Rick Morton

is The Saturday Paper’s senior reporter.

By this author


News November 29, 2025

Inside the Bureau of Meteorology’s $96m website fiasco

Global IT consultancy Accenture has been accused of ‘strip mining’ the Bureau of Meteorology during its years-late delivery of a redesigned website not fit for purpose.

News November 01, 2025

‘Practically unusable’: Inside the BoM’s website shambles

The Bureau of Meteorology’s new website was rushed out – years overdue and almost $47 million over budget – despite testing scores falling below the standard for release.

Comment October 25, 2025

‘Absurdist leaps of logic’: Robodebt misused in FOI reforms

“I am furious. Angry, certainly, about the federal government’s proposed freedom of information laws, which mock the very idea of transparency, but seething especially about the justification for them, a continuation of the rhetorical trickery that …”

News October 04, 2025

Algorithm to be used for NDIS plans

The government is using an ‘instrument’ designed by the University of Melbourne to reassess support payments for disabled people.

News September 27, 2025

Exclusive: University sought secret KPMG staff spreadsheet

The University of Technology Sydney denied the existence of a KPMG spreadsheet ranking the research performance of academics, in breach of its EBA, until it was forced to release it.

News September 13, 2025

UTS’s dirty laundry

SafeWork NSW’s first prohibition notice on the grounds of psychological safety, made against staff cuts at University of Technology Sydney, is emblematic of a higher education sector in meltdown.

News August 30, 2025

Exclusive: NDIA accused of ‘repeated non-compliance’ as it prepares for autism reforms

While advocates say they have been ambushed by Labor’s plans to eject autistic children from the National Disability Insurance Scheme, the agency has been accused of ignoring multiple legal orders.

News August 16, 2025

Exclusive: Government warned over ‘legal basis’ of welfare system

Despite being warned in 2018 that jobseekers were being exposed to unfair and excessive decisions, the Department of Employment and Workplace Relations ‘chose to continue with the status quo’.

News July 26, 2025

Exclusive: Welfare cancellations paused after tribunal complaint

The employment department quietly stopped welfare cancellations after a complaint from a disabled woman – but did not intervene in her case, which she won six months later.

News July 19, 2025

Exclusive: Smoking data taken down after link to vape ban

A report showing increased smoking and vaping among young Australians was pulled after it embarrassed the government and led to complaints from other researchers.

News July 05, 2025

Exclusive: NDIA chief intervened to throw advocate off scheme

Internal emails show the National Disability Insurance Agency rushed to withdraw access for a disabled person whose funding was criticised on talkback radio, only to reinstate it 10 months later.

News June 14, 2025

‘Mind-boggling stupidity’: The consultancy that captured universities

Nous Group has slowly taken over the university sector, filling VCs’ offices with ex-staff and buying ‘incredibly sensitive’ data that is sold back for benchmarking.

Life June 07, 2025

Abroad-minded: the hope and heartache of moving overseas

As the author prepares for an extended stay on the other side of the world, the details of the life he leaves behind take on new significance.

News May 31, 2025

ANAO slams Meals on Wheels debacle

The audit office has found the Department of Health failed to disclose conflicts of interest, did not keep records of entertainment and ignored legal advice when awarding a consultancy millions of dollars in a disastrous attempt to reform Meals on Wheels.

News May 31, 2025

Executive quits after NDIS changes

A senior executive dedicated to working with the disability community on reforms to the NDIS has resigned, and the government admits critical supports for those no longer eligible are not ready.

News May 24, 2025

Exclusive: KPMG’s secret university restructure

A leaked report of the KPMG-led restructure plan for UTS is based on a performance metric not permitted by labour contracts.

News May 17, 2025

How providers benefit from the aged-care overhaul

Just weeks before massive aged-care reforms are due to take effect, providers are still lobbying for changes to their oversight, and accommodation costs are already rising.

News May 10, 2025

Exclusive: The consultancy driving ANU cuts

As the ANU slashes costs to address its purportedly dire finances, documents seen by The Saturday Paper reveal it is paying a consultancy $3 million for a confidential strategy focused on profit growth.

News May 03, 2025

Combative NDIA’s ‘appalling’ impacts

In its efforts to cut costs, the agency running the NDIS has taken an adversarial approach that has left participants exhausted and independent reviewers appalled.

News April 26, 2025

Exclusive: BoM planned to charge for climate data

The Bureau of Meteorology made plans to charge for access to critical climate data but shelved the plan following concerns from scientists.

News April 19, 2025

Flawed cashless welfare cards rebadged

Despite promises to end the Coalition’s Cashless Debit Card, Labor has rebranded the welfare payment system that is compulsory in some Indigenous communities.

News April 12, 2025

Walking wounded: Inside the NSW doctors’ strike

Letters from the NSW government threatening disciplinary action against doctors striking for better pay and conditions have encouraged walkouts on an unprecedented scale.

News April 05, 2025

Exclusive: Child abuse services delayed by faulty tender

Almost a decade after a royal commission recommended the government establish counselling services for child abuse survivors and others, a bungled tender process has failed to establish the helplines.

News March 29, 2025

‘It was a mistake’: Australia fails to sign up to $163b research fund

As Australia loses research funding following a Trump crackdown, academics believe the government has failed universities by rejecting multiple invitations to join Europe’s largest fund.

News March 22, 2025

Everything that’s wrong with university management

It’s business as usual in the university sector, where exorbitant executive pay, insecure jobs and exploitation of academic staff continue unabated.

News March 15, 2025

Cyclone Alfred and the real cost of Dutton’s public service cuts

The involvement of the public service in the aftermath of ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred underscores the reality of the Coalition’s promise to cut 36,000 people from government departments.

News March 08, 2025

The federal government’s failure to deliver on welfare debt reform

Despite the findings of the robodebt royal commission, the government is yet to put a time limit on the pursuit of historic welfare debts.

News March 01, 2025

Seeking justice for my history teacher

The lessons Rick Morton was taught by his Year 11 and 12 modern history teacher stood him in good stead as a journalist seeking justice amid the intricacies of social policy and government bureaucracy. More than two decades later, he had a chance to return the favour.

News February 22, 2025

Exclusive: DSS shares legal letters that help silence church victims

The Department of Social Services provided legal correspondence to the Catholic Church that was then leaked to the Murdoch press and used in an attempt to silence victims.

News February 15, 2025

Exclusive: Ten dead after welfare glitch ignored by government

The government was informed of a glitch that caused more than a thousand people to be cut off from welfare payments but ignored it for more than three years because halting it would harm private providers.

News February 08, 2025

Exclusive: The failed plot to take over Meals on Wheels

A consultancy is in receivership and a senior public servant has described himself as ‘not fit-for-duty’ after a series of troubled contracts was awarded to reform Meals on Wheels.

News February 01, 2025

Exclusive: BoM diverted hundreds of millions to cover cost blowouts

Tanya Plibersek has sought an ‘urgent briefing’ on the management of the Bureau of Meteorology after it was revealed it was using hundreds of millions of dollars in maintenance funds to cover cost overruns.

News January 25, 2025

Exclusive: Albanese shut down hospital talks to pressure states

In an attempt to force the reallocation of NDIS costs, Anthony Albanese has halted funding negotiations for state hospitals – a move that could ‘bankrupt’ the system.

News January 18, 2025

‘More reactive … more suspicious’: Dutton sharpens focus on teal seats

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has shifted his campaign strategy to again involve the teal electorates, although moderates in the party say he is still using ‘the Trump playbook’.

