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Opinion & Analysis
Yesterday
Australia’s fuel crisis is just the first domino to fall
Rebuilding our lost sovereignty will require government to rein in profligate spending on industry losers and stop treating the budget as a bottomless well.
Bin the rubbish tax amid fuel crunch, waste industry pleads
The peak industry group is pleading with the City of Melbourne to scrap its $3750 tax on waste trucks in the CBD and warns it will exacerbate impacts of the fuel crisis.
‘Don’t panic’: Data centres claim their power needs are overstated
Phantom demand is making the pipeline of data centre electricity connections look scarier than it is, industry says as it faces new rules to make it pay.
Why these people decided to vote for One Nation
Blue-collar workers are moving away from Labor and towards Pauline Hanson’s surging party. Pollsters expect the trend will extend beyond South Australia.
The US won’t protect you, top diplomat warns Australia
Former DFAT boss Peter Varghese has urged the Albanese government to pursue a more self-reliant defence policy, arguing US global primacy is not a key interest.
In pictures: March 2026
This month conflict in the Middle East starts to show its effects on Australia. Our photographers have captured moments that mark this time in history.
South Australia is now like a one-party state
One Nation’s SA election success has not just decimated the Liberals, but more importantly, it has gutted effective opposition and undermined democracy.
As the world burns, Canberra fumbles
The economic effects of the Iran crisis make the Albanese government’s budget decisions harder – but also more necessary to make tough choices. That’s not happening.
The Sydney suburbs that will house $52b of power-hungry data centres
The NSW Government wants to make data centres pay for their own water and electricity infrastructure. In the meantime, it’s putting 15 in the fast lane.
This Month
Pentagon reportedly plans ‘final blow’ in Iran; Trump threatens more bombings
The US is reportedly preparing options for a dramatic military escalation in Iran; Israel says it has killed the head of the IRGC navy. Follow live updates.
Labor’s wage rise plan amid oil spike risks ‘stagflation’
Economists fear a decision to increase minimum pay could aggravate impacts of the energy price shock, push inflation higher and put more people out of work.
Ignored warnings about fuel security have left Australia vulnerable
It’s not as though we haven’t been warned before – since in 2012 there have been warnings about the nation’s fuel reserves.
Canberra wants Tomago saved – just not all on its dime
Australia needs to avoid indulging in political slush funds dressed up as “industrial policy” and pivot towards a smarter, future-looking strategy.
‘Needless secrecy’: Government resolves to be upfront over fuel crisis
National cabinet will meet next Monday to discuss the crisis, amid some internal frustration over the government’s tone and messaging to date.
‘Really escalating now’: Lobster prices to rise before Easter
Fuel insecurity is driving up prices for lobster fishers and prompting some West Australian farmers to delay seeding ahead of the first autumn rain.
Copyright holders are ready to do AI deals – under existing laws
A leading creative industry CEO representing songwriters and music publishers says current legislation is fit for purpose in the age of artificial intelligence.
Australians suffering because of Trump’s war, says Hastie
Given the conflict’s impact here, Andrew Hastie says voters should consider One Nation’s loyalty to the US president when considering a vote for Pauline Hanson.
Taxpayers paid $907m for NSW projects that went nowhere
The Coalition has blasted nearly $1 billion of capital spending on no new infrastructure, but Labor defended its ditching of projects it said were unviable.
Four Frenchmen in court over luxury goods heist from Canberra home
But the men dispute claims they took $10 million worth of goods, allegedly including a Richard Mille RM 88 which could be worth $6 million second-hand.
Australia blocks entry for 7000 Iranian visa holders
Tony Burke says thousands of Iranians who hold temporary visas will be no longer be allowed to enter the country as the US-Iran war drags into a fourth week.