Jason Koutsoukis

is The Saturday Paper’s special correspondent.

By this author


News December 20, 2025

How Anthony Albanese approaches the Murdoch press

The prime minister has taken a more nuanced approach to his relationship with the Murdoch press, proving the company no longer has a veto over policy.

News December 13, 2025

‘Increasing failure’: First Nations deaths in custody at record levels

More than three decades after the royal commission, calls are growing for the government to finally implement its recommendations, to stop the rising number of preventable deaths.

News December 06, 2025

Exclusive: PM’s office directs lobbyists to use encrypted, disappearing messages

Multiple sources confirm the Albanese government has pushed lobbyists and industry groups to use encrypted messages and verbal briefings when proposing policy ideas, to avoid FOI and disclosure requirements.

News November 29, 2025

The Richo pact: How Graham put Albanese in charge

Behind the glowing tributes to Graham Richardson is a factional deal that the controversial former minister helped broker to make Anthony Albanese leader.

News November 22, 2025

Why did Albanese grant Richo a state funeral?

Anthony Albanese’s decision to grant Graham Richardson a state funeral has confounded some within the Labor Party and drawn attention to the tribalism that still binds it together.

News November 15, 2025

‘More snouts in the trough’: The plan to expand parliament

For the first time in 40 years, Labor is developing a plan to increase the number of seats in the parliament – a move the Coalition fears will cement Labor’s majority.

News November 08, 2025

Where are they now: The politicians who lost their seats

Almost 40 politicians lost their seats or retired at the last election. Some have since become lobbyists, been elected to state parliaments, returned to the bar or become publicans.

Sport November 08, 2025

History is written at the Pollies v Press cricket match

When press gallery journalists swap their notepads for batting pads to take on politicians in the annual one-day cricket match, the contest for some is make-or-break.

News November 01, 2025

Meet the man who really controls Canberra

Don Farrell’s power extends to every ministerial office. The PM relies on him factionally and strategically – and will benefit from an ambitious plan to expand the parliament.

News October 25, 2025

Exclusive: Dutton told Joyce ‘we just want you out …’

As Barnaby Joyce threatens to destroy the Nationals, those close to him say he is smarting at the party leader he claims to have made and by whom he was ‘repaid with exile’.

News October 18, 2025

The Liberal lobbyists making their fortunes in Trump’s America

A clutch of Liberals who built relationships during Donald Trump’s first presidency are now the most influential Australians in Washington.

News October 11, 2025

Inside Albanese’s FOI reforms: ‘He hates transparency’

Labor’s reforms to freedom of information laws are opposed by every public submission made to the Senate, with the government’s record on secrecy worse than Scott Morrison’s.

News October 04, 2025

Exclusive: Anthony Albanese overruled push for public NACC hearings

The Saturday Paper can reveal that the prime minister and other ministers from NSW intervened in cabinet to constrain the operations of the country’s leading integrity body.

News September 27, 2025

The battle to defend the PBS against Donald Trump

In his visit to the White House next month, Anthony Albanese is expected to come under pressure to weaken the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme that Donald Trump considers unfair to American drug companies.

News September 20, 2025

‘It’s visceral’: Albanese’s fear of anti-immigration rhetoric

As Pauline Hanson tells The Saturday Paper her One Nation party is ‘not going to be a bridesmaid anymore’, Labor insiders reveal the prime minister’s approach to dealing with racial anxieties.

News September 13, 2025

What will Lachlan Murdoch do with his News Corp victory?

Having succeeded in ousting his more moderate siblings, the eldest Murdoch son must now consider whether a shift further to the right would increase his empire’s political influence.

News September 06, 2025

Exclusive: Inside the ANU’s leadership crisis

Amid mounting scandals and a loss of confidence in her management, the Australian National University vice-chancellor is negotiating an exit from her role.

News August 30, 2025

‘Extraordinary and dangerous acts’: Inside Iran’s domestic terror campaign

An investigation by ASIO, the AFP and foreign partners steadily pieced together financial trails and communications that led to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

News August 23, 2025

‘Long may she reign’: How powerful is Gina Rinehart?

Having lost her close relationship with Peter Dutton, Gina Rinehart is working to exert influence in a radically different Canberra.

News August 16, 2025

ANU crisis: Pressure mounts on Bishop and Bell

As an inquiry hears evidence of alleged bullying and mistreatment, sources confirm there is no desire to change senior management at the ANU.

