Monday 18-05-2026 1:31pm

Curtis Island Liquefied Natural Gas plants located in Gladstone, Queensland.

Drill baby, drill but no One

If you believe the daily bugle (Telegraph) and a Freshwater Strategy poll Australians overwhelmingly support increasing domestic oil and gas production to enhance national fuel security — with even Greens voters in favour, a new poll finds. Conducted exclusively for the Melbourne's Herald-Sun, has found in the wake of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz only 8% of voters oppose increasing domestic oil and gas production. A clear majority of 71% of voters are in favour with almost half ∼ 46% ∼ strongly in favour. Support for increased domestic production cut across political lines with more than 80% of Coalition voters in favour compared to 69% of Labor supporters. But even though their party is opposed to expanding exploration and production 57% of Greens voters are in favour of increasing domestic production. At 81%, older voters ∼ 55+ ∼ were the most likely to support it but 59% of voters aged 18-34 also backed it. Queenslanders ∼ 81% ∼ are more likely to agree than Victorians ∼ 65% ∼ though all states are more likely to agree than disagree. Freshwater director Mike Turner said there was strong support for more oil and gas and development right across the political spectrum. "Australians are instinctively supply-side economists, they think the country gets richer by digging more, producing more, and building more — they want to use more of the resources Australia already has," he said. Meanwhile, in the wake of the Farrer by-election, which earlier this month saw One Nation win its first House of Representatives seat, Freshwater also tested voters' opinions about the insurgent party. Asked to respond to a series of statements about One Nation, at 38% voters were mostly to see it as a protest party for those dissatisfied with the major parties. Only a third ∼ 34% ∼ saw it as a legitimate party that could play a role in government, though the same percentage of respondents said they thought it had some genuinely good policies on some issues. The poll also found half of voters ∼ 50% ∼ do not believe One Nation is capable of running the Australian economy, compared to 42% who do.


 SPORT:

Expected footy wins and Netball turmoil

Warriors gave Broncos a lesson in defence winning 42-12 and the Panthers were never in any trouble from the Dagons in their 28-6 win. The Knights kept their winning streak going beating the Titans 36-12. It was a bit more even down south as the West Coast see-sawed GWS in a 88-71 win and Essendon beat Fremantle 151-104. St Kilda won 109-73 against hapless Richmond. [click to read more]

Georgia Doyle in the Oz covered the Netball thriller as the Adelaide Thunderbirds jumped back to the top of the Super Netball ladder courtesy of a 55-51 victory over the Melbourne Mavericks in a result that has tightened the ladder in the race to the finals.

The Mavericks surged back in the final quarter but some clutch defence from MVP Latanya Wilson allowed the Thunderbirds to finish four-point winners.

The win helped the T-Brids leapfrog the Vixens into first place after the Melbourne side’s first loss of the season on Saturday.

The Mavs hold on to fourth place, although now sit just a single win ahead of the Swifts and Lightning after those sides won at the weekend.

The clash between the Thunderbirds and Mavericks was physical from the first whistle, with multiple bodies hitting the floor from both teams.

Kate Heffernan and Jamie-Lee Price ran toe-to-toe for the 60 minutes. Both engine rooms for their respective teams, it was Silver Ferns midcourter Heffernan who came out on top, finishing with 17 goal assists, two gains and only one turnover, while Price wasn't as effective as usual, with only 13 goal assists and five turnovers.

Mavs defender Jessie Grenvold continued her run of hot form, this time against Thunderbirds shooter Elmere van der Berg.

Grenvold finished with three gains, highlighting why she is in the conversation for the Diamonds squad to be announced in two weeks' time.

Recognising Grenvold’s impact, Thunderbirds coach Tania Obst pulled some unusual changes in the shooting end and it allowed them to keep pushing ahead, leading by nine at the main break.

