Powerbrokers in the New South Wales Liberal Party slam Tony Abbott ahead of today's state council meeting, which is threatening to descend into a proxy war between Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and his predecessor.
Thousands of young Australian workers are expected to join an $85 million class action against the sales and marketing giant Appco Group Australia, amid allegations of underpayment and bizarre workplace rituals.
The Federal Government is one step closer to passing its key industrial relations legislation, with Pauline Hanson's One Nation confirming its four senators will vote in support of the Coalition's bills.
A visual and intimate depiction of 12 hours in the life of a Melbourne homeless man prompts an outpouring of support from the public, but the man at the heart of the story, Matte Dunn, says he is ambivalent about accepting financial help.
Yenny Wahid, a well-known Islamic activist and daughter of the former Indonesian president Abdurrahman Wahid, tells the ABC's Samantha Hawley Indonesia has become a more conservative society.
Police issue a warning over the dangers of synthetic drugs after Victorian footballer Riki Stephens, one of 12 people hospitalised on the Gold Coast after overdosing at the weekend, dies in hospital.
Islamic State launches a major counter-attack on the oil rich city of Kirkuk, as the United Nations reports hundreds of families are being held near IS militant bases in Mosul as human shields.
A Brisbane couple are sentenced to life in prison for murdering mother-of-four Tia Landers in their home, while forcing her two friends to watch the ordeal and clean up.
RSL NSW receives legal advice that senior figures in the organisation, including federal president Rod White, may have broken the law in receiving and failing to disclose tens of thousands of dollars in payments.
The grandmother of two young children found dead in their Perth home says it will take until the day she dies to get over their deaths, as the children's father remains in a critical condition in hospital with self-inflicted stab wounds.
A team of scientists turn a waste product — carbon dioxide — into a fuel — ethanol — in a relatively simple process. And it happened almost by accident.
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