Saturday 16-05-2026 1:15pm

Johannes Leak cartoon in today's The Australian newspaper.

And what do the big boys think?

On Tuesday and Thursday nights this week, Chalmers' budget and Angus Taylor's budget reply respectively triggered their own culture war over economics and the household budget through tax reform. Chalmers, influenced by left-leaning economics professor Joseph Stiglitz, whom he interviewed in February, is channelling the Marx and Engels view of the world: that economic decisions can shape cultural ones. The Opposition Leader, who is influenced more by right-leaning economics professor John Cochrane, on Thursday channelled the Friedrich Hayek view of the world that he quoted at the National Press Club early this year: that the cultural side of a society is what shapes economic decisions. Taylor, who backs the risk-taking, wealth-creating culture of Australians with lower tax and smaller government, announced a reform package that would repeal Chalmers' capital gains tax changes and negative gearing and instead fully scrap bracket creep — where inflation pushes people into higher average tax rates over time. H&R Block Australia director of tax communications Mark Chapman says this is a big moment for Australia. "These changes will change people. Just look at what happens this weekend at property auctions," he says. "The tax changes in the budget will change the way people invest and run their businesses. People will become more conservative by investing in income as opposed to capital growth." Mark Bouris, the Australian businessman best known as the founder and chairman of Wizard Home Loans and now chairman of Yellow Brick Road, which has written more than $320bln in loans, says the changes are an "existential moment for Australia". "This is a very important cultural moment because all the people I deal with, all the small businesses, are not the wealthiest people in the country, they are the people who are trying to build wealth," he says. "This is an existential moment in Australian history, and if you are a small business (the Treasurer's changes will be diabolic)." Locally, David Paradice, one of the highest-profile fund managers in Australia, says investors won't invest in high-growth businesses because of the tax and instead will go for high-yielding businesses that do not reinvest capital, which is essential for boosting productivity in Australia. "It is a political risk. It is going to change the culture," he says. "I spent years overseas in places like South America where politics was a big factor in investment decisions. Australia, up until recently, you could make investment decisions without too much consideration about what government was doing. That's not the case (any) more."


 SPORT:

Nailbiters and resignations

Going to stop watching the Swans. It’s always a taxing affair with their last few second wins. They did the same last night ending up 81-75 against Collingwood. The Gold Coast was a bit better, 98-73 against Port Adelaide. As for the NRL and the Rabittoes … they were hardly in the contest going down 32-10 against the Dolphins and the Bulldogs not much better going down 16-32 against the Sharks. [click to read more]

Daniel Cherny and Ben Horne in the Oz report one of the most influential figures in Australian cricket over the past two decades has announced he is standing down from his post.

Former Test wicketkeeper Greg Dyer has told players yesterday he is standing down as chairman of the Australian Cricketers Association — a position he has held for the past 15 years.

It’s understood Dyer will stay in his role to help the ACA find a suitable successor to a post that is as important and relevant as ever as the game reaches a crossroads over privatisation and player payments.

The privatisation bun fight has nothing to do with Dyer’s departure and talks about him transitioning out of the role have been taking place in the background for some time.

Dyer was a central figure in the landmark pay dispute between players and Cricket Australia back in 2017.

Players admired Dyer for his strength of leadership in what was a protracted and acrimonious war over the revenue share model which underpins the sport.

Relations between the ACA and CA have improved in more recent years, and Dyer was part of that restoration of peace despite the battles that had gone beforehand.

The ACA will now begin a process to find a suitable chairman.

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 STOCKMARKET:

Selloff and lack of faith

U.S. stocks retreated from artificial-intelligence-fueled record highs on Friday, as spiking crude prices ignited global inflation fears, Reuters reports on today's website. [click to continue reading]

All three major U.S. stock indexes veered sharply lower, each shedding more than 1% as a jump in benchmark Treasury yields, reflecting surging energy prices and concerns about long-term inflation, offered an attractive alternative to higher-risk equities.

Despite the selloff, the S&P 500 logged its seventh straight weekly gain, its longest since a nine-week streak ended in December 2023.

The Nasdaq and the Dow fell on the week, with the Nasdaq snapping a six-week winning streak.

There’s a realization that the market had gotten way ahead of itself, said Kenny Polcari, chief market strategist at Slatestone Wealth in Jupiter, Florida. It wasn't paying enough attention to what the bond market and economic data is telling it. It was caught up in this momentum AI trade.

