A political history of Australian health policy, part 1: Foundations of a national health policy, 1913-1929

A political history of Australian health policy, part 1: Foundations of a national health policy, 1913-1929

Long before Medicare, federal election campaigns were already reshaping health as a Commonwealth responsibility. Between 1913 and 1929, Australian leaders across parties began to reposition health from a marginal federal concern to an emerging national priority. Early election debates focused narrowly on quarantine, disease control, and border ...
Minns warns public servants about cabinet leaks

Minns warns public servants about cabinet leaks

Public servants across New South Wales were issued a major warning about cabinet confidentiality conventions just days before the state government declared a “significant cyber incident” over the exfiltration of a cache of more than 5,600 sensitive government documents, triggering police raids and the arrest of a Treasury official. As
Monday Briefing: Proposed changes to the NDIS

Monday Briefing: Proposed changes to the NDIS

When Minister for Health, Ageing, and the NDIS Mark Butler addressed the National Press Club last week, he started — as is often prudent for politicians about to announce potentially unpopular policy — with the promise of cash. “This budget will invest three billion dollars in delivering more beds, more
We are sleeping through history

We are sleeping through history

All Speccie readers know there is a particular kind of intellectual courage that costs nothing. It loves prudence, develops complexity from the ‘bleedin obvious’, and always concludes that more diplomacy, more patience, and more accommodation is the answer. It is the courage of the seminar room, the enterprise of the HR department, and the bravery of ...
A reflection on my father

A reflection on my father

He was the man with the most even temperament that I have ever known. Knowing my father as a person didn’t really start until I went to university. Before that, I knew him simply as ‘my Dad’, which was a thoroughly good experience. Dad was measured in his speech and even in tone. If he did raise his voice (which was rare), the contrast seemed like the ...
God’s money and fool’s gold

God’s money and fool’s gold

What if you prayed relentlessly – ‘God, please design the perfect money for us humans on Earth…’ The ‘perfect money’, you tell God, needs to have the following attributes: Durability: It should be chemically inert, hence almost indestructible – it should not rust, tarnish, or decay, so it can be passed on from generation to generation, for centuries, ...
View from The Hill: Taylor defends putting One Nation ahead of Farrer independent as ‘least worst option’

View from The Hill: Taylor defends putting One Nation ahead of Farrer independent as ‘least worst option’

Opposition leader Angus Taylor has defended preferencing One Nation ahead of high-profile independent Michelle Milthorpe in the Farrer May 9 byelection, declaring this was “the least worst option”. In a close result, preferences from the Liberals and Nationals could be vital in getting One Nation’s David Farley over the line,
The true cost of Chernobyl isn’t what you think

The true cost of Chernobyl isn’t what you think

On the morning of the 28 April 1986, a worker at the Forsmark Nuclear Power Plant in Sweden set off the radiation alarm. The bottom of his shoe was contaminated. But the contamination hadn’t come from Forsmark. It had drifted from a reactor 780 miles to the south-east, still burning after it had exploded two days earlier: Unit Four at Chernobyl. The ...

A political history of Australian health policy, part 1: Foundations of a national health policy, 1913-1929

A political history of Australian health policy, part 1: Foundations of a national health policy, 1913-1929
Long before Medicare, federal election campaigns were already reshaping health as a Commonwealth responsibility. Between 1913 and 1929, Australian leaders across parties began to reposition health from a marginal federal concern to an emerging national priority. Early election debates focused narrowly on quarantine, disease control, and border ...

Minns warns public servants about cabinet leaks

Minns warns public servants about cabinet leaks
Public servants across New South Wales were issued a major warning about cabinet confidentiality conventions just days before the state government declared a “significant cyber incident” over the exfiltration of a cache of more than 5,600 sensitive government documents, triggering police raids and the arrest of a Treasury official. As

Monday Briefing: Proposed changes to the NDIS

Monday Briefing: Proposed changes to the NDIS
When Minister for Health, Ageing, and the NDIS Mark Butler addressed the National Press Club last week, he started — as is often prudent for politicians about to announce potentially unpopular policy — with the promise of cash. “This budget will invest three billion dollars in delivering more beds, more

We are sleeping through history

We are sleeping through history
All Speccie readers know there is a particular kind of intellectual courage that costs nothing. It loves prudence, develops complexity from the ‘bleedin obvious’, and always concludes that more diplomacy, more patience, and more accommodation is the answer. It is the courage of the seminar room, the enterprise of the HR department, and the bravery of ...

A reflection on my father

A reflection on my father
He was the man with the most even temperament that I have ever known. Knowing my father as a person didn’t really start until I went to university. Before that, I knew him simply as ‘my Dad’, which was a thoroughly good experience. Dad was measured in his speech and even in tone. If he did raise his voice (which was rare), the contrast seemed like the ...

God’s money and fool’s gold

God’s money and fool’s gold
What if you prayed relentlessly – ‘God, please design the perfect money for us humans on Earth…’ The ‘perfect money’, you tell God, needs to have the following attributes: Durability: It should be chemically inert, hence almost indestructible – it should not rust, tarnish, or decay, so it can be passed on from generation to generation, for centuries, ...

View from The Hill: Taylor defends putting One Nation ahead of Farrer independent as ‘least worst option’

View from The Hill: Taylor defends putting One Nation ahead of Farrer independent as ‘least worst option’
Opposition leader Angus Taylor has defended preferencing One Nation ahead of high-profile independent Michelle Milthorpe in the Farrer May 9 byelection, declaring this was “the least worst option”. In a close result, preferences from the Liberals and Nationals could be vital in getting One Nation’s David Farley over the line,

The true cost of Chernobyl isn’t what you think

The true cost of Chernobyl isn’t what you think
On the morning of the 28 April 1986, a worker at the Forsmark Nuclear Power Plant in Sweden set off the radiation alarm. The bottom of his shoe was contaminated. But the contamination hadn’t come from Forsmark. It had drifted from a reactor 780 miles to the south-east, still burning after it had exploded two days earlier: Unit Four at Chernobyl. The ...