The prime minister should ignore the counsel of appeasers and retaliate against Trump's tariffs — and use the chance to reshape his image.
This is every outrageous thing Australia overlooked just to be hit by the same tariffs as the countries who told Trump to get on his bike.
Malcolm Turnbull's call for Australia to stand up to Donald Trump on tariffs (and everything else) has sparked a good ol' fashioned Crikey reader debate. Has Mal got it wrong?
Twenty-five percent steel and aluminium tariffs will be placed on Australia after Donald Trump refused an exemption, and Peter Dutton has been losing momentum in the lead-up to the federal election.
News Corp has introduced its own AI model, NewsGPT, which raises issues of ethics, bias and regulation, one expert told Crikey.
Violence, real or threatened, is terrifying. But the facts matter when we're left with anti-terror laws that make us not demonstrably safer but instead distinctly less free.
The government agency responsible for overseeing carbon credits continues to reject the science around human-induced regeneration and carbon storage.
To the extent that any government should shoulder the blame for inflation, most of the blame for this spurt in inflation should be sheeted home to the previous Coalition government, not the current ...
They think that one cigarette can do damage, but one bet can’t do the same amount of damage as one cigarette can do, which I ...
Turnbull is willing to do what our political leaders won't: pursue a clear-eyed reassessment of what Trump's assault on the global order means for Australia.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and NSW Premier Chris Minns immediately described the event as terrorism. We now know that was never true.
Trump is deporting tens of thousands of immigrants, focusing on Mexicans, whom he blames for bringing fentanyl onto American ...
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