[click the intro to return other stories]

 STOCKMARKET:

Stock market caution and nuclear warnings

Investors are warning that lofty U.S. stock markets have not yet priced in the risk of rocketing inflation and are vulnerable to a sharp spike in bond yields, Reuters reports on yesterday's website. [click to continue reading]

Equity markets have been propelled by robust first-quarter earnings and expectations of boosts from artificial intelligence, overshadowing the risk of high energy prices and the lack of a conclusion to the war with Iran.

But a spike in bond market yields over the past week — which took the 30-year Treasury bond above 5% and benchmark 10-year bonds above 4.5% — could change the picture for investors. That caused stock market caution on Friday.

Paul Karger, co-founder and managing partner of TwinFocus, who manages money for ultra-high net worth families, said his clients are bombarding him with questions every time he meets with them about how to make sense of the apparent market paradox.

Breakfast, lunch and dinner: the question is always about how to make sense of the fact that this is such a divided outlook, with earnings telling a positive story but oil prices and inflation emerging as a negative for companies, Karger said.

Karger has what he calls a barbell approach to assets he manages: accumulating big overweight positions in cash, gold and other commodities, while maintaining positions in the market-leading mega-cap growth stocks.

After an initial swoon following the start of the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran in late February, U.S. stock indexes have mounted a sharp rebound. The benchmark S&P 500 (.SPX), opens new tab was last up more than 17% since its low for the year in late March, giving it a year-to-date gain of over 8% — even with Friday’s pullback of nearly 1%.

Rising benchmark yields tend to put pressure on equity valuations, as companies and consumers will face higher borrowing costs. This can also weigh on economic growth and corporate profits, while possibly making bond returns more competitive with stocks.

That may especially be the case now with the stock market at elevated levels. The benchmark S&P 500 as of Thursday was trading at 21.3 times earnings estimates for the next 12 months, according to LSEG Datastream. That is well above the index’s long-term average forward P/E ratio of 16, although it is below the 23.5 level it reached in October, as the strengthening U.S. earnings outlook has helped to keep valuations somewhat in check.

I do think there is a real fear that inflation is kind of embedded in the economy going forward, said Peter Tuz, president, Chase Investment Counsel, in Charlottesville, Virginia. You don't see any signs of it going down right now, and that is a real fear and it will drive the market down if it continues.

Jack Ablin, chief market strategist at Cresset Capital, said if there is a delay of even a few months in reopening the Strait of Hormuz to both oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) tankers as well as other commercial shipping, the result could be a brand new inflation regime for which investors just aren't prepared.

The reason equity markets remain robust, portfolio managers say, is earnings. U.S. publicly traded corporations are delivering first-quarter profits that are significantly above expectations and on track to be some 28% higher than a year ago, the largest jump seen since late 2021.

We're seeing the impact of the AI spending boom and (a related) increase in productivity, said Jeremiah Buckley, a portfolio manager at Janus Henderson, which could extend into 2027, he added.

The latest wave of artificial-intelligence market enthusiasm has buoyed stocks including . Massive capital spending on data centers and other AI-related infrastructure boosted chip demand. Still, lofty valuations in AI-related sectors are also causing some to forecast a pullback.

Also underpinning equity markets is fear of being left on the sidelines.

Traders don't want to turn bearish if there is a possibility — as many think — that the Strait of Hormuz situation could be cleared up in just a few weeks' time, said Tim Murray, capital markets strategist at T. Rowe Price.

However, investors are becoming increasingly aware of the risks — and the potential shock to equities. The surge in the price of crude oil, still trading above $100 as uncertainty swirls around the temporary ceasefire between Iran and the United States, has propelled inflation fears. Producer prices saw their largest gain in four years in April.

Markets aren't braced for an 'extreme' scenario in the Iran war of a prolonged Hormuz shutdown, John Higgins, chief economic adviser, financial markets at consultancy Capital Economics, warned his clients in a report published on Thursday. While Treasury markets are pricing in the inflation risk, equity markets are not doing the same with the prospect that a prolonged shutdown may take a toll on the growth that has supported profits.