News August 09, 2025

‘He’s not hunting ducks. He’s hunting David Littleproud.’

As Barnaby Joyce continues to undermine the Coalition’s position on net zero, pragmatists in the Liberal Party believe they need to treat the issue the same way Labor treated boat arrivals.

News August 02, 2025

Exclusive: Australia to engage US lobbyists to defend PBS

US senators are siding with the country’s drug industry to demand that trade deals attack subsidies such as Australia’s scheme, a letter to the administration reveals.

News July 05, 2025

Exclusive: Landmark aged-care reforms derailed by IT failures

Confidential documents show already delayed aged-care reforms are set back by months due to cost blowouts with a series of contractors and system failures that have been rolling for years.

News June 28, 2025

Inside Labor’s response to the US strikes on Iran

The prime minister’s slow reaction to supporting America’s unauthorised missile strikes on Iran’s nuclear sites shows the contradictions at the heart of Labor’s foreign policy.

News June 21, 2025

‘A very dangerous man’: How Alex Antic is shaping the Liberals

Having fought to the top of the South Australian Liberal ticket, Alex Antic is working to reshape the party as a radical outfit more interested in ideology than governing.

News June 14, 2025

Exclusive: PBS listings frozen over Trump’s executive order

Industry sources reveal drug companies have stopped negotiating listings on the PBS and in some cases are considering not listing in Australia as they seek to lift profits under Trump.

News June 07, 2025

Tony Burke and the expansion of Home Affairs’ power

The PM’s reunification of the super-ministry reverses a move that critics say made it more accountable, and is a boon for the leadership ambitions of Tony Burke.

News May 31, 2025

Inside story: Advance ‘siphoned’ Liberal resources

Despite claiming successes against the Greens, right-wing lobby group Advance shifted very few votes and contributed to the Liberal Party’s massive loss.

News May 24, 2025

Exclusive: How Abbott and Credlin control the Liberals

Liberal MPs reveal how the former prime minister and his close confidante have been at the centre of a string of disastrous decisions that led to the party’s stunning election loss and the collapse of the Coalition.

News May 17, 2025

Exclusive: Albanese ministry decided three months before election

Labor’s new ministry is the result of a months-old factional deal to appease the Victorian Right – although the prime minister ‘signed off’ on the controversial sackings.

News May 10, 2025

The quiet force behind Labor’s landslide

Paul Erickson’s colleagues say the Labor national secretary is a man who controls everything – he doesn’t get angry, he just gets slower.

News May 03, 2025

This man is not going to win – probably

Travelling with Peter Dutton through the final week of the election campaign, it was clear the opposition leader was running on avoidance – of scrutiny, mistakes and imagination.

News April 26, 2025

How much are Dutton and Taylor actually worth?

The opposition leader and his prospective treasurer are among the richest people to ever sit in parliament – although their wealth is held in a series of complex arrangements that would breach the ministerial code.

News April 19, 2025

The Murdoch media’s attack on the teals

As community independents look increasingly competitive in several Liberal-held seats, a concerted campaign against them is running in the Murdoch press.

News April 12, 2025

‘We are being tested’: Inside Labor’s trade war strategy

The distraction of an erratic US-driven trade war is forcing Labor to pivot on the campaign trail, while offering opportunities to sharpen its pitch as the superior economic manager.

News April 05, 2025

‘This is going to stick’: Inside Dutton’s Trump thump

The first week of the campaign has shown up an ill-disciplined opposition leader, with Coalition sources saying they are already ‘factoring in a loss’.

News March 29, 2025

Choosing Australia’s frigate suppliers

In deciding whether to award a massive Australian naval contract to Japan or to Germany, the Australian government must carefully weigh both competing strengths and strategic relationships.

News March 22, 2025

Dinner at Towers Road: The billionaires dining with Dutton

At the same time as he positions himself as fighting against corporate Australia, Peter Dutton has proved an effective fundraiser and popular guest of billionaire donors.

News March 15, 2025

Inside the Dural caravan terrorism hoax

The timeline from the discovery to the exposure of the fake terrorist plot reveals how political exploitation served to stoke fears and erode public confidence.

News March 08, 2025

Donald Trump’s son and the Australian arms dealer

Australia’s largest private arms supplier, Robert Nioa, has become a regular of Donald Trump’s inner circle – and a confidant of Peter Dutton. He is also Bob Katter’s son-in-law.

