It’s been a long time coming,but at last you get the sense that people are waking up to wokeism.
Rodger Shanahan perfectly sums up the disturbing nature of Middle East commentary,where “advocates press hard for their side without conceding any ground to the other”.
This debate is not black and white. Let’s not lose sight of what we’re trying to achieve for Indigenous Australians.
It is the final sitting week of federal parliament for the year and the social calendar is packed.
Who flew where,how and who paid are fast becoming the defining questions in politics.
If this becomes an election issue,Peter Dutton knows it could significantly harm his chances of scraping into government.
The former deputy prime minister pushed back against shadow cabinet colleagues who say abortion is a state rather than federal issue.
Senior Coalition women have tried to stop an abortion debate,making clear the federal party cannot and does not want to wind back the laws.
Political debate on abortion has been turbocharged by conservative pushes to change the law in Queensland and South Australia.
The bitter referendum campaign spent much of Anthony Albanese’s political capital,revived Dutton’s fortunes and left a void at the heart of the Indigenous rights movement.
The newspaper was prepared to fork out expenses to ensure its star guest would attend the festivities in Sydney.