News January 11, 2025

Exclusive: Children targeted in NDIS crackdown

Despite claims the government’s reform of the National Disability Insurance Scheme is focused on fraud, a third of the savings will come from pushing children off the scheme.

News December 21, 2024

Exclusive: ‘Catastrophic errors’ seen in rushed NDIS reform

Following confidential briefings, disability advocates say hundreds of thousands of people will be underserved by new eligibility rules that are reminiscent of failed Coalition policy.

News December 14, 2024

Exclusive: New tribunal yet to publish a single decision

The Administrative Review Tribunal, which was intended to restore transparency and trust, has released none of the decisions from its first two months of operation, owing to technical problems.

News December 07, 2024

Exclusive: JobSeeker payment system errors prompt review

The hunt for ‘anomalies’ in the JobSeeker compliance system will take months and the Department of Employment is unable to say if it is legal.

News November 30, 2024

Exclusive: Welfare payments cancelled unlawfully

An error in the interpretation of welfare legislation has led to the unlawful cancellation of payments, as the department fails to manage its own compliance system.

News November 23, 2024

Exclusive: NACC integrity officer quits over integrity

As the National Anti-Corruption Commission continues to face criticism over its decision-making, new details have emerged about compliance issues and disclosures at the body.

podcast November 21, 2024

Thank God for Rick Morton

We bring you Michael’s conversation from Canberra Writers’ Festival with Rick as they discuss Mean Streak.

News November 16, 2024

Exclusive: NACC dumped Gleeson over concerns for Coalition minister

Former solicitor-general Justin Gleeson’s appointment to review the NACC’s decision on robodebt was rescinded over concerns it might offend a Coalition minister who was referred for investigation.

News November 09, 2024

Exclusive: NDIS crackdown wrongly withdraws support

An enormous escalation in ‘reassessments’ of eligibility for the NDIS has seen people who should be on the scheme incorrectly removed without explanation.

News November 02, 2024

Eight minutes outside: How the NACC failed on robodebt

The National Anti-Corruption Commission’s first major decision has ended in a finding of official misconduct against the commission itself and a possible reopening of investigations into robodebt.

News September 28, 2024

Bid to take robodebt class action back to court

Evidence from the robodebt royal commission has opened the door for victims to pursue new compensation claims and the possibility of a ‘misfeasance in public office’ finding.

News September 21, 2024

Inside the fight to open the robodebt sealed section

Only five people have been given access to the royal commission’s sealed section. One is the attorney-general, who is ‘giving consideration to questions relating to the release of the confidential chapter’.

News September 13, 2024

‘Lost their way’: 12 public servants breached code of conduct over robodebt

A report by the Australian Public Service Commission has found a dozen public servants, including two departmental secretaries, breached the Public Service Code of Conduct in their handling of robodebt.

News September 07, 2024

Exclusive: Leaked tape shows BoM crippled by huge cost blowouts

In a meeting with staff, the chief executive of the Bureau of Meteorology confirmed the agency was dipping into future operational funds to pay for current projects.

News August 31, 2024

‘Very colourful terms’: Is this the end of the Jacqui Lambie Network?

Infighting has whittled the party to just two members, though Jacqui Lambie still wants to run candidates in the next federal election.

News August 24, 2024

‘Last-minute homework vibes’: Inside Shorten’s NDIS reforms

Disability advocates say the government’s reform of the National Disability Insurance Scheme has been rushed and creates more opportunity for mistreatment.

News August 17, 2024

‘Some kind of monster’: Inside the Reynolds defamation trial

Giving evidence in Linda Reynolds’ defamation trial, Scott Morrison says he doesn’t remember the details of the review he commissioned into Brittany Higgins’s rape but says Reynolds suffered as a result of prolonged ‘attacks’.

News August 10, 2024

Exclusive: New laws to push people with disability into nursing homes

A new aged-care bill gives explicit powers to place people under the age of 65 with disability into residential aged care, although the government claims the laws will improve the situation.

News August 03, 2024

Navigating a broken employment services system

As one man tries to find work, he has been failed in multiple and complicating ways, with the government outsourcing his case to an employment services company owned out of Florida by a group of men who made their fortune in turbo ovens.

News July 27, 2024

NDIS media strategy briefing given before review finished

As the government struggles to pass its NDIS reforms, the scheme’s reviewer says he was briefed on focus group research before he completed his recommendations.

News July 20, 2024

Jobseeker glitch cuts more than 1300 incomes

EXCLUSIVE: A system glitch has wrongly punished more than 1300 jobseekers by cutting off their income in an IT disaster that is a potent reminder of the dark days of robodebt.

News July 06, 2024

Exclusive: ACCC pushes to regulate tech platforms

In an interview with The Saturday Paper, Australian Competition and Consumer Commission chair Gina Cass-Gottlieb has called for the government to introduce new powers to sanction tech platforms.

News June 29, 2024

Exclusive: BoM staff redirected to work for fossil fuel companies

The Bureau of Meteorology is facing internal dissent after it seconded forecasters from its overstretched aviation unit to provide contract services to mining companies.

News June 22, 2024

Exclusive: CSIRO dismantles clinical research units

Job cuts at the CSIRO will see the agency close two clinical research units and shelve a plan to establish a food research centre in Victoria.

News June 15, 2024

Exclusive: Welfare groups fear collapse after budget

The budget’s failure to deliver the funds recommended in a review two months earlier leaves community legal services with a massive shortfall and pleading with the attorney-general for assistance.

News June 08, 2024

Inside the BoM’s failings: ‘They will straight up tell you black is white’

As the Bureau of Meteorology pulls back on its international obligations, increasing automation and a lack of experienced staff has made forecasts less reliable.

News June 01, 2024

Exclusive: Shorten revives the Coalition’s failed NDIS reforms

Cost-saving reforms to the NDIS will allow debts to be raised against disabled people and give extraordinary new powers to cancel support entirely.

News May 25, 2024

How right-wing lobbyists are expanding their reach

Right-wing and libertarian lobby groups are expanding their funding and influence since the Voice to Parliament referendum, and the free speech union is the latest addition to a growing ecosystem.

News May 18, 2024

Exclusive: The consulting firm and the Meals on Wheels millions

The acting auditor-general is considering an investigation into contracts awarded to a private firm following complications over a tech upgrade for the Meals on Wheels service.

News May 11, 2024

Five-month delays for counselling of violent men

As Australia struggles with a surge in calls for help to domestic violence services, treatment programs for violent men are also struggling to meet demand.

News May 04, 2024

Who is NSW police chief Karen Webb?

Karen Webb was an unexpected pick for commissioner of the NSW Police Force. She came through a field defined by infighting, phone taps and complex power plays. Now she is at the forefront of the country’s response to domestic violence.

News April 27, 2024

Exclusive: Albanese fears Facebook will leave Australia

As media companies including News Corp prepare for more redundancies following the loss of payments from Facebook, the government fears the platform will leave Australia entirely.

News April 20, 2024

Every player in the Lehrmann scandal

Bruce Lehrmann’s rape of Brittany Higgins has dragged in dozens of people, almost all of them damaged by the scandal and its fallout.

News April 13, 2024

Exclusive: Babies are being left off Medicare as department founders

Services Australia is failing to acquit its basic functions as it waits for a legal decision that could force it to wipe hundreds of millions of dollars in alleged debts.

News April 06, 2024

Inside the ‘dirty strategy lunches in media city’

The latest developments in the Bruce Lehrmann case are an expression of poisonous fallings out and the reckless tabloid culture in Sydney media.