Crude prices surged after combative comments from U.S. President Donald Trump and Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi raised doubts as to whether their countries' fragile truce would hold and dampened hopes that normal traffic through the crucial Strait of Hormuz would soon resume.

Trump’s meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping concluded with few tangible results, and Beijing offered no clear help toward resolving the U.S.-Iran conflict.

It certainly was encouraging to see both countries engaging again at the highest level. Historically, these type of events bring about headlines outlining various commitments, said Matthew Keator, managing partner at the Keator Group, a wealth management firm in Lenox, Massachusetts. This week’s meeting seemed like more of a reset in relations between the two countries and less short-term, quantifiable results.

The yield on 10-year Treasury notes , an indicator of global borrowing costs, touched its highest level since May 2025, when markets were reeling from Trump’s Liberation Day tariff proclamation.

Global bond yields also jumped on growing evidence of the Iran war’s widespread economic damage.

Yesterday marked Jerome Powell’s last day as U.S. Federal Reserve chair, a position he has held through the pandemic, periods of inflation, and interest rate hiking and cutting cycles.

Incoming chair Kevin Warsh is saddled with the potential need for a rate hike if a protracted Iran war leads to sticky inflation.

The weakness today is highlighting the concerns that the recent (inflation) numbers aren't transient, and it’s hard to envision the new chair communicating anything other than a neutral policy stance at best until we see some consistent, meaningful change in the data, Keator added.

The odds of the Fed hiking interest rates by 25 basis points in December are approaching 40%, up from 13.6% a week ago, according to CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 537.29 points, or 1.07%, to 49,526.17, the S&P 500 lost 92.74 points, or 1.24%, to 7,408.50 and the Nasdaq Composite lost 410.08 points, or 1.54%, to 26,225.15.

Among the 11 major sectors in the S&P 500, energy shares jumped 2.3%. The 10 remaining sectors lost ground, with materials and utilities suffering the steepest percentage losses.

The Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index slid 4%, dragged lower by stocks that have benefited from the AI hyperscaler phenomenon.

Nvidia and AMD fell by 4.4% and 5.7%, respectively, while Intel dropped 6.2%.

Microsoft rose 3.1% following the disclosure of a new position in the company taken by Bill Ackman’s hedge fund Pershing Square.

Dexcom jumped 6.6% following the medical device maker’s announcement that it will appoint two independent directors and revamp a board committee in collaboration with activist investor Elliott Investment Management.

Ford dropped 7.5%, retreating from a near 21% surge over the last two sessions on optimism over the automaker’s energy storage business.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 3.88-to-1 ratio on the NYSE. There were 128 new highs and 187 new lows on the NYSE.

On the Nasdaq, 1,121 stocks rose and 3,623 fell as declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 3.23-to-1 ratio.

The S&P 500 posted 12 new 52-week highs and 32 new lows while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 53 new highs and 151 new lows.

Volume on U.S. exchanges was 19.32 billion shares, compared with the 18.13 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.


 NEWS:

👥 The squalor
continues
unabated

When a survey team from auditing firm Deloitte visited the Northern Territory’s town camps in 2016 to conduct a major review, responses on the ground were mixed. Residents in Elliott were tired of talking about housing when nothing ever changed. Borroloola’s town campers were keen to participate and explain their aspirations, and people in Darwin and Tennant Creek all participated reports The Australian today's website. [click to read more]

But the Deloitte crew immediately ran into trouble in Alice Springs, home to the largest number of town camps. They were ordered out of town on their very first visit.

Tangentyere Council Aboriginal Corporation, the powerful organisation that represents Alice Springs' 18 town camps, was not happy with the review, commissioned by the Northern Territory government and actively opposed parts of it.

Tangentyere, described by the reviewers as a fierce advocate for town camp residents, eventually agreed to participate — under an altered methodology.

The original methodology was designed to provide an independent, place-based vision for each of the town camp communities from information gathered by local Aboriginal people, the final report, Living on the Edge, said.

Tangentyere’s resistance made this more difficult than anticipated and the modified process has provided a collective vision for town camp communities in Alice Springs.

Despite the difficulties, the reviewers were granted two limited visits to Alice Springs in early 2017 and the final report found a broad range of town camp housing conditions but 90% were identified as good or average. This rating does not take into account the cleanliness of the residences … overall, the cleanliness of residences is very poor, it said.

