena Campbell
Positive COVID-19 cases continue to rise among Victorian healthcare workers

Without radical reform, the prognosis for our health system is grim

Healthcare workers are leaving the sector in droves, not because they want to, but because they are being asked to work beyond their capacity.

  • by Dr Neela Janakiramanan
Albanese says Labor can be the change Australia needs.

After labouring the point, Albanese finally gets his story straight

In this age of too many vague political words, can clear and specific beliefs still reach people?

  • by Sean Kelly
The steelworks and coal loading facility in Port Kembla, Wollongong. For many the Glasgow summit has been a step in the right direction even though it failed to call for countries to “phase out” coal.

Political leaders ignoring the biggest threat to our national security

In a rapidly warming climate, geo-strategic competition between China and Australia will be like trying to manoeuvre chess pieces on a toppling chessboard.

  • by Robert Glasser
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Letters
Letters

Progressive Liberals can step up if they choose to

Matt Kean talks about voters stripping the Liberal Party of progressives, yet the solution is in the hands of the “Progressives”.

Column 8 granny dinkus
Opinion
Column 8

When X does more than mark the spot

The butterfingers award everyone wants.

Scott Morrison and Katherine Deves.

My trans truth is not a cosmetic choice, it’s a brutal imperative

Uncaring politicians talking about transgender issues without seeking to understand the complexities are playing with a fire they cannot see.

  • by Liska Fell
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Scott Morrison and his family at the Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre on Sunday.

Morrison repositions himself with pitch to younger voters in final week of campaign

The PM who spent most of the last five weeks sledging his opponent and arguing over past decisions, has been replaced by someone who wants to talk about his optimism.

  • by David Crowe
People hug outside the scene after a shooting at a supermarket on Saturday, May 14, 2022, in Buffalo, New York.

Biden will do ‘everything in his power’ to end hate crimes. But can he do anything?

The Buffalo mass shooting was inspired by the horrors of the Christchurch massacre. But America won’t respond with sweeping gun law reforms the way NZ did.

  • by Farrah Tomazin
Scott Morrison read the room like a palm on Sunday.

I’ll get out of your lives, promises Morrison. Just re-elect me first

The prime minister was warm and loquacious at Sunday’s official campaign launch. For a bloke who believes in minimal government, he sure spoke for a long time.

  • by Jacqueline Maley
REA Group CEO Owen Wilson says banks have been calculating a borrower’s mortgage serviceability at an interest rate of 5 per cent for several years.

Superannuation housing ‘solution’ will drive up prices

Coming to a Saturday auction near you - first time buyers with an extra $50,000 in their pockets that will push up prices and make housing more unaffordable.

  • by Shane Wright
Demons fans return to the AFL for the game against the Western Bulldogs.

It’s time to reward AFL fans with a day grand final

Despite footy fans’ undying support during two years of COVID interruptions, the AFL Commission may opt for a twilight grand final - against fans’ wishes.

  • by Cheryl Critchley
Andrew Symonds celebrates a century at the MCG with Matthew Hayden.

Why Andrew Symonds meant so much to us

In a spiritual sense, Andrew Symonds occupied the same wondrous place in Australian cricket dreams as Shane Warne and Rod Marsh.

  • by Daniel Brettig
Teenager sending email from smart phone in his bed, Typing text message on smartphone. young cell phone addict teen  awake at night in bed using smartphone for chatting A smartphone offers unfettered access to the internet, so when should kids have one?
Analysis
Web culture

Stronger parental controls only one piece of phone safety puzzle

The government wants to force Apple and Google to make stronger tools for parental oversight, but a cultural and educational shift is also needed.

  • by Tim Biggs
Trent Barrett
Opinion
NRL 2022

Bulldogs directors losing patience with struggling Barrett

Trent Barrett has barely won a game as Bulldogs coach, and no club or board can tolerate that.

  • by Danny Weidler
Opinion
Investing

I started investing in shares a year ago, so how am I doing?

After investing in shares for the first time last year, I’m treading water with my Australian portfolio, but I’m in for the long haul with history on my side.

  • by Jessica Irvine
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Opinion
AFL 2022

Peak AFL socialism: Why West Coast v Melbourne is a landmark

The bookies and the punters have assessed that Demons can’t lose, and that West Coast has less than Buckley’s hope. It’s incredible to think that these teams have diverged so sharply, given that Sunday’s West Coast team has the same goal-to-goal line as the 2018 preliminary final.

  • by Jake Niall
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On the money? Treasurer Josh Frydenberg and Prime Minister Scott Morrison.

Politicians’ pay has gone up by a third in a decade, but a wage rise in line with inflation is too much?

A near-decade of wage stagnation has afflicted most of us, but not politicians.

  • by Jacqueline Maley
Andrew Denton

The vulnerable v the entitled: how VAD has become a ‘hugely unfair fight’

Andrew Denton’s passionate advocacy for voluntary assisted dying has been fuelled by the realisation the most powerful people in the country were opposing VAD.

  • by Peter FitzSimons
Those on the right who have split with the Liberal Party are coming for the party’s conservative voters: George Christensen, Craig Kelly, Campbell Newman, John Ruddick

Danger for the Liberal Party coming from the right as well as the ‘teals’

Even a Liberal Party reduced to a conservative rump may be optimistic as others position themselves to attract the traditional conservative base.