News February 17, 2024

Exclusive: Plibersek intervenes after BoM executives lie to court

The handling of an unfair dismissal case has again exposed concern about the running of the Bureau of Meteorology, which continues to fail its international obligations and miss other targets.

News February 10, 2024

Climate 200’s plan for the next election

The teals’ gains were the Liberals’ losses in the last election – for the next one, the movement behind these successful independent campaigns is targeting vulnerable Nationals seats.

News February 03, 2024

Veterans’ Affairs misled Information Commissioner over records breach

Following revelations in The Saturday Paper that Veterans’ Affairs shared personal medical records without consent with a university research project, the department has admitted to misleading the Information Commissioner about the extent of the breach.

News January 27, 2024

Exclusive: Services Australia can’t say how many caught by glitch

The government’s welfare agency has been accused of ‘deliberately’ miscalculating payments, as it struggles to explain errors in aged-care refunds.

News January 20, 2024

Exclusive: Coles and Woolworths to face full ACCC inquiry

As the government launches another review of supermarkets’ conduct, the corporate watchdog is expected to announce its first full-scale supermarkets inquiry in 16 years.

News January 13, 2024

The hidden risks in the NDIS restructure

The NDIS is on the brink of its biggest-ever restructure, and people in the disability community are concerned that the earliest reforms in a sweeping agenda may leave many who rely on the service unsupported.

News December 23, 2023

Exclusive: St Vincent’s Hospital to be insolvent by April

A key Sydney hospital is on the precipice of insolvency, according to leaked internal memos, and will soon be unable to pay its staff.

News December 16, 2023

‘Please don’t make me sound like a cheap tabloid journalist’

The third week of evidence in Bruce Lehrmann’s defamation case against Network Ten highlights the ugly collision of media and politics.

News December 09, 2023

Centrelink lashed over robodebt-style accounting

The unlawful use of robodebt-style income averaging to calculate welfare debts has been going on for decades and may require large-scale waivers, says the ombudsman in a scathing summary of Centrelink’s handling.

News December 09, 2023

Kind of lazy and an idiot: the Bruce Lehrmann trial

This week the defamation trial has revealed more of Bruce Lehrmann’s interactions with Brittany Higgins in the weeks before the alleged rape, and tensions between him and his former colleagues.

News December 02, 2023

‘You didn’t look nervous, Mr Lehrmann. You look very keen to tell a lie...’

Bruce Lehrmann’s defamation case against Network Ten has been defined by an inability to recall key details and testimony that is contradicted by other evidence.

News November 25, 2023

NDIS regulator faces fresh allegations

As minister Bill Shorten prepares to release the findings from a sweeping review of the NDIS, the head of its regulator faces allegations she was aware or should have been aware of abuse exposed by the media.

News November 18, 2023

A serious flaw in the robodebt response

The attorney-general has ignored a ‘lynchpin’ recommendation of the robodebt royal commission, claiming it is not a recommendation at all.

News November 11, 2023

Power and violence in private school culture

The murder of a young woman at an elite private school, and the reaction from a former principal, has highlighted a broader culture of privilege in which young boys are protected from consequence or culpability.

News November 04, 2023

NT community’s win benefits all renters

A High Court victory for residents of a remote community who sued the Northern Territory government over the appalling condition of their rental properties has implications for renters with negligent landlords across the country.

News October 28, 2023

Exclusive: NDIA used the law to ‘exhaust’ participants

A leaked review document shows the National Disability Insurance Agency used ‘legalistic brinkmanship’ to force disabled people to ‘bargain away their rights’.

News October 21, 2023

Exclusive: Private companies halting welfare payments

A feature in the welfare system is allowing private businesses to suspend hundreds of thousands of welfare payments.

News October 14, 2023

Nothing has won

A decade of work for supporters of the Indigenous Voice to Parliament was struck down barely an hour after polls closed in the east of the country.

News October 14, 2023

NDIS Commission on the brink

A census of staff morale provides an insight into the chaos engulfing the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission, putting vulnerable people at risk.

News October 07, 2023

University strikes and the profit motive

As academics strike at multiple universities, so-called sector reforms have turned what were places of higher learning and research into corporatised money makers.

News September 30, 2023

Anatomy of a ‘No’: The people voting against the Voice

At the start of this campaign, the average ‘No’ voter was a man over 50. Since then, the ‘No’ vote has grown in almost every demographic – driven by distrust of the Voice and the belief that First Nations people don’t want it.

News September 22, 2023

‘I am in robust health’: Rupert Murdoch hands the empire to Lachlan

At the age of 92, Rupert Murdoch has finally stepped down as chair of News Corp. The ‘most dangerous man in the world’ has put his son in charge.

News September 23, 2023

Exclusive: Australia’s welfare agency at risk of collapse

Services Australia staff say the agency is in chaos, blaming under-resourcing and poor decisions for ‘the worst culture, morale and treatment of employees ever seen’.

News September 16, 2023

‘They price it in’: The woman taking on corporate Australia

In an interview with The Saturday Paper, the ACCC chair details her plans to aggressively litigate major companies, with a particular focus on cost of living.

News September 09, 2023

Exclusive: Joyce sought to sell government a stake in Qantas

Following the resignation of Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce, fresh details have emerged regarding his relationship with government.

News September 02, 2023

Exclusive: Qantas considers paying back JobKeeper

As the national carrier faces increasing criticism of its conduct, a former minister likens the airline’s management to ‘terrorists’.

News August 26, 2023

Exclusive: Millions skimmed off government welfare contracts

Briefing documents show employment providers are paying themselves more than $40 million a year to move welfare recipients through jobs and training within their own companies.

News August 19, 2023

Exclusive: Aged-care watchdog closes cases without probe

Staff at the aged-care regulator say complaints are being closed with copy-and-pasted findings, in some cases leading to preventable deaths.

News August 12, 2023

Exclusive: DPP reviews prosecutions for false welfare debts

More than 100,000 people have been affected by a second robo-debt-like scheme, which has run for two decades and could cost $1 billion to correct.

News August 05, 2023

Exclusive: UNSW referred to ICAC

The controversial filling of a seven-figure-salary role at UNSW Sydney has been referred to the state’s anti-corruption body.

News July 29, 2023

Government shared veterans’ medical data

The Department of Veterans’ Affairs has routinely shared confidential medical records with a cost-saving program.

News July 15, 2023

Exclusive: Morrison approved for legal aid over robo-debt

Legal ramifications are sinking in for bureaucrats and former ministers after damning findings from the robo-debt royal commission.

News July 07, 2023

Robo-debt royal commission ends in criminal referrals

The robo-debt royal commission has found the scheme was sustained by ‘venality, incompetence and cowardice’.

News July 01, 2023

Exclusive: How the TriCare empire spun off as a non-profit

A billion-dollar private aged-care company is set to transition to a non-profit structure, while still charging rent to the charity for use of its facilities.

News June 24, 2023

Insiders expose ‘bullshit’ at CSIRO

Staff have revealed internal divisions stemming from tensions between the CSIRO’s board and its departing chief executive, who put industry priorities ahead of science.

News June 17, 2023

What’s next in Australia’s Covid-19 response

As Australia plans its inquiry into the pandemic response, there is still no evidence key recommendations to deploy the National COVID-19 Health Management Plan are in place, six months after its release.

News June 10, 2023

Overstretched NDIS regulator in crisis

As the NDIS regulator pushes to meet targets, its staff say they are pressuring disabled people to drop complaints and are missing serious abuse and neglect.