Housing associations had failed to keep up with service demands, the report found and insufficient maintenance combined with neglect and ongoing abuse of the properties meant town camp tenants were kept in unacceptable living standards.

These conditions stand true today. The Australian has visited at least half of the 18 town camps in Alice Springs and found many acceptable block-work houses where conditions range from basic to squalid.

The worst we witnessed were at White Gate, a few kilometres east of Alice Springs, where about 15 residents, including kids, live in tin sheds and makeshift homes in demountable structures and shipping containers with mattresses piled on the floor.

Showers and toilet facilities are shared and water is trucked in. Dogs and their puppies wander underfoot among the rubbish and when we visit on a Thursday it’s washing day: a truck loaded with washing machines stops by so residents can do a few loads in the mobile laundry.

This settlement has fallen through the cracks. It’s not been officially sanctioned as a community so doesn't get basic services. The Northern Territory government holds crown land title over the land and has been in negotiations for decades to transfer land tenure to residents and their interests.

The appalling living standards in town camps have been under scrutiny following the alleged abduction and murder of five-year-old Kumanjayi Little Baby, who was living in the Old Timers settlement on the edge of Alice Springs.

Tangentyere lists White Gate as a town camp on its website and says while it is not funded to deliver services to the settlement, it provides municipal services such as rubbish collection, potable water and investment in critical infrastructure.

Meanwhile, residents John Wallace and Tunella Hayes, who say they have lived here for many years, wait for a roof over their heads that isn't a tin shed. They share a communal shower and toilet with other residents and say when the toilet gets clogged they call Tangentyere. It can take 3-4 days for anyone to come and fix things, they said.




 LOCAL CHATTER:
This week at Michael Reid Murrurundi, two of today’s Australian landscape artists ∼ Dyarubbin/Hawkesbury-based painter Julz Beresford and West Australian artist Carly Le Cerf ∼ have joined forces for Between Dust & Rain. Now on view at the gallery and available to explore online covering the sunburnt red centre and the bush-covered inlets. The exhibition is on show until June 7.
♦♦♦♦
Hellsing, trained by Annabel and Rob Archibald, has struck a rich vein for form and scored a career-best win in the Listed $200,000 Arrowfield Scone Cup (1600m) at Scone yesterday. Churchill’s Choice was second with another Archibald stable runner, Formal Display coming third. Despite having his 10th start in a preparation stretching more than six months, Hellsing is going better than ever and backed up from a win at Royal Randwick to take out the Scone feature in a thrilling finish where only two lengths separated the top six placegetters. Scone horse week continues with the Arrowlfield Dark Jewel race day today which starts at 11:00. Also the Scone Arts and Craft exhibition is open at the Scone Arts & Craft Centre 10-4:00 and the Primary School Arts Prizes exhibition in the Upper Hunter Library is running from 10-5:30pm.
♦♦♦♦
What rain? The BOM didn't see any but we felt some in south Murrurundi. Wet the grass but didn't clean the deer poo off the driveway.
♦♦♦♦
A reminder no passenger trains from 3:00am until Tuesday at 3:00am on the Hunter Line. The ARTC is upgrading something or other. Gotta get the bus.

 NEWS:

📲 Gobbledegook
answers for
lack of social
media fines

Five months after Australia's landmark social media ban for under-16s took effect, furious parents and campaigners say TikTok, Instagram and Facebook are flouting the rules while regulators fail to issue a single fine, the Daily Telegraph newspaper reports today.

Families across the country and campaigners who led calls for the legislation are fed up waiting for the federal government to take action, as it can be revealed tech giants are failing to using the age verification technology available to them.

Companies can be fined up to $50 million for failing to take reasonable steps to ensure under-16s aren't on their platforms but despite feedback from Australian parents ∼ 65% of whom say platforms should be fined ∼ no penalties have been issued.

The eSafety Commissioner, Julie Inman Grant, has instead put TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and YouTube on notice, warning them that investigations are underway and setting out eSafety’s expectations for improvement.

Under the legislation, the Commissioner must apply to the Federal Court, recommending it impose a $49.5 million civil penalty for systemic breaches or can choose to issue an infringement notice for up to $19,800 without going to court.

“These are complex investigations that take time, however we are aiming to make enforcement decisions related to these investigations around the middle of the year, an eSafety spokesperson said.

