Correspondence

WAFarmers calls on Minister Jarvis to advocate for trade

WAFarmers’ President Steve McGuire has sent a letter to Minister for Agriculture and Small Business, Hon Jackie Jarvis MLC, calling for her urgent advocacy for a commonsense change that will minimise trade disruption during the 12-month closure of the Fremantle Traffic Bridge. The State Government will rebuild the Fremantle Traffic Bridge, halving the number of vehicle bridges across the Swan River for “up to a year” from 1 February 2026. Given the next opportunity to

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Opinion Articles

Reflex politics crushing WA

Out on a country road, when something jumps out in front of you, the worst thing you can do is panic and yank the wheel. Anyone who has spent time behind the wheel outside the suburbs knows you don’t swerve wildly left or right every time the road throws up a surprise. That’s how you turn a problem into a wreck. Yet that, increasingly, is how the Albanese Government governs. When political pressure mounts, it

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Opinion Articles

How to jump-start the next generation of ag technicians

If you want a competent technician who can diagnose a John Deere header that has ground to a stop, fault-find a CAN-bus issue on a Case tractor, or re-loom the electrics on a Claas baler, the Australian training system offers you exactly one answer: a four-year apprenticeship. It does not matter how capable the kid is. It does not matter if they grew up rebuilding engines in the shed. It does not matter if they

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General News

WAFarmers Christmas message

MERRY CHRISTMAS! As the sun sets on our 113th year, WAFarmers extends its best wishes to all our members, farming families, friends and broader regional communities this festive season. For many of us, Christmas is a time to reflect, reconnect, recharge and rejoice. It’s a moment to pause and celebrate the resilience, dedication, and innovation that has always defined WA’s incredible farming sector – and drives us to continue our work to ensure city-based governments

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Opinion Articles

The last letter, the last coin, the last dial

If you want to measure the real speed of modern change, don’t look at the size and complexity of new headers or how Al is every student’s best friend. Look instead at the three oldest bits of civic infrastructure we all grew up with: the post office, the banknote and the landline. All three are being shut down in real time. And the countries doing it aren’t fringe outliers – they’re the sensible, efficient northern

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Opinion Articles

Gun laws are not a substitute for courage

Every time Australia is struck by an act of mass violence, the political reflex is immediate and reassuringly familiar. Governments reach for gun law reform. It looks decisive. It sounds compassionate. It creates the impression that something concrete is being done. What it rarely does is confront the deeper causes of violence — the ones that require moral clarity, hard policing and political courage. Firearms reform is attractive politics because it is administratively complex but

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Opinion Articles

Songlines, space stations and the slow decline of science

The Americans had Apollo. The Soviets had Soyuz. The Chinese have Tiangong. And Australia? We now have the world’s first taxpayer-funded attempt to guide space exploration using songlines. It’s as if the nation looked up at the stars, ignored four centuries of physics, and concluded that what satellite design really needs is a smoking ceremony and a cultural consultation workshop. According to the project brief, “learning from songlines, creation stories and deep cultural connections between people

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Opinion Articles

When correlation becomes a business model

Another week, another glossy press release announcing that regenerative agriculture has once again rediscovered the secret to farming profitability. This time it arrives wrapped in the language of “Natural Capital Accounting,” pushed proudly by Perth NRM, RegenWA and their national partners, and backed by a study now published in the Agricultural Systems journal. According to the headline findings, mixed farms in WA with “more trees integrated into the landscape” earned an extra $100 per hectare

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Opinion Articles

How the Housing Boom Broke the Lucky Country

Like every parent watching their adult kids edge toward the real estate market, I look at the numbers with growing alarm. In 25 years, Perth house prices have jumped from roughly $200,000 to close to $900,000 — a three-to-fivefold increase — while wages have barely doubled from $50,000 to $100,000. That’s not a generational squeeze; it’s a structural impossibility. Unless the next generation marries a doctor, a diesel mechanic, a FIFO worker, wins Lotto, or

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Opinion Articles

The parallels between the Roaring 1920s and the Turbulent 2020s

“History doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes.” Mark Twain A century divides the Roaring Twenties from today’s so-called Turbulent Twenties, yet the distance feels strangely compressed. As we limp toward the midpoint of our own decade, the parallels grow sharper and harder to ignore — reminders that our present upheavals are rarely as unique as we like to believe. Historians are rightly suspicious of neat analogies, but here the similarities are too blunt to

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