News June 03, 2023

Exclusive: NDIS regulator in chaos

The agency that regulates the NDIS has engaged lawyers in an attempt to prevent being served with a complaint about its own dysfunctional workplace culture.

News May 27, 2023

Charges laid in aged-care Taser killing

The death of Clare Nowland this week underscores the failings in aged-care policy and policing.

News May 20, 2023

Exclusive: Robo-debt findings delayed to allow NACC referrals

Commissioner Catherine Holmes has written to the attorney-general to ask that her findings be delivered after the National Anti-Corruption Commission is operational, so she can make direct referrals.

News May 13, 2023

Shorten’s kill list: Morrison, Tudge and Robert

The end of Stuart Robert’s political career also marks the end of Bill Shorten’s campaign to push him out of parliament, leaving behind an incredible string of scandals.

News April 29, 2023

Huge rises in student HECS debt

Students will see their debt grow by almost $5 billion on June 1, in the largest inflation-related hike since the 1990s, as the government funding pool for tertiary places shrinks.

News April 22, 2023

Dutton refuses to identify ‘Elders’ he met over the Voice

Peter Dutton claims his position on the Voice is informed by Indigenous communities, but the communities he names say they are being misquoted or that he refused to meet with them.

News April 15, 2023

Exclusive: Mental health commission in crisis

The agency responsible for advising the government on mental health is under investigation for alleged financial irregularities, dysfunction and workplace bullying.

News March 11, 2023

Robo-debt final week: ‘It served them right, did it?’

In its last week of hearings, the robo-debt royal commission has found the moment when the scheme became an expression of unchecked political desire.

News March 04, 2023

Robo-debt commission: Robert insisted on ‘double-down’

Former minister Stuart Robert says he wanted to end robo-debt but he had to support it because he was a cabinet minister. The evidence from senior public servants suggests the opposite.

News March 02, 2023

March 2: Robo-debt royal commission — as it happened

For the fourth hearing block of the robo-debt royal commission, follow events live with The Saturday Paper's senior reporter.

News March 01, 2023

March 1: Robo-debt royal commission

For the fourth hearing block of the robo-debt royal commission, follow events live with The Saturday Paper's senior reporter.

News February 28, 2023

February 28: Robo-debt royal commission

For the fourth hearing block of the robo-debt royal commission, follow events live with The Saturday Paper's senior reporter.

News February 27, 2023

February 27: Robo-debt royal commission

For the fourth hearing block of the robo-debt royal commission, follow events live with The Saturday Paper's senior reporter.

News February 25, 2023

Robo-debt commission: ‘Hand on heart time. Any exposure?’

In the final hearings of the robo-debt royal commission, the net is tightening around the people responsible for the illegal scheme.

News February 24, 2023

February 24: Robo-debt royal commission

For the fourth hearing block of the robo-debt royal commission, follow events live with The Saturday Paper's senior reporter.

News February 23, 2023

February 23: Robo-debt royal commission

For the fourth hearing block of the robo-debt royal commission, follow events live with The Saturday Paper's senior reporter.

News February 21, 2023

February 22: Robo-debt royal commission

For the fourth hearing block of the robo-debt royal commission, follow events live with The Saturday Paper's senior reporter.

News February 04, 2023

FW: URGENT: Tudge leaked personal data to cow welfare critics

As more terrible details emerge in the robo-debt royal commission, a case is being built of misfeasance in public office.

News January 28, 2023

‘Pandora’s box’: Real conspiracy behind robo-debt

Fresh evidence to the royal commission shows how departments actively avoided legal precedents to keep robo-debt running for years.

News December 17, 2022

Morrison and Porter sought robo-debt advice to woo Hanson

Documents tendered in the robo-debt royal commission show how, as treasurer, Scott Morrison intended to use the punitive aspects of the illegal scheme to win more support from Pauline Hanson.

News December 10, 2022

How bureaucrats kept robo-debt alive

In the week before Scott Morrison gives evidence to the robo-debt royal commission, extraordinary details have emerged about how the public service shaped the ombudsman’s supposedly independent advice on the scheme.

News December 03, 2022

Battle for the RBA’s future begins

Philip Lowe’s future as Reserve Bank governor looks in doubt – he’s short of allies as a major review looms, just months from a decision about his reappointment.

News November 26, 2022

Exclusive: Robo-debt ‘insights’ to shape NDIS compliance

As senior staff at the National Disability Insurance Agency explain their role in establishing robo-debt, the agency is seeking to expand similar compliance programs targeting people with disability.

News November 19, 2022

How it happened: Medibank hack came via a single login

Insiders say hackers exploited a basic flaw in Medibank’s security. It’s part of a dramatic surge in attacks that’s forcing authorities to step up the hunt for cybercriminals offshore.

News November 12, 2022

Inside Morrison’s push for robo-debt

Fresh details have emerged about Scott Morrison’s first briefing on robo-debt, but notes that may reveal exactly what was said at the meeting have been destroyed.

News November 05, 2022

Robo-debt: Liberals knew it was illegal before it started

Departmental and legal advice both showed the robo-debt scheme was unlawful – but once Scott Morrison had seen the proposal, he wouldn’t give up on it.

News October 29, 2022

Julia Gillard’s childhood royal commission

South Australia is hammering out what could be a model for preschool education nationally, with a royal commission headed by former prime minister Julia Gillard.

News October 29, 2022

‘It’s kind of horrific’: BoM cuts compromise forecasts

As the Bureau of Meteorology deals with cuts and delayed upgrades, it is breaching its international obligations for weather data.

News October 22, 2022

Exclusive: Toxic culture has plunged the Bureau of Meteorology into chaos

Bureau of Meteorology staff have been hospitalised because of work conditions, as a loss of senior meteorologists means junior forecasters are trying to deal with natural disasters beyond their expertise.

News October 15, 2022

Exclusive: Nursing homes advised to avoid ‘high-needs’ residents

A consulting firm responsible for a quarter of the aged-care sector has warned its providers to avoid high-needs patients or risk reducing ‘profitability’.

News October 08, 2022

Exclusive: Leaked Burke speech sets stakes for welfare reforms

In a major speech to private welfare operators, Tony Burke has warned there is ‘flexibility’ in contracts signed by the Coalition to establish the current welfare system.

News October 01, 2022

Standardised testing is failing would-be teachers

A standardised test for graduating teachers, informed by management consultancy firm McKinsey, is contributing to the crisis in schools.

News September 24, 2022

Exclusive: Cabinet documents show funding for new hospital staff refused

Hospital developments are being announced across NSW, but the government has refused requests from its own department to adequately fund new medical staffing.

News September 17, 2022

Casino within a casino: Star’s extraordinary breaches

An inquiry has found alleged triad-linked junket operators were running a de facto casino at The Star, and the casino routinely misled regulators.

News September 10, 2022

One’s duty to history: Queen Elizabeth II
(1926-2022)

The 70-year reign of Queen Elizabeth II has ended with her death at Balmoral Castle.

News September 10, 2022

Australia’s spiralling homelessness crisis

In 2008 Labor pledged to halve homelessness, instead it exploded in a decade of Coalition leadership. Now a new national agreement must tackle a ‘vicious spiral’ of unaffordable housing and poverty.

News September 03, 2022

No model for change to Covid isolation rules

The latest changes to Covid-19 rules – shortening isolation periods and removing some mask mandates – were made without any written advice and no modelling was provided to national cabinet.

News August 27, 2022

Why hospitals aren’t recovering after the Covid peak

The national hospitals crisis is pushing patients into ever-more desperate circumstances, and healthcare workers are demanding that the federal government act.