News March 01, 2025

Inside the Coalition’s unfunded election promises

The Coalition has announced it will match major spending announcements made by the Albanese government but has been unwilling to outline the savings on which this would depend.

News February 22, 2025

ASIO ratchets up the warnings

In a wide-ranging account of the threats facing Australia, the ASIO chief revealed hostile actions from state actors, extremists and, increasingly, adolescents.

News February 15, 2025

Labor’s election advertising strategy

Labor has outpaced the Coalition with a rush of advertisements reflecting the belief that voters’ views on Peter Dutton are still evolving and a negative campaign will work in the government’s favour.

News February 08, 2025

Environment protection backdown rankles Labor stalwarts

As the government moved this week to kill off its own environmental reform, there is anger and disappointment within Labor’s ranks over the sacrifice to economic interests.

News December 21, 2024

Exclusive: Albanese’s satisfaction ratings as bad as Morrison’s

Despite passing an ambitious suite of legislation in the final sitting week of parliament, Anthony Albanese is seen by focus groups as greedy, timid and too close to corporate Australia.

News December 14, 2024

Anthony Pratt’s box seat ride to White House influence

The billionaire Visy chairman has collected some of Australia’s leading political figures as advisers and is now a regular at Mar-a-Lago. What will he do with his latest, most powerful connection?

News December 07, 2024

Exclusive: Dutton hires Morrison’s ‘disinformation’ team

The Liberal Party has hired controversial digital agency Topham Guerin to produce content for its election campaign, despite concerns about disinformation and deepfakes used by the group.

News November 30, 2024

‘Don’t do it’: The man calling the shots on gambling reform

The decision not to implement a ban on gambling advertising comes after intense lobbying and draws on a close relationship between the PM and Peter V’landys.

News November 23, 2024

‘That’s the f--king point’: Labor donor reforms explained

The biggest electoral reforms in 40 years have been criticised as a plot to entrench the two-party system, which would deliver millions in extra funding to Labor and the Coalition.

News November 16, 2024

‘Steaming pile of shit’: Rudd prepares to work with Trump

As he attempts to build relations with the Trump administration, Kevin Rudd has been accused of privately mocking the president-elect’s inner circle at parties held at the ambassador’s official residence.

News November 09, 2024

Damning final report into PwC misconduct

The final report into misconduct at PwC and the other Big Four consultancies has recommended 40 changes that would fundamentally alter the way these firms operate.

News November 02, 2024

Albanese’s growing reputation as the ‘freebie’ prime minister

As Anthony Albanese reassures colleagues over his handling of the Qantas upgrades scandal, some Labor figures express concern he has become too used to the perks of office.

News October 26, 2024

Is Richard Marles more than ‘two boots sticking out of Albo’s bum’?

Colleagues deride the defence minister as vain and too enthusiastic about the trappings of office – but his factional power makes him a possibility to succeed the prime minister.

News October 19, 2024

Inside Peter Dutton’s quiet pitch to big business

Attacks on big business have been part of the opposition leader’s strategy to broaden his appeal – now he is working to repair strained relations with the corporate sector that have raised concerns within his party.

News October 12, 2024

‘The last free freedom fighters’: Labor’s war with its old guard

As Labor insiders chafe against the regular and outspoken criticism from Labor’s elder statesmen, some say it provides the contestability that this government lacks.

News October 05, 2024

Exclusive: FOI docs reveal courting of health officials

As hundreds of millions of dollars are spent on outsourced software, key provider Salesforce has built a reputation for the largesse of its hospitality.

News September 28, 2024

Exclusive: States abandon federal terrorism ‘clusterf--k’

The national strategy on counterterrorism has collapsed, with the states walking away and dysfunction hobbling Home Affairs.

News September 21, 2024

How major parties plan to use AI at the next election

AI-generated content on apps such as TikTok is seen as the next big thing in political messaging, with Gen Z the target for the next federal election.

News September 14, 2024

‘He’s a clown’: Jim Chalmers, Angus Taylor and the RBA

Behind the apparent breakdown in relations between Labor and the Reserve Bank is a more bitter feud with the Coalition over reforms.

News September 07, 2024

How the NACC ‘betrayed its core obligation’

The National Anti-Corruption Commission has ignored referrals from a royal commission to investigate six public servants over the disastrous robodebt scheme.