The geopolitical crisis in the Persian Gulf and the inflation it may be causing has the potential for long-term damage.

The Iran crisis has the potential to reshape the trajectory of the markets for the rest of the year, said Matthew Gertken, chief geopolitical strategist at BCA, a market analysis firm.


 NEWS:

🏘 Powerlines
owners want
to shift
costs to public

Poles and wires owner Transgrid will bank a $603.7m profit this year, financial documents provided to the regulator suggest, as it attempts to slug New South Wales households with $1.14bln in capital works on an ambitious grid upgrade that has blown out, reports The Australian today's website. [click to read more]

Transgrid is the NSW electricity transmission company privatised by the state government in 2015. It is a regulated utility, meaning that its profits tend to be steady and ultra-safe.

The group has applied to the Australian Energy Regulator to increase its total costs for the NSW section of project EnergyConnect, the crucial 900km interconnector linking South Australia with NSW and Victoria, to $3.2bln. Transgrid blamed external factors for the cost blowout.

AGL Energy opposed Transgrid’s gambit. It made a blistering submission urging the regulator to reject what it describes as an attempt to offload construction risks onto consumers, a burden that should rightfully rest with Transgrid’s shareholders, who benefit from its expansion.

AGL suggests that Transgrid’s reopener application should be denied … Transgrid’s claim relies on an artificial framing of events that misapplies the rules, it said.

The EnergyConnect project forms part of the estimated $40bln Transgrid is also building HumeLink, which has experienced cost blows of about five times its $1bln estimate in 2020, and will transmit power created by releasing the water from the top reservoir at Snowy Hydro 2.0 into the grid.

Transgrid is owned by New York private equity giant KKR, as well as The Future Fund and pension funds from Canada, Singapore and Abu Dhabi. It has a vested interest in making its asset base larger, because its regulated return grows by extension.

Remade as a trust since privatisation, its monster profit can be obfuscated, unlike ordinary large public companies. However, certain financial disclosures do have to be provided for regulatory purposes.

From these, it can be deduced that Transgrid will make an after tax return on capital of $604m this coming year. It banked a $570m profit last year, and $508m profit the year before that. Its approved return on equity is 5.8%; AGL’s equivalent is 4%.

Transgrid refused to confirm or comment on its apparent windfall.

In cost blowout on Snowy Hydro 2.0. Part of the role of these power lines is to deliver renewable energy from South Australia to the hydro pumped facility in the Snowy Mountains, which in turn will be used to pump water uphill to its top reservoir..




 LOCAL CHATTER:
Tamworth Art Gallery director Bridget Guthrie, Jelle van den Berg and David Darcy at yesterday's public/artist gabfest at David Darcy's recently opened Tamworth Gallery exhibition called Self Sabotage. The gabfest was well attended with more than 50 people admiring and asking question of the artist's new direction.
♦♦♦♦
A reminder no passenger trains until tomorrow at 3:00am on the Hunter Line. The ARTC is making fixing up what needs fixing on the rail lines.

 NEWS:

🚔 Bullies
weapons
roundup

NSW Police have seized a staggering 94 firearms and 48 other weapons such as knives and knuckle dusters from known domestic violence offenders in a four-day blitz across the state, the Daily Telegraph newspaper reports today.

Nearly 1000 people were charged with a combined 2000 charges ranging from stalking and intimidation, assault and non compliance of court orders.

Police target the people who pose the greatest risk: repeat offenders, wanted offenders and those with outstanding warrants, police minister Yasmin Catley said.

“The volume of weapons seized is frightening, but this is exactly why police do the work they do.

“Domestic and family violence is a stain on our society. These offenders rely on fear and control, and Amarok is about turning that pressure back onto them.

If you use violence, intimidation or coercive control, police will come for you.