News August 20, 2022

Exclusive: Barilaro affair sacking dodged whistleblower protections

New revelations in the John Barilaro trade saga show how firing the woman first offered the New York role prevented her from accessing state whistleblower protections.

News August 13, 2022

Front row seats at the Barilaro ‘shitshow’

After a week of extraordinary testimony, former deputy premier John Barilaro argues he is the ‘unluckiest’ man in New South Wales.

News August 06, 2022

Exclusive: Private schools win millions in disability funding

Disabled students in public schools are missing out on $600 million a year, because of onerous and unfair funding arrangements.

News July 16, 2022

Albanese offers no relief for jobseekers

The Labor government has left in place ‘mutual obligations’, as new tender documents show the punitive system channels billions of dollars into private companies.

News July 09, 2022

‘Pushing bullshit’: Leaked docs reveal Dutton’s education farce

Leaked documents show the Liberal Party cut more than half the national history curriculum to fit its ideology. Now Peter Dutton is using attacks on education to rebuild his base.

News July 02, 2022

The next coronavirus variant is already here

New research shows the latest Omicron strains are more able to infect people who have been vaccinated, and multiple infections can cause future serious illness.

News June 25, 2022

The fight for NDIS support

Kate, 17, was taken to hospital for surgery to improve her life. It has led to a months-long battle with the hospital and the NDIS for a dramatically increased support plan.

News June 18, 2022

Inside the Qantas saga: ‘It is a wonder they can get a plane off the ground’

As Qantas drops to become the worst performing airline in the country, staff and unions say years of outsourcing have turned it into a budget carrier.

News June 11, 2022

‘Negligent in the extreme’: Labor inherits crises across portfolios

As Labor ministers take up their portfolios, the party has uncovered a mess of unmade decisions and funding holes across Arts, Energy and the NDIS.

News June 04, 2022

The ‘institutional rot’ of Australian universities

Threatened cuts to key support positions and research have sparked unprecedented protests at the University of Sydney and elsewhere and jeopardised the top-tier status that draws students.

News May 28, 2022

Coalition loss: ‘The transphobe thing was an absolute disaster’

Interviews with more than a dozen senior Liberals show how Scott Morrison’s belief in his own ‘genius’ and self-image as a ‘master strategist’ cost the party government.

News May 21, 2022

Testimony at the disability royal commission

The disability royal commission this week heard powerful testimony about a neglectful and mercenary approach to care at one of Australia’s longest-serving providers.

News May 14, 2022

Ben Roberts-Smith trial calls next witness

As the Ben Roberts-Smith defamation case continues, his four star witnesses face their own difficulties in and out of the witness box.

News May 07, 2022

Why is Scott Morrison dodging the ABC?

The Coalition’s relationship with News Corp and its hostility towards the national broadcaster are influencing more than just the televised leaders’ debates.

News April 23, 2022

Clive Palmer and how to buy the balance of power

As speculation mounts that Clive Palmer will seek a preference deal w ith the Coalition, his advertising spending in some markets is more than 200 times that of his rivals.

News April 16, 2022

Hillsong after the Houstons

With founder Brian Houston resigning from Hillsong amid scandal and allegations, and his wife, Bobbie, being pushed out, the global megachurch is now facing its own day of reckoning.

News April 09, 2022

Coalition stacking Liberals across the boards

In the days before the caretaker period, the Morrison government has made 19 appointments to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, many of whom have links to the Liberal Party.

News April 02, 2022

Lismore inundated again in ‘never-ending’ floods

As further floods tear through southern Queensland and northern New South Wales, communities are exhausted, devastated and searching for answers.

News March 26, 2022

Exclusive: NDIS reforms target children under nine

Tender documents show the government is tweaking the National Disability Insurance Scheme to exclude thousands of children with disabilities such as autism.

News March 19, 2022

Morrison failed to act on flood relief ‘handshake’

As blame-shifting continues over the slow response to the floods in northern NSW, Scott Morrison has gone quiet on a support package agreed to with the state’s premier.

News March 12, 2022

Residents abandoned in epic floods

As extraordinary stories emerge of the rescue efforts in northern New South Wales, with hundreds of people saved, residents describe being completely abandoned by the federal government.

News March 05, 2022

Exclusive: Leaked documents show public housing plan halved

Leaked documents show the NSW government’s plan to sell the Waterloo Estate to developers will deliver less than half the public housing stock initially deemed possible.

News February 26, 2022

Exclusive: Millions siphoned against Treasury advice

Secret documents show Dominic Perrottet’s office gave millions to a private project in the seat of a National Party defector, against advice and without the relevant department’s involvement.

News February 19, 2022

The truth about spiralling mental-health waitlists

The crisis in mental-health care has been exacerbated by a breakdown in the college responsible for accrediting new psychiatrists, pushing waitlists to as long as a year.

News February 12, 2022

The story of a life behind the aged-care statistics

Behind the numbers of elderly people who have died of Covid-19, and the glib dismissal of them by politicians, are stories of rich lives ended in often terrible loneliness.

News February 05, 2022

Exclusive: Robo-debt call centres take over Covid hotline

The hotline at the centre of the government’s new Covid-19 strategy is staffed by casual workers with almost no training, employed by the company behind robo-debt.

News January 29, 2022

Hospital plan: ‘Try very hard to avoid getting Covid until March’

In October, the government made a new plan for hospitals – but it was never updated and one of the key drugs it was based on still hasn’t arrived.

News January 22, 2022

The sweetheart deal that caused testing to collapse

A deal that allowed private pathology labs to claim government rebates up to 20 times for one procedure has contributed to the startling collapse of the testing system.

News December 18, 2021

Part two: How Covid-19 began an ‘mRNA revolution’

Covid-19 focused the world’s scientists and politicians like never before. The breakthroughs made to manage it could now lead to vaccines against HIV and even cancer.

News December 11, 2021

Part one: The true story of the Covid-19 vaccines

In many ways the world was cruel to Hungarian biochemist Katalin Karikó, until she saved it.

Life December 11, 2021

‘I’m not going to sugar-coat it’: meet 2021’s most resilient school leavers

For some young people, finishing school in a global pandemic was made more difficult by the compounding effects of disadvantage.

News December 04, 2021

Omicron variant: What happens now

New details have emerged regarding the spread of Omicron to Europe, but it is still not clear how significant the Covid-19 strain will be.

News November 27, 2021

Government outsources aged care reform to management consultants

Eight months after receiving the final report from the aged care royal commission, the Morrison government is spending millions of dollars on management consultancies rather than implementing key recommendations.

News November 20, 2021

Exclusive: Government ‘star chamber’ targets doctors

The agency tasked with oversight of Medicare billing is accused of ‘terrorising’ doctors as it recoups tens of millions in payments.

News November 06, 2021

Exclusive: Legal ultimatum a ‘slap in the face’ for mesh victims

The shifting of liabilities between shell companies has left thousands of women harmed by transvaginal mesh implants with no one to sue for proper compensation.

Life November 06, 2021

First Nations students and finding the right pathway

As an honours student studying philosophy at Melbourne University, having just missed out on a Rhodes Scholarship, Warumungu man Ethan Taylor is interested in the production of knowledge and justice.

News October 23, 2021

Opening up: Covid-19 cases could still reach 750,000

As the eastern states emerge from lockdowns, the pandemic isn’t over, it’s just changing shape.

News October 16, 2021

Exclusive: Government documents reveal Indigenous infection rates

Leaked documents show Covid-19 infections among Indigenous people are almost double the national average.

