Noosa News
Parliament’s toxic workplace culture started long before Scott Morrison, but now it’s his task to handle

The early signs of an earthquake can often be easy to miss.
Above the ground, the initial tremors can seem innocuous. But deep below, the tectonic shifting of plates can set in motion a series of events that rip apart the earth and bring down all that stands above it.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison could be forgiven for missing the early signs of the quake that would destabilise his government and upend the nation’s political landscape.
When those early tremors started, Morrison was riding high. The nation was bouncing back from an economic recession and the man who’d won an unlikely victory years earlier appeared on track for re-election.
His focus was solely on a successful vaccine rollout, which he hoped would bolster the public’s…
-
Noosa News23 hours ago
Queensland names Cameron Munster as new Maroons captain to succeed Daly Cherry-Evans
-
Noosa News20 hours ago
You Can Save up to 43% on Power with BLUETTI’s EOFY Sale
-
Noosa News18 hours ago
More than 250kg of cocaine found in Brisbane shipping container as police foil $82 million drug plot
-
Business18 hours ago
Austal share price smashes new record high as takeover rumours swirl again