Semi automatic pistols, sawn off shotguns, rifles, an array of pistols and large amounts of ammunition were seized in last week’s blitz by officers from Operation Amarok, which targets known offenders.

Amarok deploys hundreds of police from each of the regions' Domestic Violence High Risk Offender Teams, along with officers from the Raptor Squad, Youth Command, Child Protection Register, Traffic and Highway Patrol Command and the Transport Command.

Our focus is on removing violent offenders from homes and enforcing protection orders, NSW Police acting assistant commissioner Paul Dunstan said.

This operation reinforces our ongoing commitment to tackling domestic and family violence year round.

Police conducted 1847 bail compliance checks and 14,318 apprehended domestic violence order compliance checks with a total of 391 breaches identified.

Too many people in our community are living in fear inside their own homes, and Operation Amarok is designed to intervene, support victims and ensure offenders are put before the court, he said.

The largest number of weapons, 37, were seized from southwest Sydney, followed by 27 weapons in the west of the state, 10 in the southern region, 11 in northern NSW, six in northwest Sydney and three in central Sydney.

Besides Amarok, local police also conduct random check on known offenders and also welfare checks on victims.

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🏠 Market stalls
as tax reforms
sink in

Sydney auctions revealed clear signs of impact following Labor’s landmark tax reforms, with multiple agents reporting a drop in investor interest, while home’s that were set to be standouts also fell short, reports news.com.au website today. [click to read more]

In North Bondi’s blue chip locale, a home tipped for a hotly contested auction passed in on Saturday — in an evident sign buyers remain cautious in the market.

At 61 Clyde Street, North Bondi a crowd gathered to see the four registered bidders compete but only two were active.

With a guiding price of $9.1m, the five-bedroom, two-bathroom house stalled prior to its opening bid of $8.5m, then rising to $8.7m, $8.75m to $8.85m.

Bidding then paused, followed by the announcement of a vendors bid of $9.1m by Auctioneer Clarence White of Menck White Auctions.

A final $9.15m bid was placed but eventually, the home passed in.

According to Mr White, he believes it is too soon to see a trend from buyers from this week’s budget announcement but hopes the market may regain confidence.

I think market’s like certainty, even if the certainty isn't what they wanted to hear, he said.

“I'm hoping the budget is out of the way and the rate rise has come, people know what they are moving forward on.

But there’s no doubt it’s a low confidence market and buyers are tentative on price, vendors are sometimes a little bit high.

He added the best offer pre-auction was $9.075m. So it was a good result in the end, he said.

Mr Phillips said the auction offered a good indication of the current market at the moment being flat.

There’s buyers out there but you need to work with them and vendors need to be more realistic, he said.

But it’s a best buying market for buyers to get into.

Now’s the time to be buying.

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🛒 The swapsies
of Coles and
Woolworths

Toothbrushes, ice-cream and frozen pizza: data reveals how Coles and Woolworths switch promotions in sync. Analysis shows in some cases the switch from promotional to full price happens almost simultaneously in Australia’s two biggest supermarkets writes The Guardian website. [click to read the rest of the story].

You're looking to buy an electric toothbrush. You're in Woolworths and you see one of the Oral-B kits advertised for sale at $99.50.

The product appears to be a half-price bargain, reduced from its usual price of $199, which also happens to be how much the same item costs at Coles.

But what you wouldn't know, unless you were paying very close attention, is that the toothbrush kit had been 50% off at Coles and full price at Woolworths just a week earlier — or that, more often than not, when it was on promotion at Coles, it was full price at Woolworths, and vice versa.

Analysis of the High-Low pricing strategy employed by Australia’s two biggest supermarkets comes after a court found this week Coles deceived customers with misleading discounts in its Down Down promotional program.

The Oral-B toothbrush is one of 10 products whose prices switched on and off promotion at Coles and Woolworths largely in sync over the past two years, according to data provided to Guardian Australia by the price tracking website CW Scanner.