News October 09, 2021

How private management consultants took over the public service

Since the Coalition came to power, outsourcing of policy work to management consultants has surged – to the point where the public service scarcely has the expertise to function.

News October 01, 2021

Who will replace Gladys Berejiklian?

Following the surprise resignation of NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian, four men are jockeying for the job.

News October 02, 2021

Exclusive: Australia’s most vulnerable ignored in plan to open up

A rush of government tenders to outsource Covid-19 responses shows who is most at risk as lockdowns end. The 20 per cent who will not be fully vaccinated when states begin to open are not anti-vaxxers but rather the most vulnerable.

News September 25, 2021

Covid figures: Splits emerge in government health models

As contact tracing collapses in NSW, differences are opening up in the key health modelling commissioned by government.

News September 18, 2021

Exclusive: Ambulances ‘beyond crisis point’

The ambulance service used to reach its ‘status three’ crisis band once a decade. It has hit it several times in the past few weeks alone.

News September 11, 2021

Exclusive: National cabinet told hospital crisis could last six months

As overwhelmed hospital staff prepare to triage patients based on age, a new briefing to national cabinet says the strain on the health system will last well into next year.

News September 04, 2021

Exclusive: Covid-19 hospitalisations three times higher than reported

Victoria and NSW are at a crisis point, with Covid-19 hospitalisations being underreported and cascading impacts on ambulance services and medical staffing.

News August 28, 2021

Exclusive: States unable to staff ventilator capacity

Analysis prepared for national cabinet shows that although states have built up surge capacity for ventilators during the pandemic, they do not have the medical staff to operate them.

News August 21, 2021

Leaked doc: National cabinet counts ICU beds, underestimates cases by 50 per cent

A leaked document shows that national cabinet has shifted its focus from vaccinations to working out how well hospitals will cope with Covid-19 surges.

News August 14, 2021

Brutal cuts to NDIS see some plans halved without consultation

The National Disability Insurance Scheme is cutting services without consultation, leaving those with disabilities in a continued fight for funding, while fraudulent providers face little scrutiny.

News August 07, 2021

Morrison’s figures do not predict an end to lockdowns

As Scott Morrison leans on ‘optimal’ vaccine modelling, the epidemiologists he commissioned say they can’t predict a return to normal.

News July 31, 2021

The political forces inside the anti-lockdown movement

The divisions and tensions inside national cabinet mirror the political forces that are gaining strength within the anti-lockdown movement.

News July 24, 2021

What drives Dr Kerry Chant?

Dr Kerry Chant is on the front line in the fight against Covid-19. She is described by colleagues as someone who abhors small talk and will give advice regardless of the impact on her career.

News July 17, 2021

Vaccines, part two: ‘Is this guy serious?’

Australia’s vaccine rollout has been a series of decisions and sliding doors moments, all connected to one original failure.

News July 10, 2021

Part one: The true story of Australia’s vaccine failure

A time line of the science behind the Covid-19 vaccines shows how close Australia came to its own breakthroughs, and how it backed the wrong candidates.

News July 03, 2021

Exclusive: Morrison ignored chief health officers’ advice

On Monday, chief health officers urged Scott Morrison to drop the AstraZeneca vaccine entirely. Instead, he broadened its usage.

News June 26, 2021

The end of AstraZeneca

As the government sets new ‘horizons’ for the vaccine rollout, questions are being asked about how decisions regarding supply were initially made.

News June 19, 2021

The police, the YouTube star and the Labor Party

The arrest of a Friendlyjordies producer on an intimidation charge is the latest strange turn in the life of the Labor-aligned YouTube star.

News June 12, 2021

Is Medicare under attack?

Looming changes to Medicare rebates have brought howls of protest and the potential for another ‘Mediscare’ campaign by Labor. But, experts say, the real problem is the rise of private health and the slow drift to a US-style system.

News June 05, 2021

‘You had one job’: inside the botched aged-care rollout

At the same time as the government was failing to deliver vaccines to aged-care homes, it scrapped the support payment designed to stop staff working at multiple sites – a key source of transmission.

News May 29, 2021

Vaccine rollout: how it all went so terribly wrong

The federal government has taken unprecedented control of Covid-19 vaccinations, but the rollout has been mired in politics, faulty numbers and unawarded tenders.

News May 22, 2021

Is a former Murdoch executive the ABC’s next best hope?

As yet another funding fight looms for the national broadcaster, the government has appointed three new members to the ABC board.

News May 15, 2021

Refugee processing blitz

Refugees who have waited for years to have their cases for asylum heard are now being rushed through a new system that critics say erodes due process.

News May 08, 2021

McKinsey and the NDIA

While the government works to reform the disability insurance agency and restart welfare debt collections, management consultancy McKinsey has amassed significant influence.

News May 01, 2021

Film productions move to Australia

As the pandemic rages overseas, scores of major film and TV projects are moving production to Australia. But will this gold rush bring any lasting benefits to the local industry?

News April 24, 2021

Getting overseas students back

The struggling university sector will get no help from the Victorian government to set up quarantine facilities for international students, while similar plans in other states have also stalled.

News April 17, 2021

Covid-19 and its effects on the brain

A comprehensive study of more than 230,000 people by Oxford University researchers has linked neurological disorders, such as stroke and dementia, to Covid-19.

News April 17, 2021

The restructuring of the NDIS

A secret taskforce set up to cut costs and reduce access to the NDIS is the tip of the iceberg in a suite of plans to dramatically reshape the scheme.

News April 13, 2021

Exclusive: Documents leaked from secretive NDIS taskforce

The National Disability Insurance Scheme is looking to limit new applicants and the amount allocated to existing users to control a cost blowout.

News April 10, 2021

Robo-debt public servants now shaping the NDIS

As the government pushes for major changes to the NDIS, The Saturday Paper can reveal key figures in the scheme’s fraud and compliance division were also involved in the robo-debt fiasco.

News April 03, 2021

WhatsApp leak: ministers shut out of  NDIS redraft

State and territory disability ministers have been sidelined from plans to strip back the NDIS. The legislation will hand the federal minister ‘God powers’ over the scheme.

News March 27, 2021

Asylum seekers and Medicare access

Asylum seekers are being denied access to Covid-19 tests, Medicare and even schooling because of both deliberate and unintentional flaws in the visa system.

News March 20, 2021

The NDIS and government controls

A win for the government in its push to deny people on the National Disability Insurance Scheme access to sex worker supports may hand the Commonwealth even greater power to control the scheme.

News March 13, 2021

Lex Greensill: Why the green energy backer lost his billions

For years, the rise of the Bundaberg farmer’s son turned London banker seemed unstoppable. Then things started to fall apart.

Comment March 10, 2021

Why our media and politics fail trauma survivors

Media commentators were quick to attack mention of a widely read self-help book in the dossier of Christian Porter's accuser. But the science of trauma is complicated, and we lack the nuance needed to understand it or its treatments.

News March 06, 2021

Aged-care royal commission final report

After two-and-a-half years, the report of the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety has landed. Its findings are clear: without a major overhaul and more resources, our elderly will continue to receive substandard care.

News March 01, 2021

Aged Care Royal Commission report lashes failing sector

More than two years after it was first established, the final report of the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety has called for systemic overhaul of an underfunded and under-regulated sector.

News February 27, 2021

Exclusive: Crown report referred to the Federal Police

The AFP is investigating a report referred by Justice Patricia Bergin in the wake of her explosive inquiry into Crown Casino, as ASIC begins looking into the company’s current and former board appointees.