“Effective regulatory investigation must be methodical, rigorous and provide procedural fairness.

We will provide further updates … when it is appropriate to do so but will not compromise the regulatory process currently underway or prejudice any enforcement action we may undertakein future.

The groundswell of support for tech giant fines comes on the second anniversary of the launch of News Corp’s Let Them Be Kids campaign, which sparked the social media restrictions here — and in a further 14 countries abroad.

Melbourne dad Wayne Holdsworth, who lost his teenage son Mac in October 2023, was at the centre of the campaign, going on to become one of Australia’s most prominent advocates for education around online harms.

Mac took his own life after being targeted in a sextortion campaign, lured by a predator who threatened him on Instagram and Snapchat.

We're hoping that some fines will be issued really soon, to show that we're serious about holding the tech giants to account, Mr Holdsworth said.

The sooner we do that, the better, because then I think they'll sharpen up their act a little bit, and start to take these restrictions seriously - because at the moment, I don't think they are.

His views are echoed in a scathing new report from the Age Verification Providers Association, the peak body for more than 30 international firms providing age check services.

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🌞 Kate
charms
the Italians

The Princess of Wales has just made her first overseas working trip since 2023, where she signalled the start a new global mission reports news.com.au website today. [click to read more]

Florence. 2000. The very tidy British student sitting on a solitary glass of vermentino would have just disappeared into the sea of Aramintas and Hugos on their gap years as they sucked back Marlboros and ostentatiously dragged out 'grazzzzzzies'.

This week, that girl, now the Princess of Wales, was back in Italy, practising her language skills and happily telling the crowds, Io sono Caterina in a big flashing milestone moment for her.

Flying into Reggio Emilia this week, Kate was met by a 3000-strong crowd - some of whom had waited five hours to catch a glimpse of royalty, which is quite the turn up for a country that binned its own monarchy in 1946.

After a couple of millennia of being overrun by the Carthaginians, Gauls, Visigoths, Huns, Normans, France, Austria, and Germany, the Italians welcomed the Kate takeover a braccia aperte.

According to the BBC, Kate got a movie star welcome, with banks of photographers, crowds pressed against barriers and people watching from windows around the square.

But before we spend too much time pondering the question of what gelato flavour Kate might have treated herself to after a hard day of rolling her Rs with great flourish (I say pistachio), let’s talk about what this trip means.

On paper, a princess spending around 36 hours or so on foreign soil doing meat and potatoes royal work is about as surprising as finding out that Queen Camilla has a standing bulk Beaujolais order.

This is Kate’s first overseas working trip since 2023 and her first since her cancer diagnosis more than two years ago.

In the years since then, the Princess of Wales has undergone months of chemotherapy, stared down her own mortality, still had to be a mother and wife and occasional princess and slogged her way up recovery mountain while the world watched on.

And this is more than just a good news story, especially for William, given his wife just learned how to make fresh pasta.

Kensington Palace has been briefing that this is just the first in a series of international trips to learn how other countries bring up happy, healthy kids.

Now, she’s taking it up a gear, an aide told the The Telegraph.

This is a global mission. She wants to look at other models around the world and create a global conversation.

Alert Heathrow’s Windsor Suite, because Kate is coming.

So, practically, what does this mean? Are we going to see the princess dash off on a dizzying whirl of lovely jaunts to places foreign and warm? Will Adelaide Cottage soon be clanking with bottles of Duty Free and Prince William left to solo parent and unpack the dishwasher? (Not that Kate has drunk much since her health battle began, she recently said, but I'm putting Carole Middleton down as a Brandy Alexander kind of woman).

Not for now at least, most likely.

The 44-year-old’s entire post-cancer journey has been measured and she has been given the time and space to move at her own pace. Global missions are famously not fast and/or furious undertakings.

That said, with this Italy trip under her belt, we can make a decent bet that she could attend William’s November Earthshot Prize in Mumbai, the first she will have gone to since 2023.

However, looking a little further down the track and given this is an institution whose history spans millennia, this Italy trip suggests the Waleses and their trusty travelling trunks could be off at some stage again too.

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🎁 Awards keep
small towns
going

'Proud, pleased, gobsmacked': Tidy Towns honours the unsung heroes of small Australian communities. The awards may look a little different from the original anti-litter tourism effort of the 1960s, but they're still a way for far-flung towns to showcase their civic pride writes The Guardian website. [click to read the rest of the story].

