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Albanese proving an elusive target for Coalition's election playbook watoday.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from watoday.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Lockdown takes toll as Telegraph puts heat on Gladys Berejiklian and her health minister The NSW health minister, Brad Hazzard, called out News Corp’s reporting of premier Gladys Berejiklian’s coffee break with her boyfriend. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP The NSW health minister, Brad Hazzard, called out News Corp’s reporting of premier Gladys Berejiklian’s coffee break with her boyfriend. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP Thu 22 Jul 2021 23.41 EDT Last modified on Fri 23 Jul 2021 03.20 EDT When the Daily Telegraph shamed Gladys Berejiklian on page one for grabbing a coffee with her boyfriend sans mask, the reporting was very precise. The ambiguous rules over when Sydneysiders need to wear a mask has been brought front and centre by NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian after she went maskless when buying a cup of coffee. https://t.co/K3trBLr46kpic.twitter.com/gAYD8XVBwo The West Australian (@westaustralian) July 19, 2021 ....
Early election would be suicide for Scott Morrison 21 Jul 2021, 08:52 GMT+10 Prime Minister Scott Morrison has a lot of work to do in repairing his own reputation if he wants to win another term, writes Andrew P Street. CONTENT WARNING: This article discusses rape and sexual abuse SOMETIME BETWEEN NOW and early May 2022, Prime Minister Scott Morrison is going to have to take a deep breath, put on his big boy pants and call a federal election. And given the way time works, he only has two realistic options: as late as humanly possible, or in September-October 2021. Yes, even now. And yes, even given everything that s going on in Sydney and Melbourne (and Brisbane and Canberra and Adelaide). Yes, even now, despite the polling that suggests Labor would walk an election in - although, of course, 2019 might want to remind people about getting too comfortable about that. ....
Nine lives A fair bit of trepidation and muttering has sprung up in the hack ranks of The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald following a few days of deckchair swapping, including some that were simply tossed overboard. First, there was the departure of John Hewson and Amanda Vanstone as columnists and the arrival of Niki Savva. Savva, who worked for Nine chair Peter Costello back when he was treasurer in the Howard government, needed a place to land after leaving The Australian in protest at the thought of sharing a page with Peta Credlin. So far so good: Savva does a readable column. And it s hard to imagine too many tears being shed for Vanstone s reactionary thought bubbles. The same remains to be seen for Hewson, after his pupation into something of a dapper climate change warrior gave the former Liberal leader a point of difference. ....
Edwyn Adeney The same people who shed a tear when Fidel Castro died are now baffled by the “ingratitude” of the Cuban people to their “communist overlords” for decades of free healthcare and “100 per cent literacy,” says Sky News host James Morrow. This comes following widespread protests by thousands of Cuban residents against their government for the economy’s collapse, food and medicine shortages, and the handling of the COVID pandemic. The protest reached a level never seen before in the country’s 62 years under communist rule. Mr Morrow said the Cuban people have a “big fight” on their hands but should not expect help from the “Biden administration and the American left”. ....