The products, which include Dr Oetker Ristorante frozen pepperoni pizza, Blackmores fish oil tablets, Weis mango and ice-cream bars, mini Magnums and Quilton toilet paper, are a sample of the many products that follow this pricing pattern, according to CW Scanner.

While High-Low pricing is separate to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission’s proceedings against Coles and Woolworths, the tactic raises further questions over the lengths the major supermarkets take to compete against one another.

The strategy first came to light during the 2024 ACCC supermarkets inquiry and in an ABC report.

This is not what competition looks like, said Erin Turner, the chief executive at the Consumer Policy Research Centre.

When markets work, businesses feel pressure to give customers a great deal all of the time — not every other week.

Turner said cyclical High-Low pricing could be misleading if it is combined with claims in store that trick people into thinking they're paying a rare low price, rather than the discounted price that occurs every two weeks.

In some cases, the switch from a promotional price to full price happens simultaneously, or almost simultaneously, across the two supermarkets.

The data shows Natural Confectionary Co’s Juicy Burst lollies have often gone on sale for $2 at Coles on the same day they revert to their full price of $5 at Woolworths.

It is similar with 1.25-litre bottles of Coca-Cola: they have been on sale for $2 at Woolworths while being sold at their full price of $4 at Coles. Often those prices swap on the same day.

The data shows that Fairy 5 Power Action Lemon dishwashing tablets sold for the same price at Coles and Woolworths for a few days. Then the supermarkets swapped again, with one selling the product for $76 and the other for a sale price of $30.

Christina Anthony, a consumer behaviour expert at the University of Sydney, said the pricing tactic was commercially rational and it wasn't necessarily misleading or a sign of active collusion between the major supermarkets.

However, she said the strategy could erode transparency for shoppers and make it even harder to know what items' real prices were.

The research tells us consumers have very poor memory for price and it’s more about whether it feels like it’s cheap or not, she said.

High/Low pricing tickets had a huge impact on consumer behaviour and skewed shoppers' perceptions of price, Andy Kelly, a director at the consumer advocacy group Choice, said.

There’s also an argument that if you're putting a product on sale … it’s skewing the value of that product, he said.

If they're selling it at 50% for at least half the time, does that kind of become the usual price of that product?"

He said the strategy disadvantaged consumers who were not able to wait to buy something when it was on sale, or those who did not have time to track pricing patterns.

The ACCC’s final report from its examination of the supermarket industry said the widespread use of High Low pricing and its cyclical nature meant products could be on promotion a lot of the time.

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 COMMENT:

Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
Federal Court has ruled against a women-only app founder in a landmark transgender discrimination case, forcing her to pay compensation and sparking fears about women’s rights, writes Peta Credlin in the Sunday Telegraph today. [click to read more]

On Friday afternoon, as I sat down to work on this column, I honestly didn't know where to focus first.

Was the biggest issue the loss of integrity in our public life, after the Prime Minister ("my word is my bond") admitted saying 50 times he would not change any of the rules around investment properties but did it anyway?

Or was it the reality, confirmed in the budget papers, that under Labor’s record high immigration, Australia will hit 30 million people by 2030, despite nowhere near enough housing for those here now? Or was it the revelation that Labor has just brought in death duties by stealth?

Giggle v Tickle

As I debated all of this, the Federal Court handed down its decision in the long-running Giggle v Tickle case, where Sall Grover, a woman and founder of a women’s online networking app (called Giggle For Girls) was accused of discrimination against a transgender woman, the biologically male Roxanne Tickle, who sought to join the women-only app.

In a devastating blow for the rights of women and girls in this country, the court rejected scientific fact and declared that sex was more than biology (it isn't), and so Grover lost and now owes compensation to Tickle.