It’s a quintessential Australian image. Driving down a freeway or gravel track on a road trip and coming across a well-weathered sign at the entrance to a community reading tidy town winner in proud lettering.

It may come as a soothing reassurance that the town you're about to enter will be relatively litter free, or stir up a sense of deja vu of a similar sign on another road you've seen some years ago, perhaps on the other side of the country.

The National Tidy Towns Sustainability awards event, to take place in Launceston this weekend, began as a West Australian tourism initiative in the 1960s and has grown into one of Australia’s longest running community programs, with more than 4000 volunteers contributing to projects that entered this year’s awards.

The state winners competing for the coveted national title range from Ikuntji in the NT, population 150, and Williams in WA, population 1040, to the Mornington Peninsula in Victoria, home to more than 170,000 people.

In Williams, two elderly women, Judy and Robin, have spent thousands of hours in the past year preserving disintegrating old roads board records to be archived digitally.

Robin says she has a habit of getting bogged down in other people’s history, having previously volunteered for four years smartening up the cemetery.

The paperwork dates back to the late 1800s and had been growing dust in old barrels and tea chests at the local newsagents. From a pottery shed, they've been cleaning up the old records, damaged by water, vermin, fire and the mark of time.

They've found sustenance payments for ex-soldiers, residents who lost their farms for under a pound when their rates were overdue and rewards for parrot beaks and scalps of foxes that were overrunning the area.

We're cleaning it up as we go, nobody is putting up hands to help us, she says with a laugh. But there’s so much to learn from it … I think the town will be a bit proud, a bit pleased and a bit gobsmacked if we win. They probably didn't realise the effort that’s gone into it.

Hazel Harris is the community resource manager in Williams and helped lead the town’s winning entry. After being announced victor, the whole community came out in droves to celebrate at a sundowner.

The awards honour all the unsung heroes within small communities, Harris says, with Williams' winning state entry sign now sitting proudly by a beloved gumtree that’s the first thing most travellers see driving into the main street.

Launceston has the hosting rights for 2026 after winning last year’s national title, with the sustainability team leader at the council, Michael Attard, in full preparation mode for the big event.

He says winning gave the community a great sense of pride, with the city praised for its marine cleanups and education programs, as well as its volunteer-led Repair Cafe, which has diverted 2000 kilos of landfill.

There’s a sense of purpose being part of a community group that’s working towards [benefiting] our environment, Attard says.

Traditionally focused on litter prevention and beautification, the awards have long since expanded, with the NT’s winner, Ikuntji, for instance, commended in the heritage and culture category for becoming the first central Australian community to implement a local decision-making framework, empowering residents to oversee their own essential services in line with cultural knowledge.

Ed: Murrurundi has twice won the 'Tidy Towns' award.

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👪 And then
there's Family
First …

Family First candidates contesting the next New South Wales and Victorian elections will, if elected, push to restore clearly designated male and female toilets in public buildings in order to protect the privacy, dignity and safety of girls and women, national director and NSW Legislative Council candidate Lyle Shelton says in a press release today.

Mr Shelton said Australians were increasingly alarmed at the push by governments and bureaucracies to erase sex-based spaces in favour of so-called all-gender facilities.

Politicians are caving in to the LGBTQA+ political lobby and pandering to men who think they are women and demand access to girls' and women’s spaces, Mr Shelton said.

Women and girls should not be forced to surrender their privacy and dignity because political leaders are too weak to stand up to radical gender ideology.

Mr Shelton said Family First would campaign for state governments to reject and reverse provisions of the new National Construction Code which allow developers to replace up to half of male and female toilets with all-gender facilities.

This agenda has never been driven by ordinary Australians. It has been pushed relentlessly by activist groups seeking to normalise the idea that biological sex is meaningless, he said.

The result is that women and girls increasingly feel unsafe, uncomfortable and excluded from spaces designed specifically for them.

Mr Shelton commended the Australian Christian Lobby for bringing public attention to the issue through its recent campaign.

The Australian Christian Lobby deserves credit for exposing what is happening and mobilising Australians to speak up before it is too late, he said.

The fact that Tasmania stripped these provisions from its version of the code and the Northern Territory rejected the code entirely proves governments can resist this ideological overreach if they choose.

Girls and women should not have to self-exclude from public spaces or feel anxious every time they use a bathroom because politicians are bowing to activist pressure, he said.

