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Federal election 2025 LIVE updates: Albanese eyes three terms as polls set to open across Australia; Coalition campaigns to bitter end

Federal election 2025 LIVE updates: Albanese eyes three terms as polls set to open across Australia; Coalition campaigns to bitter end

The Age02-05-2025

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6.55am
Only Labor flyers at Washington DC booths
By Michael Koziol
Australians rocking up to vote at the embassy in Washington DC have encountered a stark lack of diversity when it comes to how-to-vote cards.
Only Labor's election material has been on display outside the voting booth.
The embassy assures us it's no conspiracy by ambassador Kevin Rudd, a former Labor prime minister, nor were the other flyers simply so popular they were all taken.
Other parties just didn't send any.
A notice taped above the desk states: 'Any materials received by the embassy are displayed on this table.
'It is the sole responsibility of the political parties/candidates to provide materials if they choose to do so.
'If materials for a political party or candidate are not displayed here, this means it was not provided to us by the party or candidate.'
6.28am
The campaign in pictures
By James Brickwood, Alex Ellinghausen and Natassia Chrysanthos
It was less than a week out from the federal election, at a Liberal Party pub gathering for party faithful in Kooyong, and candidate Amelia Hamer was looking out of place. Photographer James Brickwood, by then on his fifth week following Opposition Leader Peter Dutton around the country, took note.
'You've got the opposition leader, who's been in parliament for 24 years, and this first-time candidate thrown into the spotlight, who is under a lot of scrutiny and would be feeling the pressure,' Brickwood said.
'At times, though, Dutton would roam the room meeting supporters, but Hamer was kind of left on her own, either unsure whether to follow or not encouraged to by Dutton.'
Brickwood captured a moment where Dutton appears on the move and Hamer unsure. It has become one of the most memorable images of this year's campaign, turned into a meme online and shared in political circles as the Coalition's campaign is scrutinised in its final days.
Read the full story and see our photographers' best pictures from the campaign here.
6.18am
Welcome
By Nick Newling
Good morning and welcome to our live coverage of the 2025 federal election.
Today voters head to the polls on the final day of a gruelling campaign to decide who will lead the country for the next three years.
My name is Nick Newling and I will be helming our blog this morning. We have reporters and photographers stationed at battleground seats across the country bringing you all the updates (and democracy sausages) as they happen.
Will Anthony Albanese become the first prime minister in 21 years to win two consecutive elections? Could Peter Dutton unseat a single-term government for the first time since the 1931 election?

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US beef might be on the table, but we don't have to eat it

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Mexican sparrows have even found a way to make tobacco into a health aid – they put cigarette butts in their nests to repel parasites. Paul Doyle, Glenbrook It's good to know my visiting cockatoos might come in handy when I have a jar I can't open. Lisa Clarke, Watsons Bay Hard to swallow Jeremy Brender (Letters, June 6), why would anybody consider paying an exorbitant price for an egg and lettuce sandwich at Sydney airport when they could buy a $10.30 meat pie instead? Robert Peters, Maitland Name brand Maiden name? A woman's 'maiden' name is really her father's name. Patriarchy still rules (Letters, June 6). Betsy Brennan, Wahroonga Ruff and ready While I'm in full agreement with correspondent Alison Stewart's views on misogyny in the Liberal Party (Letters, June 6), I must, in defence of old dogs, take issue with her last sentence. You can, actually, teach them new tricks. It just takes a little longer. Jo Bond, South Melbourne (Vic) Postscript Who can trust a politician? We all know the answer to that one, yet Australians trusted Anthony Albanese enough to vote for him in record numbers only a month ago. Buyer's remorse seems to be creeping up fast, as it does in politics, not least among readers who had hoped for a meaningful shift away from fossil fuels. Labor's approval of Woodside's North West Shelf gas project until 2070 was viewed by many, including Herald columnist Ross Gittins, as an inexcusable breach of trust. 'Why, Albo, why? Make it make sense,' pleaded reader Ross Hudson. In bringing Labor back for a second term, Australians had also hoped for tax reform, but the prime minister's unwillingness to slap mining companies with a resources rent tax further undermined public faith. 'Albanese has lost his spine,' lamented Peter Nash. 'Labor has been intimidated by mining companies and by business opposition to changing negative gearing and capital gains tax.' People with fat super balances are also having trust issues after Labor announced its plan to raise earnings tax on accounts above $3 million. The government's extravagant tobacco tax seems to have backfired too, leading to a proliferation of illegal imported cigarettes and vapes. 'Labor's disastrous tobacco taxes are a timely warning about their proposed super taxes,' wrote William Lloyd. Albanese's rejection of American demands for Australia to jack up defence spending didn't inspire confidence among defence hawks. David Sinclair didn't mince words. On the matter of public security 'our PM either has his head stuck firmly in the sand, or in another part of his anatomy entirely.' The defection of Greens senator Dorinda Cox to Labor this week only created more suspicion. 'Albanese's welcoming of that political turncoat adds insult to injury,' said James Fliece. A cynical Sue Dyer added: 'The prime minister and Cox should come clean about when she applied and how this was facilitated and approved.' Labor wasn't alone in the firing line. Liberal elder Alan Stockdale's 'light-hearted' remarks about 'assertive women' – in an address to the NSW Liberal Women's Council no less – drew howls of derision. Alison Stewart had some advice for Liberal women: 'You can't teach old dogs new tricks. Look elsewhere for representation.' That's always an option Alison, but the question is, who do you trust?

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