News February 27, 2021

The rise of Afterpay

Afterpay produced Australia’s youngest self-made billionaire. The company is yet to report a profit, but has ambitious plans to grow overseas and outrun regulators here.

News February 20, 2021

Robo-debt shonky from the start

The government claims it thought debts raised by its robo-debt scheme were legal. But experts now point to two cases that went before the High Court and clearly highlighted the program’s risks.

News February 20, 2021

Family Court merger

The Family Court system has been struggling for years, yet a decision to merge it with the Federal Circuit Court has provoked both concern and support from stakeholders across the spectrum.

News February 13, 2021

Crown’s casinos and the Bergin report

James Packer’s Crown Casino has been found unfit to hold a licence in NSW, following an 18-month inquiry. The findings call into question Crown casinos around Australia and have other state governments scrambling.

News February 05, 2021

Redrafting the NDIS

The NDIS minister is pushing for states and territories to agree on a ban on sex therapy under the insurance scheme. Disability advocates fear Stuart Robert’s plans to increase federal control are a cost-cutting exercise at heart.

News February 06, 2021

Inside Tim Wilson’s campaign against super

As the face of the Coalition’s push to reshape super, Tim Wilson sees the early access to accounts offered during the pandemic as a blueprint for a more fundamental change to the system.

News January 30, 2021

Exclusive: Scott Morrison misrepresents China advice

As the prime minister tries to calm concerns about tensions with China, Kevin Rudd says the idea Morrison is taking a consultative approach is ‘nonsense’.

News January 23, 2021

Did Australia put its money on the wrong vaccines?

As the realities of Australia’s vaccine choices set in, tensions are rising with the states and territories over the program’s rollout.

News December 19, 2020

Fracking on Country in the NT

As a senate inquiry launches a scathing critique of the legislative failures that led to the destruction of the Juukan Gorge caves, traditional owners in the Northern Territory are fighting a fracking project that threatens water sources and sacred sites.

News December 12, 2020

How the NDIA is devaluing disability

With the NDIA appearing intent on downgrading funding for supported independent living, the lives of those relying on the scheme are being put at risk.

News December 05, 2020

Exclusive: The seven-year plot to undermine the NDIS

After years of careful manoeuvring, the Coalition government is readying to make radical changes to the National Disability Insurance Scheme. The revised system will force new assessments and tighten eligibility.

News November 28, 2020

Andrews budget wedges Morrison on aged care

After Victoria was ravaged by a second wave of Covid-19, Premier Daniel Andrews has targeted his state’s budget to address the crisis’s key drivers: insecure work and aged care.

News November 21, 2020

Big picture: Robo-debt, politics and poverty

A landmark Productivity Commission report into mental illness provides a road map to reduce harm, but it chafes against deep-seated government ideology.

News November 14, 2020

Progress on Covid-19 vaccines

This week, pharmaceutical giant Pfizer announced it had produced an effective vaccine for Covid-19. It is one of four vaccines to which Australia has now secured access.

News November 07, 2020

Policing family violence in NSW

As the NSW parliament debates amendments to family violence legislation, new research shows that some victim-survivors are being charged as offenders instead, while children are not being protected by apprehended violence orders.

News October 31, 2020

Trump 2020: This is how you steal an election

As the US election looms, a shadow campaign is running to suppress votes, with Trump Supreme Court pick Brett Kavanaugh using a disgraced argument he first tried as an adviser to George W. Bush.

News October 24, 2020

Time for a haircut and catch-up

Among all the hardships of Melbourne’s lengthy Covid-19 lockdown, not being able to get a haircut has been rated by many as one of the most psychologically taxing. With salons now reopened, a palpable sense of purpose and identity is returning to the city.

News October 24, 2020

What went wrong inside Australia Post?

The mail carrier’s chief executive has been asked to stand aside after revelations of luxury watches gifted to executives, but the company is facing much deeper crises.

News October 17, 2020

Exclusive: War on refugees moves to final phase onshore

Without warning, the government has removed all support from hundreds of refugees in community detention – denying them housing and income support.

News October 10, 2020

Budget 2020 does little for the vulnerable

This year’s budget provides little support for those in greatest need, including the aged-care sector and people who are unemployed – with women over 40 bearing the heaviest burden.

News October 03, 2020

Jacqui Lambie’s stand on education

Jacqui Lambie has made clear she will vote against the Coalition’s controversial higher education reforms, but the government appears to be angling for Centre Alliance’s vote.

News September 26, 2020

Coalition to cut $2 billion a year from university research

New analysis reveals the government intends to cut billions of dollars from university research, while reannouncing funds from elsewhere in the budget.

News September 19, 2020

The collapse of aged care (part two)

The Covid-19 pandemic has highlighted two decades of aged-care mismanagement, but at the heart of the sector is a pyramid scheme that exposes the taxpayer to billions in liability.

News September 12, 2020

The collapse of aged care (part one)

As the royal commission prepares findings that will likely recommend a return to an earlier system of aged care, the crisis in the sector can be linked to Howard-era reforms that stoked greed and lowered care standards, and have been worsened by successive governments.

News August 29, 2020

Exclusive: Jobactive virus kickbacks top $500 million

Government policies have seen the ‘unemployment industry’ paid millions during the pandemic, while jobless rates soar.

News August 22, 2020

Federal government holds back vital Covid-19 spread data

As the coronavirus crisis in aged care worsens, the federal government is withholding key information and denying it is responsible for surge staff in nursing homes.

News August 15, 2020

The international search for a vaccine

As the world doubts Russia’s Covid-19 vaccine announcement, there have been promising developments in trials from China and Britain.

News August 15, 2020

Exclusive: The phone call that denied elderly patients access to hospital

Two months ago the government set its response for Covid-19 outbreaks in aged care – controversially, it was ‘about keeping the hospitals for the young’.

News August 08, 2020

What led to Victoria’s extraordinary shutdown

The Andrews government cannot identify any legislation it needed to override, but experts say that is the point.

News August 01, 2020

Lost function: Long-term consequences of surviving coronavirus

New research shows coronavirus may have lasting impacts on cognitive ability.

News July 25, 2020

Covid-19 outbreaks in aged care

A third of Covid-19 deaths in Australia so far have occurred in aged-care homes. An investigation finds an underfunded and underprepared sector.

News July 18, 2020

How the second wave broke

Australia almost beat the first strain of coronavirus. New research shows that later strains, which had spread through Europe and America, slipped out through hotel quarantine.

News July 11, 2020

Exclusive: Doctors ignore terminal cancer

A scan might have found the cancer now killing Daniel van Roo. Instead his doctor gave him 50 STI tests, which van Roo believes was because he is gay.

News July 04, 2020

Young people with disabilities still living in aged care

Of the thousands of young people with disabilities living in aged-care facilities, only a few hundred have been moved into the community since the NDIS rollout began in 2013.

News June 27, 2020

How divisions at The Age cost its editor his job

Last week’s shock departure of the editor of The Age was sparked by discontent among staff over editorial direction and leadership. But it seems the warning shots claimed an unintended victim.

News June 27, 2020

Exclusive: New govt report targets ABC

As the ABC announces massive job cuts, the Morrison government has commissioned a report that mirrors Murdoch concerns about the broadcaster.

News June 20, 2020

Autism review concerns NDIS users

As the National Disability Insurance Agency awaits the findings of research it has commissioned into autism support and treatment, members of the autism community are concerned the report may never be made public.

News June 20, 2020

Inside Hemmes’ $100m wage case

While Josh Frydenberg personally consulted the Merivale CEO about JobKeeper’s design, court documents detail the huge underpayment suit his pub empire is facing.