The fact that the taxpayer-funded Human Rights Commission was a part of this legal action to deny all women our biological rights is appalling. The fact that Grover now has to rely on donations from ordinary people to defend rights that should not need defending says everything about the state of woke policy and activist courts in Australia.

But what’s perhaps most galling of all is that we are only in this position of denying chromosomal reality because Julia Gillard, ironically the first female prime minister, stripped the word woman from the sex discrimination act. Before then, this case would never have got to court.

Anyone for any toilet

But what this latest decision does (and let’s hope it gets overturned when Sall Grover heads to the High Court), is that women’s sport, toilets, access to medical services, schools, clubs, domestic violence shelters, prisons ∼ the whole box and dice ∼ are open slather to any man who declares he is a woman.

Gender used to be what you called yourself, sex is what XY or XX made you. Not any more, thanks to this decision. And Gillard too, who changed the law just TWO DAYS before she was rolled by Kevin Rudd in June 2013 — how dare she lecture anyone on misogyny.

But on Friday afternoon, the bad news kept coming.

To add Labor insult to Labor injury, dropped out when they hoped no-one was watching was news from the Victorian government that not only was Daniel Andrews going to get a bronze statue in his honour but that it was already being made. You can't make this stuff up, can you?

In memory of stupidity

Given Victoria has a daily interest bill of $24 million, a $130,000 statue is a rounding-error but it’s the attempt to force Victorians to honour the man who locked them up for two years, ruined businesses, blew out debt, kowtowed to China, dialled up woke and made the once-proud state an international laughing stock that’s tipped people over the edge.

Am I the only one asking how the heck did we get here?

And, more to the point, how do we turn it around or, God forbid, is it even possible?

Never trust any leader again

If Albanese is allowed to get away with his massive budget lie, then we will never be able to trust any leader again. And if we can't ask questions before an election and base our decisions on what they tell us and hold them to it, then democracy is dead.

For all of Labor’s talk about intergenerational equity, the budget hits younger Australians the hardest. The PM says breaking his word on negative gearing is about them, but how can it be when they will never be able to use negatively gearing (as he has) to build up a nest egg but those doing it now can keep it up?

Buy a new-build property instead, Labor tells investors. But again, how’s that fair for young people given this is what they typically buy as a first home and, now, they're going to face even more competition as investors move in? Even Labor’s own budget papers admit that these changes will likely increase rents (as they did in the Keating era before he was forced to back down) and do little to increase the stock of available homes.

And then there’s the tax on aspiration (CGT changes) before they get you from the grave (the hit on trusts).

Liberal backbone

Thankfully, the Liberals have finally found a bit of policy backbone, and a bit of political mongrel.

Angus Taylor’s reply to Labor’s budget speech felt like the start of the Coalition getting its mojo back. He made the bold move to end bracket creep once and for all by indexing income tax thresholds, meaning low- and middle-income earners won't get punished for getting ahead. On migration, he went for the jugular and landed a bullseye if the hyperventilating from Labor MPs is any guide. The PM in particular was hysterical, declaring it was un-Australian to divide people between those who are migrant and those who are not.

That is not what Taylor did. He divided them between Australian citizen and non-citizen and said that, under the Coalition, only citizens would get access to the pension, the dole, the NDIS and other welfare.

Help for no commitment

Now what is unfair about that? Why should your taxes carry people who have made no formal commitment to this country? Right now, people can live here for decades, take the money and never pledge loyalty to Australia and its people. Taylor says not any more.

Add in the Treasurer’s announcement of a new Working Australians Tax Offset (a pollster-named handout if ever there was one) of $250 a year (or $4.80 a week) and rightly people are angry. In his budget speech, Jim Chalmers called his WATO meaningful but what’s meaningful about 68 cents a day when the cost of everything has skyrocketed? It’s not meaningful, it’s insulting.

(And I might add, it’s still not even the $275 Albanese promised off their power bills).