Family First will fight to restore common sense and protect the rights and dignity of women and girls.

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 COMMENT:

Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
While cities welcome visitors to Gadigal country", a little girl’s death reveals the devastating truth about life in remote Australia, Peta Credlin writes in the Daily Telegraph today. [click to read more]

It’s all very well welcoming people to Gadigal country in Sydney but how about we talk about the reality of life for so many Aboriginal people living outside our big cities.

Because it is the life lived in town camps ∼ best described as hellholes by Alice Springs local Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price ∼ that’s far more urgent today than who arrived 250 years ago.

We're not supposed to talk about Sharon Granites any more ∼ the sweet little five-year-old abducted last weekend ∼ because she’s dead. Her family want her described as Kumanjayi Little Baby for cultural reasons.

Modern day aboriginal culture

But it’s modern-day Aboriginal culture ∼ the unemployment, family dysfunction, and substance abuse that characterises remote Australia ∼ that’s led to her tragic, premature death.

The bed that this little girl was abducted from was a grotty mattress on a filthy floor, in a room full of empty Jim Beam bottles. Her father was in jail and there'd been a bit of a party before she disappeared. The DNA of two persons has been found on her underwear. Her accused killer was a frequent prison inmate too, not long released.

We talk a lot about reconciliation for the wrongs of the past. But what about rectifying the wrongs of the present? We argue incessantly about the failures of government to end Indigenous disadvantage but what about the failures of Aboriginal people too?

Town camps natorious

The town camps around Alice Springs have been notorious for years. Very few residents have real jobs, very few of the children go to school regularly, the police often feel powerless to enforce the law because they won't be supported by woke magistrates and weak governments and child protection officers feel they can't do what they otherwise would, for fear of creating another stolen generation.

Just because people happen to be Aboriginal doesn't mean that different standards apply.

The government says that this is not the time to talk about policy change. But if it’s not done now, everyone will move on until the next child dies.

Ask yourself this, would the outrage be different if this little girl and her alleged killer were from a nice suburb in the city? Where are the activists?


Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
"Promises and pie-crust," Jonathan Swift wrote in 1738, "are made to be broken." Vladimir Lenin, who liked the line, treated it as a slogan. Anthony Albanese treats it as a principle, Henry Ergas points out in the The Australian today. [click to read more]

The Prime Minister’s defence for repudiating assurances he had insistently reiterated ∼ indeed, for the 50th time ∼ is that Australia faces a crisis of intergenerational equity. But as Jonathan Pincus and I demonstrated on these pages, the claim is analytically incoherent and empirically threadbare. Nor, even if there were such inequities, would that justify the abrupt abandonment of repeatedly affirmed undertakings.

Serious governments seek democratic consent for contentious measures they had previously assured voters they would not introduce. John Howard did so with the GST: having ruled it out, he reversed openly, took it to the 1998 election, and proceeded only on the mandate he won there.

Greatest tax take in commonwealth history

The reason the Albanese government has not followed suit is neither urgency nor necessity. It is fear: fear that despite the opposition’s parlous state, voters would punish a government that has spent freely, governed carelessly and is now poised to extract the greatest tax take in commonwealth history.

The budget’s own numbers make the reality plain. Even accepting Treasury’s assumptions, the budget measures will increase housing supply over the next decade by less than one-third of 1%, while housing demand is likely to rise more than 15 times as quickly. This is not serious economic reform. It is a revenue grab wrapped in the language of moral urgency.

Corroding public trust

The inevitable result of that gap between political rhetoric and political practice is to corrode public trust. Trust, after all, is not a natural disposition; it is a social achievement, slowly accumulated and quickly squandered.

The word itself reveals the point. The Old English treow lies behind both truth and trust; since at least the 15th century, to trust someone has meant to believe that when he says what he will do, he speaks truthfully. Governments can sustain trust only by being truthful and trustworthy — and the institutional form through which those virtues manifest themselves is the promise.

A promise is what binds words to conduct, declarations to action, and electoral consent to subsequent government. Governments owe fidelity to their promises not merely for their own political advantage; they owe it because a healthy democratic life depends upon citizens being able to assume and assess fidelity to public commitments.