  • by Parnell Palme McGuinness
The emergency sign at a Sydney hospital.
Opinion
Healthcare

Time to fix our health system that’s as broken as my leg

A broken leg took Helen Pitt to the emergency room who returned with a diagnosis: our healthcare system is sick.

  • by Helen Pitt
Crypto-tracking ETFs make their debut in Australia

Crypto exchange-traded funds a fizzer on debut

It was a disappointing start to the sharemarket trading of units in ETFs that track the prices of cryptocurrencies, as investors held back against a background of plunging crypto prices.

  • by John Collett
Ryan Channing and Ian Thorpe in 2017.

The man who helped Thorpe take his first steps out of the closet

His mysterious death - now the subject of social media conjecture - quickly became a news story largely thanks to his relationship with Thorpe.

  • by Andrew Hornery
Letters
Letters

Grape degradations offer a sobering insight

It was an insight to learn that grapes, and therefore wine, are so sensitive to climate change.

Single people can struggle in lockdown even without jackhammers.
Opinion
Opinion

Swift action required for nation hurt by lockdowns

We must do more to support those suffering with their mental health in the aftermath of the pandemic.

  • by The Herald's View
Opinion
Investing

Tracking down long-lost investments

Tracking down lost investments can be complex, so it usually pays to get some help from a financial professional.

  • by George Cochrane
One Nation candidate Ludo Mineur.

Key seats Bass and Braddon become victims of their own loveliness

Tasmania’s neighbouring electorates of Braddon and Bass, key to elections, have attracted those searching for natural beauty. The influx has caused problems.

  • by Tony Wright
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Illustration: Jim Pavlidis

Can a bulldozer vault out of this? Morrison has seven days to try

The prime minister told me in December that “elections are always about the future”. He seems to have forgotten that.

  • by Peter Hartcher
Sinn Fein northern leader, Michelle ONeill and Sinn Fein leader, Mary Lou McDonald take a selfie as they celebrate the historic win.

How Sinn Fein went from ‘pariah’ party to Irish political powerhouse

Growing support for the new look Sinn Féin is not only a huge turnaround in the party’s fortunes, but makes Irish unity more likely.

  • by Ray Bassett
Liberal MPs Dave Sharma, Katie Allen, Trent Zimmerman and Jason Falinski all pushed Prime Minister Scott Morrison to include a net zero emissions by 2050 pledge as part of his climate policy.

Think again about that teal protest vote: you risk stripping the Liberals of progressive MPs who change the nation

The NSW treasurer writes that Australian voters should consider the US Republican Party and the damage done to centre-right parties when their progressive voices are removed - the likes of Liberal MPs who have stood up for climate action and LGBTQ rights.

  • by Matt Kean
Higher interest rates continue to dominate the direction of global sharemarkets.

Inflation threatens super funds’ pandemic recovery

Super fund balances are higher than they were just before the pandemic, but returns for this financial year could disappoint.

  • by John Collett
Kathy Lette: If ever in doubt, just remember that embarrassment lasts a moment, regret a lifetime.

I turned down a date with George Clooney. Oh, the regret!

My biggest regrets by far are not the things I’ve done, but the things I haven’t done.

  • by Kathy Lette
John McEnroe captured in the act of protesting a decision during the Wimbledon tennis championships in 1980.
Opinion
MyCareer

‘You cannot be serious!’: What happens when we reach our goals

We want to be taken seriously in our careers, but hold great fears that we might be. To be taken seriously is to be seen as a grown-up, and we can no longer hide behind the comic.

  • by Jim Bright
The Amazon Echo of five years ago was a comparatively limited device.
Analysis
Home tech

‘Voice assistants’ have become less vocal, but much more powerful

As Amazon and Google usher in an era of ambient computing, Sonos pushes back over privacy concerns with a music-based voice service of its own.

  • by Tim Biggs
<p>
Letters
Letters

For whom the polls toll: PM lost on path to victory

Tell the Coalition they’re dreaming if they believe in that narrow path to victory. The “vibe” on the street is there for Anthony Albanese.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison campaigning in Queensland last month.

Marooned: How Queensland is key to Coalition’s defensive strategy

If Queensland doesn’t save the Morrison government, it will deliver the bulk of members - and possibly the leader - of a Coalition opposition.

  • by Cameron Atfield
<p>

Organised crime thrives because NSW cannot follow the money

A secret briefing by the NSW Assistant Commissioner of Police has thrown the spotlight on the gaping holes in money laundering legislation.

  • The Herald's View
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Anthony Albanese looking relaxed in Queensland on Friday.

Albanese was here (again): Labor leader ramps up campaigning for final week

Labor leader Anthony Albanese has dialled up his campaigning, showing quiet confidence that the May 21 election could be his.

  • by Rachel Clun
Labor’s Penny Wong laid claim to patriotism and hit out at the government for politicising national security.

The Coalition is now losing the debate on national security and China

National security had been seen as one of the Coalition’s biggest strengths heading into the election.

  • by Anthony Galloway
SAS soldiers on duty in Afghanistan move towards a waiting UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter.

Broken friendships as soldiers examine conscience and take sides

Since allegations of war crimes in Afghanistan, soldiers have been forced to make choices where they might otherwise have hoped to step between the folds.

  • by Harriet Alexander

The unexpected life lessons for adults from children’s books

Parents hope their kids will develop a love of reading through being read to. Could the rewards also flow the other way?

  • by Amelia Lester