About Us

Kenwyatt.com.au is an Australian news site that covers how decisions made in Canberra and every state and territory affect people’s lives. It focuses on the economy, government, Indigenous issues, and local communities, with a special interest in how policy decisions affect homes, workplaces, and services across the country.

The publication’s job is to keep a close eye on things like the budget, the cost of living, wages, welfare, housing, jobs, taxes, and public services. It sees arguments about laws, investigations, agencies, FOI decisions, and treaty processes as important parts of the national story, not just side issues.

What the publication does

Kenwyatt.com.au writes about the economy in a way that connects policy and real life. We look at what budget papers, GST changes, tax reforms, industry policy, trade agreements, markets, employment data, and welfare rules mean in real life. The cost of living is seen as a group of related problems, such as income, housing, energy, transportation, healthcare, and education.

Politics coverage is mostly about institutions and processes. People closely observe Parliament, committees, enquiries, and watchdogs as they test ideas, gather evidence, and determine the appropriate use of power. Reporters view tools for freedom of information as an integral part of their reporting, revealing the decision-making process behind official statements.

The importance of states and territories is not overlooked. The site talks about the ACT, New South Wales, the Northern Territory, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, and Western Australia as separate places with their own political situations, budgets, and policy tests. This work encompasses local news, councils, and regional communities, particularly those where the impact of national decisions is most pronounced beyond the capital city.

Indigenous issues are a main focus. The coverage includes communities, Closing the Gap, justice, health, land, culture, education, technology, and treaties. Reporting aims to represent the variety of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander experiences and to regard Indigenous policy as fundamental to any comprehensive narrative of Australian public life.

Foreign affairs, business, defence, and immigration are discussed in relation to the economy, government, and community life. Major decisions in these areas are looked at to see how they will affect jobs, industry, regional Australia, and long-term commitments to First Nations rights and the land.

How the newsroom works

Strong sourcing and careful reporting are what make the newsroom work. Official documents, laws, budget papers, court records, independent research, data, and recorded interviews are the building blocks. Context is seen as important, so stories show how a new policy fits into longer histories, past promises, and earlier reviews.

Day-to-day choices are based on fairness, accuracy, and accountability. Claims are checked, corrections are made when needed, and sources of information are found whenever possible. The editorial agenda is not set by political parties, governments, businesses, or lobby groups.

The Editorial Standards, which are next to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Service, go into more detail about ethics, conflicts of interest, sourcing, and how to correct mistakes. Those papers explain the official promises that support the journalism.

The name, independence, and privacy

Kenwyatt.com.au is a news site that is not part of any other site. It is not owned by, affiliated with or endorsed by Ken Wyatt, the former Australian Minister for Indigenous Australians. Just because two names are similar doesn’t mean they are connected in any way. The publisher owns all rights to the site, its content, and its branding.

The organisation knows that trust also depends on how information is used. We take care of any personal information we collect through the site and follow Australian privacy laws and media guidelines. The Terms of Service and Privacy Policy explain how information is gathered, used, and kept safe, as well as how to voice concerns.

Kenwyatt.com.au wants to be one of the most trusted places in Australia for news about the economy, politics, Indigenous issues, and public policy. It does this by treating communities with respect, looking closely at institutions, and seeing every story as part of a shared effort to figure out how decisions affect people’s lives all over the country.