News August 31, 2024

Pezzullo: Labor has ‘picked a side’ in war with China

The offer of military bases to the US clashes with the government’s stated aim of distancing itself from a great power rivalry, says the former secretary of Home Affairs.

News August 24, 2024

Aged-care contracts blow out to $685 million

EXCLUSIVE: Analysis of IT contracts to support the new aged-care system show fees have ballooned to $685 million for just three multinational consultancies.

News August 17, 2024

Advance’s plan to destroy the Greens

Following a series of focus groups and other polling, Advance has announced its sole focus until the next election will be cutting the Greens’ senate vote by a third.

News August 10, 2024

Inside Labor’s plan to restrict non-compete clauses

Labor plans to limit the use of non-compete clauses, on the basis that such constraints on the movement of workers to rival employers suppress both wages and innovation.

News August 03, 2024

Teals at risk in Goldstein, Kooyong, Mackellar and Curtin

Polling shows at least four teal independents are at risk of losing at the next election, as the government prepares donation reforms that favour major parties.

News July 27, 2024

Seven questions for PwC

As PwC’s most senior executives prepare for further questioning before a Senate committee, the company has failed to answer key questions at the centre of the tax leaks scandal.

News July 20, 2024

Aged-care contracts blow out by $227.9 million

EXCLUSIVE: An investigation into multiple technology contracts signed to support the new Aged Care Act has raised doubts over the Commonwealth’s capacity to properly manage the delayed implementation of the law.

News July 13, 2024

‘A little more adventurous’: Inside Dutton’s youth crime strategy

Peter Dutton is remaking the Coalition in the image of the Liberal National Party, wrongfooting a federal Labor government that has never before dealt with a Queensland opposition leader.

News July 06, 2024

Exclusive: NDIS contract blew out by $200m

An EY review obtained by The Saturday Paper reveals that the cost of a software contract with an American firm approved in 2019 went from $10 million to $210 million in three years, and is likely still rising.

News July 06, 2024

Inside the Fatima Payman defection

Fatima Payman has confirmed she spoke with election strategist Glenn Druery before crossing the floor, as colleagues say her defection from the Labor Party was months in the making.

News June 29, 2024

Exclusive: Husic made venture capital appointments ahead of quantum contract

Ahead of a huge investment in PsiQuantum, Industry Minister Ed Husic gave advisory positions to executives from a venture capital firm connected to the company.

News June 22, 2024

Exclusive: Morrison to serve Albanese as Trump envoy

As the Albanese government prepares for the possibility of a second term for Donald Trump, Scott Morrison is being considered as an informal envoy.

News June 15, 2024

Labor faces the Greens over Gaza

As the Greens are accused of condoning anti-Semitism in their rhetoric on Gaza, Labor is attempting to predict the impact the conflict will have in key seats.

News June 08, 2024

Exclusive: Disgraced consultancy to run government ethics training

A week before the long-awaited report into consulting services, it can be revealed that KPMG was given $1.3 million to train the public service in ethics.

News June 01, 2024

Will mothers and Barnaby Joyce decide the vape ban?

While the government’s push to ban non-therapeutic vapes has been heavily supported by public health bodies, it has split the Coalition over female voters, the blackmarket and Barnaby Joyce.

News May 25, 2024

Inside the Liberals’ plan to reclaim teal seats

The party has learnt some lessons from the last election in its selection of professional women to contest three seats lost to independents. Can they convince voters turned off  by Peter Dutton’s platform?

News May 18, 2024

Exclusive: Repatriation of ISIS brides shelved

Amid calls for the urgent repatriation of so-called Australian ISIS brides and their children stranded in Syria, Anthony Albanese has decided to shelve any plans to bring them home.

News May 11, 2024

How lobbyists shape the budget

As a review of the Lobbying Code of Conduct draws criticism from transparency advocates, lobbyists are descending on Canberra to take expensive seats at fundraisers around the most important night of the political year.

News May 04, 2024

‘An unusual chess player’: How Labor is approaching Peter Dutton

As Labor confronts Peter Dutton’s success in the polls, research is shaping how they will characterise him – from his police career to his investment properties to his time as health minister.

News April 27, 2024

‘A race towards minority’: Labor’s fight for re-election

Labor is looking past ailing polls as it lays the policy groundwork for the next election, while strategists and pollsters say even a minority government may be tough to secure.

News April 20, 2024

Inside Albanese’s industrial re-election strategy

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is staking a significant part of his re-election on an interventionist plan to revitalise investment in industry.