Who controls your data online? Hint: it’s not you!By Manal al-Sharif | September 13, 2022Big tech wants us to think we control our own data, but we don't. Our relationship with technology begins with ...
Don’t mention the war powers: what’s behind Labor’s silence on inquiry? By Zacharias Szumer | September 12, 2022Labor said it was committed to holding an inquiry into war powers reform if elected. So far, there’s been no ...
Did Tourism Australia really get a KPMG report, or was it Scomo’s imagination?By Jommy Tee | September 11, 2022There are still many questions surrounding Scott Morrison's ill-starred time at the helm of Tourism Australia.
Elizabeth’s legacy: the enduring Australian monarchyBy Mark Sawyer | September 9, 2022King Charles presents a vexed dilemma for the Albanese government as it proceeds with the referendum to enshrine ...
A winner by wallet maybe, but Lachlan Murdoch has put Crikey on the world stageBy Alan Austin and Michael West | September 9, 2022If he gets in the witness box, Lachlan Murdoch stands to win his defamation action against Crikey but the ...
Spies Like Us: how Timor’s oil and gas delivered justice to Bernard CollaeryBy Rex Patrick | September 8, 2022The prosecution of Bernard Collaery was dropped after pressure from Timor-Leste and fears of China's expansion. ...
Royal Favours: pipe and slippers time for David Hurley and Scott MorrisonBy Michael West | September 7, 2022It's time for Governor General David Hurley and Scott Morrison to go. Public perceptions of mates-deals have ...
Tapped out: underclass left behind in Australia’s cashless futureBy James F Sice | September 6, 2022Card machines might be an alternative for Australians who rely on spare change from strangers to stay afloat in ...
Wing crack fears for A380 superjumbo escalate customer nightmare for Qantas chief Alan JoyceBy Michael Sainsbury | September 5, 2022Qantas international flights may become even more expensive as Airbus has issued a global directive concerning ...
A long trip to the Jobs Summit, and many mountains to climb for a sclerotic economyBy Mark Sawyer | September 2, 2022The Jobs and Skills Summit wraps up today. The famous Hawke-Keating economic summit of 1983 lasted four days. This ...
Universities in crisis amid savage cuts to staff and services but, hey, big profits are backBy Michael Sainsbury | September 1, 2022Australian universities have banked billions in profits despite the pandemic, with the elite Group of Eight making ...
Rex Patrick: will Timor-Leste become China’s latest aircraft carrier?By Rex Patrick | August 31, 2022In the wake of Scott Morrison and Marise Payne's disastrous foreign affairs stewardship, Penny Wong jets to ...
Punishment by partiality: Lendlease white-collars stick to the right side of the law no matter whatBy Michael West | August 30, 2022The law and the Tax Office hold Lendlease, PwC, MinterEllison and KPMG to a different standard to a dentist and a ...
For whom the toll bells: Transurban’s profits, motorists’ losses and looming toll hikesBy Michael West | August 29, 2022With tolls about to hike with inflation, Victorian and NSW governments face a motorist headache heading into their ...
Bulldozing trust: when the big build back tramples on communities and wildlifeBy Kurt Johnson | August 27, 2022A Sydney development fuels suspicions that projects being promoted to help the post-Covid recovery are overriding ...