Albo's right for a change

Anthony Albanese said that this budget is full of Labor values and it is — the socialist values that attack the fair-go, break trust, and hit middle Australia even harder

For the Liberals, there could be no better ground than this to fight Labor.

If the Coalition holds its nerve and campaigns every day like its life depends on it (because, frankly, it does) then this budget could well be the beginning of the end for the Albanese government.

But only if they work, day and night, to take the fight up to Labor. Labor is the target, not each other and not One Nation.

THUMBS UP

Jacinta Nampijinpa Price: Her emotional, fighting speech in the Senate is a must-watch as she demanded culture takes a back seat to better protect Aboriginal children.

THUMBS DOWN

Military witch hunt: Another $43m in Labor’s budget to investigate soldiers on top of the $350m that the Brereton process has cost taxpayers already.


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:

Melissa Kirsch writes in The New York Times it's the time of year for what Susan Sontag designated "that necessarily seasonal, minor literary form called the 'commencement address.'" In the age of memeable wisdom, the commencement address has become a social-media-ready trove of inspiration whence spring bons mots like George Saunders's "failures of kindness," (Syracuse, 2013); Steve Jobs's "Stay hungry, stay foolish" (Stanford, 2005); and David Foster Wallace's "This Is Water" parable (Kenyon, also 2005). I appreciate a sincerely delivered secular sermon exhorting me to go in the direction of my dreams, but like any liberal arts grad, I insist on my own specialness and the generic nature of graduation speeches often leaves me skeptical. "The world is more malleable than you think," Bono told the University of Pennsylvania class of 2004, "and it's waiting for you to hammer it into shape." I want to believe in this kind of rallying cry but the lack of specificity in such mass encouragement can make it feel a little toothless. The best graduation speeches, I think, are the ones grounded in personal experience, the ones that ring not only sincere but also profoundly felt. You may not be a Taylor Swift fan but you knew she was speaking from her soul when she told N.Y.U.'s 2022 graduates: "Never be ashamed of trying. Effortlessness is a myth." Yes! Anyone can see that Taylor Swift tries hard, that her success has come via fist-clenching, teeth-gritting effort. "The people who wanted it the least were the ones I wanted to date and be friends with in high school," she continued. "The people who want it most are the people I now hire to work for my company." If a billionaire is going to genuinely connect to an audience of debt-saddled grads, she has to show that she came by her wisdom honestly. She has to truly mean it. In George Saunders's speech, he tells a story about a girl in his seventh-grade class who was "mostly ignored, occasionally teased," and how he could tell this hurt her. He wasn't mean to her, he says, but, 42 years on, he regretted that when he witnessed her suffering he responded "sensibly, reservedly, mildly." The oft-quoted line is, "What I regret most in my life are failures of kindness," but the line that I like even better is more direct: "What's our problem? Why aren't we kinder?" He goes on to propose some theories, and some solutions. I love this speech because it emerges from a relatable personal experience and it dwells in specifics rather than conceptual oratory. Every person present has their own failures of kindness. Everyone present is implicated. The Sontag quote at the top of this newsletter is actually from a graduation speech she gave at Wellesley College in 1983. It has one more line that I love, that, if I must receive life advice via Instagram quote card, I would be delighted to see in my feed. She tells the graduates that the most useful suggestion she can make is that they go on being students for the rest of their lives, and then says, "Don't move to a mental slum." I don't know exactly what that means, to move to a mental slum, but I find her admonition witty and hyperbolic and inarguably wise. And, like the most enduring speeches, it still has impact. Sontag wasn't optimistic about the world into which her audience was graduating but she felt it urgent that they not abandon their education when they exited the halls of knowledge. She concludes by telling them if they stop reading or looking at art or "whatever feeds your head now," then they're getting old. I think about this a lot — what feeds my head. And her sign-off was appropriately encouraging: "I wish you love. Courage. And fantasy." I wish that for us, perpetual students all, no matter what we're commencing this spring.




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