SMH · Paul Sakkal, Mostafa Rachwani
News that a group of four women and nine children have arrived in Damascus and hope to fly to Australia within days has added urgency to the question of how the group should be dealt with.
Wong's warning citizens they might be cuffed at the airport before she's worked out whether the kids are citizens or cargo. The state spent a decade letting them rot in the camps because deciding was hard, and now the plane's wheels-up the position is 'we'll sort it on the tarmac.' Policy by arrival lounge.
news.com.au
A new plan aims to free up Australia's 13 million empty bedrooms as the housing shortage deepens, mostly by encouraging Boomers to downsize.
Thirteen million empty bedrooms and the revolutionary plan is to politely ask the Boomers if they'd mind shuffling along. Mate, you don't solve a housing crisis with a real estate brochure and a hopeful tone β Menzies built suburbs, this mob writes pamphlets about them.
SMH · Matthew Knott
Four years after the $90 billion contract cancellation triggered the worst diplomatic rupture in modern Franco-Australian history, Paris has signalled it would consider reviving submarine talks if AUKUS unravels.
Paris says it'll sell us submarines again if AUKUS falls over β which is more grace than we showed dumping them by text message. Forty months later we're back at the door with a different ring and the same hangdog look. Talleyrand would've charged us interest.
Spectator Australia · Olivia Cole
Olivia Cole reviews Jay McInerney's See You on the Other Side, a coda to characters whose glory days ended decades ago.
Spectator's running a McInerney book review now β the literary equivalent of finding a Bret Easton Ellis paperback at a garage sale and calling it a cultural moment. The Calloways had their glory days in the 80s, which is also when this masthead last had an idea.
Spectator Australia · Douglas Murray
Douglas Murray laments that 'ageing' has become a permitted insult, in a magazine that has built a small empire identifying which insults are permitted.
Murray reckons 'ageing' is the last acceptable slur, which is a hell of a discovery from a bloke whose entire career has been an extended treatise on which slurs are coming back into fashion. The Spectator's found a grievance for every demographic now β they're running a lost-and-found for hurt feelings and calling it cultural commentary.
Spectator Australia · John Foreman
Four years after Putin promised a fortnight's work, Ukraine is still standing β and now being told by Trump to call it a day.
Trump tells Ukraine to fold and Ukraine tells Trump where to put it β four years into a war Putin said would take a fortnight, the country still standing is the one being lectured about realism. Mate, the Ukrainians have learned more about sovereignty in four years than Washington's managed in fifty.
Spectator Australia · Henry Donovan
Germany's conservatives wanted a break from Merkel's fifteen-year managerial drift. Merz spent a career attacking it, then inherited it whole.
Germans voted for a sharp conservative knife and got another butter spreader. Merz spent fifteen years telling anyone who'd listen that Merkel had hollowed out the CDU, then took the chancellorship and proved her right by becoming her. Bismarck unified Germany with blood and iron. This bloke's running it on focus groups and a shrug.
news.com.au
The Foreign Minister tours China, Japan and Korea to shore up fuel supplies as the Iran ceasefire holds and reserves remain below benchmark.
Wong's off to Beijing, Tokyo and Seoul to shake the tin for fuel because the cupboard's bare and the Americans have stopped restocking it. Three weeks ago we couldn't tell the public how many days of diesel we had. Now the Foreign Minister's doing the rounds with a begging bowl dressed up as a strategic dialogue. Talleyrand worked the European courts with leverage. We're working Asia with a shopping list.
SMH · Natassia Chrysanthos, Brittany Busch
Opposition leader Angus Taylor signals support for Labor's NDIS overhaul as SA Premier Peter Malinauskas commends the federal government's 'political courage' on reform.
Bipartisanship breaks out the moment the bill's too big to argue about. Taylor backing Butler on the NDIS overhaul β the political equivalent of two blokes finally agreeing to put out the fire after the house has burned down. Malinauskas calls it 'political courage.' Mate, courage is what you need before the cost blows out. After it, that's just arithmetic with a press conference attached.
Spectator Australia · Flat White
President Trump addressed the press after a shooting at the White House Correspondents' Dinner, calling the incident 'very unexpected.'
Trump calls a shooting at the press dinner 'very unexpected' β mate, the only thing unexpected in Washington these days is a sentence with a verb in the right place. Forty years of treating political violence as a ratings event and now the chickens have RSVP'd to the gala.
SMH · Paul Sakkal, Rob Harris, Jackson Graham
The Liberal leader said Welcome to Country ceremonies had lost their value, the day after booing was heard at Anzac Day services.
A day after the boos at the Shrine, Taylor's discovered Welcome to Country has 'lost its value' β which is the kind of insight you only get when there's polling attached. Reconciliation in this country now runs on the timetable of the news cycle: sacred on Friday, optional Saturday, embarrassing by Monday. Menzies at least defended his prejudices in his own words. Taylor's reading his off the chyron.
SMH · James Massola
Labor finally moves on the $50 billion NDIS, picking the cohort with the least political muscle to absorb the hit.
Albanese spent three years hoarding political capital like a bloke with a piggy bank he was too frightened to break, and now he's smashed it open for the NDIS β the one cut that punishes the people least equipped to punish him back. Courageous reform if you squint. A protection racket of a different colour if you don't.
SMH · Shaun Carney
The Albanese government will soon deliver the most highly anticipated budget in its four years in office. But economic experts probably arenβt going to like it.
Carney's defence of Labor amounts to: the experts who got the last decade wrong shouldn't be trusted on the next one. Fair enough. But 'the critics are also stupid' isn't a budget strategy β it's a press secretary's consolation. Chalmers will deliver something cautious, the gallery will call it bold, and the mortgage holders will keep doing the actual budgeting at the kitchen table.
Spectator Australia · David Flint
Flint's reading prophecy into a hot-mic moment between Putin and Xi about living to 150 β autocrats talking nonsense at parades is the oldest show in the catalogue.
Putin and Xi muttering on a parade ground about living to 150 and the Spectator's treating it like Yalta. Two ageing autocrats doing the immortality bit at a tank show isn't a Bond villain plot β it's the standard delusion of men who've been told 'yes' for too long. Talleyrand would've been bored by lunch.
Sky News Australia
An Aussie's complaint about disappearing streaming content has landed on the central swindle of the subscription era β you're not buying anything, you're renting the memory of access.
Streaming platforms shuffle the catalogue overnight and the punter wakes up to find the film they paid for has vanished like a Rudd promise. We used to own the video. Now we rent the right to be reminded what we don't own. Blockbuster at least let you keep the late fee receipt.
Sky News Australia
Boos and heckles at dawn services drew condemnation from the political class β the same class that's spent twenty years using Anzac Day as a backdrop.
Heckling at a dawn service is a rotten bit of business, no argument. But spare us the leaders' synchronised tut-tutting β the same political class that turned Anzac Day into a photo op every April is suddenly shocked someone treated it like a public meeting. You can't spend twenty years draping the cenotaph in branding and then act surprised when the punters think it's a stage.
Sky News Australia
The first Afghan refugee in the Australian Defence Force delivered the Anzac dawn service address, settling more about Australian identity in one speech than two decades of political debate managed.
An Afghan kid the system spent two decades arguing about now wears the uniform and gives the Anzac speech. The whole national debate about who gets to be Australian, settled at dawn by a bloke in service dress while the politicians were still working out their press releases. Worth more than every border slogan of the last twenty years combined.