Governments need to mean what they say

The credibility of promises is also more broadly crucial to the viability of a free society, whose very essence is that people must order their lives amid continual uncertainty. Promises, including the promise that laws will not be changed capriciously, are what give individuals, families and businesses stable ground on which to plan. As Hannah Arendt wisely observed, they build islands of predictability in the ocean of uncertainty — islands that matter most to those with the fewest resources to absorb sudden policy shocks.

A young couple relying on an investment property to finance homeownership, a retiree dependent on hard-earned savings, a small business weighing expansion: all rely on governments meaning what they say.

But promises can only fulfil that stabilising role because they belong to the grammar of commitment: to the forms of obligation whose value lies in their relative insulation from changing convenience. A promise abandoned the moment it becomes burdensome is worth no more than the loyalty that melts away at the first sign of difficulty.

The preservation of credible public commitments is especially vital in Australia, where suspicion of the political process long predates contemporary disenchantment. Distrust of politicians was, as John Hirst emphasised, constitutive of the colonial polity itself. The men who entered politics were not thought fit to be trusted - and despite outstanding exceptions, many weren't.

Pioneering scholars of mass behaviour

The endless Australian debate over the accountability of parliamentarians reflected that suspicion. Both the Burkean trustee ∼ who is guided only by the light of his own judgment ∼ and the instructed delegate had their advocates. But it was the latter conception, entrenched by the emerging Labor Party, that ultimately prevailed. Labor parliamentarians were to be mere instruments: controlled by the ALP’s extra-parliamentary wing, bound by a pledge to uphold the platform and required to submit to caucus discipline on pain of political excommunication.

The Australian mass party thus emerged, from the beginning, as an institutional response to distrust: a mechanism designed less to cultivate confidence in politicians than to contain the risks they posed once elected. And Australian voters learned to scrutinise the distance between promise and performance with an intensity rare in comparable democracies. When that gap widened too far, confidence collapsed.

It is against this background that the events of the past three years must be seen. The Albanese government’s record on the central tax promises of two successive elections ∼ stage three, superannuation, and now negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount ∼ does not just constitute a litany of broken commitments; it constitutes the accelerated dismantling of an already tarnished public asset.

The predictable effect is an even more accelerated crisis of political representation. The four-decade arc from 1975’s 4% third-party vote to 2025’s 34% highlights its seemingly inexorable progression.

Withdrawing faithfulness

Those voters who have spurned the major parties are not ideological partisans of any third force; they are observant citizens who, having grasped what the parties no longer deliver, exercise the only sanction the system leaves them. Unable to meaningfully demand or expect faithfulness to a program from parties whose programs have ceased to bind, they withdraw their own faithfulness from those parties altogether.

The alternatives may not be especially attractive nor particularly unifying — but negative coalitions, aimed at punishing a detested foe, form more easily than positive ones precisely because they require only shared aversion rather than common aspiration. In these conditions, anti-system parties flourish, their capacity to aggregate voters a symptom not of democratic renewal but of democratic exhaustion.

To make things worse, governments confronted by a perpetually seething electorate are naturally tempted to govern through stealth and administrative manoeuvre, further impairing the trust whose disappearance produced the crisis of representation in the first place. And when a real, rather than confected, emergency arrives, they discover they can no longer summon the loyalties and willingness to sacrifice on which the survival of free societies ultimately depends.

Public language becomes tactical

No society can govern itself for long on the assumption that public language is merely tactical. Governments that repeatedly break faith with the electorate may secure temporary advantages. But they do so by undermining the confidence that policies announced today will survive long enough to shape behaviour tomorrow. As that confidence erodes, both the effectiveness of public policy and force of democratic authority unravel.

That is the deeper significance of the Albanese government’s conduct. It is not merely bad policy. It is the depletion of a civic inheritance that free societies squander far more easily than they rebuild. Yes, promises can be cracked like pie crusts. But in the end, public trust cracks with them. Lenin, sheltered by brutal authoritarianism, never had to learn that lesson. With the fabric of our democracy rapidly fraying, it is high time Anthony Albanese did.



 FEATURE:

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What's the one thing that every pundit and certified member of the Fourth Estate knows? Why, it's that MAGA is finished.

MAGA
isn't
finished!

Roger Kimball in Spectator Australia.



H

ow many stories have we been treated to about 'the fracturing of MAGA?' NPR knows it, Politico intuited it, Salon bet on it and the New Republic salivated over it. 'Trump's MAGA Base Splits Dramatically,' that anti-Trump orifice recently crowed. 'New poll shows Donald Trump's support continues to drop.' Then of course there is the The New York Times, which has predicted and rejoiced in the death of MAGA again and again.