News June 06, 2020

Daniel Andrews and China’s Belt and Road Initiative

Victoria’s participation in China’s $US1 trillion Belt and Road Initiative has attracted widespread criticism and created conflict between the state and the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

News May 30, 2020

How one mine ate a town

A Queensland town’s decades-long legal fight against being subsumed by a coalmine could end next week as the case reaches the High Court of Australia. But not before a final turn of the screws.

News May 23, 2020

Exclusive: Gov’s $5.8m aged-care app offers ‘no duty of care’

An Uber-like app that matches aged-care facilities with casual workers has won a government contract despite questions over what it provides.

News May 16, 2020

How Covid-19 energised conspiracy theorists

Coronavirus has invigorated conspiracy theorists and brought together disparate groups, many of them flourishing as social media platforms stand down moderators.

News May 09, 2020

The Newmarch House Covid-19 cluster

With the aged-care watchdog looking into the Covid-19 cluster that has claimed 16 lives at Newmarch House in Sydney’s west, systemic flaws are being exposed. But what comfort is that to the distressed families of residents?

News May 02, 2020

Black Summer bushfire inquiries begin

Many are still waiting to rebuild their homes that were destroyed during the Black Summer, but experts have told the bushfire royal commission and parliamentary inquiry that the climate crisis will leave more people vulnerable to disaster.

News April 25, 2020

Last exams: Reality of year 12 in lockdown

Covid-19 has opened up new disparities between students, as some states consider narrowing the scope of final-year exams in response.

News April 18, 2020

Tasmanian hospitals caught in coronavirus storm

While rumours swirl over how the North West Regional and Private hospitals became the epicentre of Tasmania’s Covid-19 battle, evidence has emerged of a severe shortage of personal protective equipment and encouragement of dubious practices throughout the state.

News April 11, 2020

What’s next for George Pell

While the High Court this week quashed the cardinal’s conviction for child sexual abuse, there remain several fronts on which the legal battle may continue.

News April 04, 2020

Family violence increasing during Covid-19 lockdown

With the nation in near lockdown due to the coronavirus outbreak, family violence is on the rise, with many victims now unable to access the help and services they need.

News March 28, 2020

Exclusive: Inside the hunt for a vaccine

While one Queensland laboratory readies a Covid-19 vaccine for human trials, Howard-era public servant Jane Halton is co-ordinating the global response.

News March 21, 2020

Everything you need to know about coronavirus

In a world currently also contaminated with false information surrounding the coronavirus outbreak, the experts are here to unravel the truth.

News March 14, 2020

George Pell’s High Court appeal

The High Court decision on the fate of convicted cardinal George Pell may be delivered as early as next week.

Comment March 07, 2020

A fraction too much fiction

“The truth, in Scott Morrison’s world, is like light. With the right forces, it can be fractured or bent out of shape. Sometimes it changes of its own accord, as the sun charts a course across the sky. As Immigration minister, he invented the notion …”

News February 29, 2020

Julian Assange’s extradition hearing

As Julian Assange’s fight against extradition to the United States finally came to court this week, allegations arose that he was bugged at the Ecuadorian embassy.

News February 22, 2020

Aged-care assessment reform may be ‘accounting trick’

Experts in the aged-care sector warn that the government may reduce waiting lists for home-care programs by restricting their eligibility requirements, leaving thousands of older Australians in need.

News February 15, 2020

Government stalling on Howard refugee compo

For nearly a decade, Payam Saadat has fought for compensation over the trauma he endured in immigration detention. More than 60 other cases rely on the result of his trial.

News February 08, 2020

The biggest party donor you’ve never heard of

Liberal insiders say Isaac Wakil was never present in high-end donor circles. So what prompted the reclusive 92-year-old to donate $4.1 million to the Liberal Party?

News February 01, 2020

The coronavirus epidemic

As the impact of the deadly coronavirus grows exponentially, health authorities are scrambling to contain the number of infections, while University of Queensland researchers are working day and night on a potential vaccine.

News January 25, 2020

Exclusive: Red Cross employees speak out

As the Australian Red Cross faces criticisms over its bushfire efforts, current and former employees question the broad scope of its fundraising appeal.

News December 21, 2019

The long, hot summer

Australia is on fire and the volunteers on the front line are sounding an alarm. Lacking vital resources, they are exhausted and quickly draining their annual leave. And the season has no end in sight.

News December 14, 2019

Sexual abuse survivor rebukes Hillsong head

While Brian Houston celebrates Hillsong’s new multimillion-dollar church in New York, a victim of his father’s sexual abuse crowdfunds to pay for cancer treatment.

News December 07, 2019

Australia and digital data

As the ACCC inquires into the data use of digital platforms, the government is caught in a faceoff between News Corp and the tech giants.

News November 30, 2019

Bolt, Pascoe and the culture wars

As Andrew Bolt attempts to start a culture war over Bruce Pascoe’s Dark Emu, a search of primary documents affirms the book’s accuracy.

News November 23, 2019

Saving Julian Assange

A band of strange political bedfellows have united for a common cause – to fight for the return of Julian Assange to Australia.

News November 16, 2019

Co-designing the Voice to Parliament

Despite an early promise by the Morrison government to deliver better outcomes for Indigenous Australians, they remain no closer to being recognised in the constitution.

News November 09, 2019

Mental health cost of welfare

A wide-ranging review of Australian mental health has pointed to the welfare system, particularly the troubled jobactive program, as a key driver in the crisis.

News November 02, 2019

Outsourcing to hit ‘dysfunctional’ aged-care system

While the aged-care royal commission’s interim report highlights the need for reform, experts warn the government’s plans to outsource health assessments may only add to the crisis.

News October 26, 2019

The fight to save Victoria’s last forests

A report that recommends turning forested areas of central west Victoria into national parks has been met with silence by the Andrews government, prompting fears of a return to logging.

News October 19, 2019

Chemical restraint in aged care

While aiming to reduce sedative use in aged-care facilities, new government regulations may have the opposite effect, putting elderly residents at risk of dangerous – and potentially fatal – side effects.

News October 12, 2019

Exclusive: 500 children forfeited to state in NDIS standoff

New figures reveal the human toll of a five-year NDIS funding fight, with hundreds of families pushed to relinquish their children into state care.

News October 05, 2019

Exclusive: Aged-care sector at risk of collapse

Funding cuts made when Scott Morrison was treasurer have left parts of the aged-care sector on the brink of insolvency, propped up by a government bailout.

News September 28, 2019

The week Australia failed on climate change

While Scott Morrison toured Trump’s America, the world’s top climate scientists fought it out over their latest warning of the coming disaster.

News September 21, 2019

Exclusive: Key NDIS emails held on private bank server

As a royal commission begins on the disability sector, correspondence reveals NDIA chair Helen Nugent has used an email account owned by Macquarie Bank to direct the $22 billion agency.

News September 14, 2019

Newstart: the human cost of Morrison’s plan

With an expansion of the welfare crackdown signalled this week in parliament, experts warn the government’s measures will lead to collateral damage.

News August 24, 2019

How the prime minister got middle Australia wrong

In a major speech this week, the prime minister warned the public service that it is losing the trust of middle Australia. But data suggests the ‘quiet Australians’ are losing faith with their politicians.

News August 10, 2019

Murdoch media fuels far-right recruitment

A world-first study by Victorian academics shows inflammatory media reports – on race and Safe Schools – acted as a dog whistle to extremists seeking ‘permission’.