That is ∼ that was ∼ the narrative. What is the reality? Yesterday's primaries tell a very different ∼ in fact, contradictory ∼ story. MAGA's vitality was reaffirmed, as was President Trump's potency as a political imprimatur. Across the board, a majority of the candidates he endorsed trounced their Republican in name only (RINO) rivals

Not what we read

At least 26 MAGA Republicans won last night. Indiana, Michigan, Texas, North Carolina. Wherever there was a primary, MAGA triumphed. In Ohio, Vivek Ramaswamy took some 85 per cent of the vote, winning in every single county.

Those are the facts. What is their significance? I think Kurt Schlichter is correct.

He wrote: MAGA's vitality has been reaffirmed
Inevitably the RINOs will take the wrong lesson from tonight's brutal discipline. They will think that because they personally offended Trump, they got defeated. That's not it. Trump is not our leader. He is our avatar. You dummies screwed with the base and the base, not Donald Trump, made you pay.

Right on cue, the New York Times corroborated Schlichter's prediction. 'Rather than a contest between moderates and conservatives,' this fish wrap of record intoned, 'the primaries became a test of how much deference Republicans owe Mr. Trump and how much control the President holds over rank-and-file voters.'

I would say that this stunning victory is a wake-up call for RINOs, but it isn't. Their narcolepsy is terminal

Demos abandon country

The same can be said of the Democratic party, which, in abandoning their country, also abandoned their electoral prospects.

If you don't know the work of the woman who writes under the name 'LHGray', you should. She is as perceptive as she is amusing, though her diction is not for the faint of heart. 'The Democratic party, as it staggers toward the 2026 midterms,' she wrote in response to last night's political dégringolade, 'is not merely losing.'

It is structurally, psychologically, and philosophically finished … a once-formidable machine reduced to a necrotic loop of obsession, fantasy, and self-sabotage. And the republic is not mourning the loss. It is moving on without them. The Democrats built this cage. Now they will live inside it. Indiana? A bloodbath … RINOs who dared defy the redistricting will of the people got eviscerated.

Sufferings of the damned

All this is true. MAGA isn't finished. In the important work of eviscerating the Democratic party, it's just getting started. And let me add that painful process couldn't happen to a more deserving cohort.

Tertullian says that among the pleasures enjoyed by the blessed in paradise is the spectacle of the sufferings of the damned.

That celebration of Schadenfreude was later repudiated by the Church, but every red-blooded man and woman will recognise and smile at its psychological acuity.



 OVERSEAS:

The London Telegraph writes plunging into a quiet river lined with willow trees, moored boats and cottages, the pack of wild swimmers entering the water paints a bucolic image of the British countryside. The swimmers are in fact just 10 miles west of Big Ben and Buckingham Palace, exercising on London's first section of the River Thames to be named an official bathing site.The stretch between Ham and Kingston-upon-Thames in south-west London is one of 13 new locations across the UK approved by the Government as monitored swimming areas. There are now more than 450 designated bathing spots across the country, but only one on the River Thames in London. It is a significant achievement for a waterway considered "biologically dead" in the 1950s owing to excessive pollution. Now, swimmers flock to this section of the Thames to celebrate its newly granted clean water status. Two dozen members of the Teddington Bluetits swimming group launched themselves into the river from a small pontoon, submerging themselves into the frigid water with an accompanying chorus of "oohs" and "aahs".
Chris Evans, editor: At the end of a bruising week, Sir Keir Starmer might have hoped for a quiet Friday to get him through to the weekend. Instead, Andy Burnham has been cleared to run in the Makerfield by-election and Donald Trump has weighed in on the Westminster chaos for the first time. In today's edition: ♦ How Trump lost control of the 'best summit ever'. ♦ 'I'm a neuroscientist, but the way weight-loss drugs changed my thoughts surprised me'. ♦ Plus, our favourite fish and chip shops in Britain. ♦ Four ways Labour's psychodrama could play out. ♦ Civil servant pensions exceed £150,000 a year. ♦ Pictured: Schoolboy killed in meningitis outbreak. ♦ Five divers die while exploring Maldives caves and ♦Homes at risk of collapse after builders abandon 35ft pit.




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The Murrurundi Times is owned, compiled and written by Des Dugan. Email