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Federal election 2025 LIVE updates: Dutton pledges $40b debt cut; Albanese campaigns in Perth

Federal election 2025 LIVE updates: Dutton pledges $40b debt cut; Albanese campaigns in Perth

The Age30-04-2025

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6.21am
Dutton's drive-by: Opposition leader hits Kooyong, no questions allowed
Rachael Dexter
On Wednesday night Opposition Leader Peter Dutton made a rare appearance in the seat of Kooyong, joining Liberal candidate Amelia Hamer at the Tower Hotel in Hawthorn East — a venue that has become known for its vocal anti-Monique Ryan campaigning with an enormous anti-Monique Ryan sign mounted on the pub.
It marked just his second visit to the seat the Liberals are eager to win back.
Despite the significance of the visit, the man hoping to become prime minister did not take questions from the media.
This masthead was present when Dutton arrived at the venue, delayed by anti-nuclear protesters stationed outside the pub and dressed in hazmat suits.
I attempted to approach Dutton to ask several questions — most pressingly, for his response to reports of neo-Nazis impersonating Liberal campaigners in Kooyong, which dominated local headlines yesterday.
However, a media advisor from Dutton's office informed me that questions would not be permitted, as the event was not a press conference.
It appears media attendees were invited solely for photos and vision, with no opportunity to engage the opposition leader directly.
The visit to Kooyong was part of a broader blitz across Melbourne's marginal seats, with Dutton also stopping in Dunkley and Aston on Wednesday.
After one of the most dramatic days in Kooyong, the opposition leader came, smiled, and left — all without taking a single question.
Follow our Victorian hot seats blog here.
6.21am
Albanese outlasts Whitlam
Anthony Albanese on Wednesday marked a small victory - surpassing Gough Whitlam's time in office.
The Prime Minister said he was determined to become a leader with a long legacy.
'The problem [with Whitlam] was that yes he introduced Medibank, but he wasn't there long enough and a lot of his reforms disappeared,' Albanese said, as he ducked and weaved volunteers around the local polling booth.
'A long term Labor government, like [under] Bob Hawke, his reforms entrenched a lot of change.'
One woman lining up to vote told Albanese as she shook his hand that she 'believed in his values'.
'It's all about that, what you say, no one left behind and no one held back,' she said.
Albanese quipped that she had evidently watched his National Press Club address earlier that day.
6.20am
Mixed bag for PM's arrival in WA
Jeers and adulation greeted the prime minister as he made a wicked blitz to the west on Wednesday evening.
Fresh off a speech in the nation's capital, Albanese has soared across the country to court voters at a pre-polling booth in the Perth suburb of Midland.
Shoulder-to-shoulder with two local candidates the group took to a voting centre which borders the crucial seats of Hasluck and Bullwinkel.
Things got off to their usual start with the prime minister cooing at five-and-half-month -old Annabelle as mum Kyra lined up to cast her vote.
But the situation quickly devolved.
Liberal volunteers began yelling 'keep the sheep', kicking off a chain reaction of chants from party supporters. Labor's army began repeating their party name, prompting one Greens supporter to yell 'stop AUKUS'.
Though voters remained relatively unfazed.
'It's an enormous privilege to meet you,' David Leith said as Albanese greeted queuing locals.
6.20am
Good morning
By Angus Delaney
Good morning and thank you for joining our live coverage of the election campaign.
There's just two more sleeps until polling day! My name's Angus Delaney and I'll be helming the blog into the afternoon.

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Mr Stansfield - who confirmed dissenting voices in the partyroom over the election position - said Mr Rockliff's position was secure. "The die is cast. They have chosen to follow their leader to an election that they will lose," he said. Liberal senator for Tasmania Jonno Duniam was incredulous about the leadership speculation. "They could choose to change leader - I'm not a part of that party room, I'm not going to tell them what to do," he told the ABC. "This is nuts that we're going to an election." Mr Rockliff on Friday travelled to his home region of the north-west coast, the same community which experienced the deaths of six children in a 2021 bouncy castle tragedy. He opted against a public appearance, given it came on the same day a verdict was finally reached on workplace health and safety failings behind the incident. "Today politics must be put aside. Another heart wrenching day, as we relive the trauma of the Hillcrest tragedy," he posted on social media. 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The vote was an episode in spiralling political brinkmanship, with the premier warning opposition leader Dean Winter he would advise for an early election if his motion succeeded. The prevailing political wisdom is the Rockliff government will lose an election, with veteran Liberal political operative Brad Stansfield saying they would be "annihilated" in a winter campaign. However, parliament's dissolution is not due until after Tuesday, given the need to pass a stop-gap budget bill before the election campaign. The delay across the King's Birthday long weekend gives the 17 members of the Liberal party room - including 14 who will put their seats at risk in a campaign - plenty of time to rethink their support for Mr Rockliff. "It's probably 70 to 80 per cent likely that either over the weekend or following the appropriation bill going through on Tuesday, Jeremy won't be leader," former premier David Bartlett told AAP. "It won't be a coup. It will be a smooth transition of power to a new leader and Jeremy will be under all sorts of pressure from internal Liberal party people to make that happen. "I'm not even convinced Jeremy Rockliff wants to go to another election. He'd probably rather retire to the farm." Mr Bartlett led a Labor government between 2008-2011, including the 2010 election which required him - like Mr Rockliff after the 2024 poll - to govern in minority. He said there were no shortage of options for a new leader, who would need to organise support from enough crossbenchers to stave off an election. "Eric Abetz is ambitious, Michael Ferguson still has a baton in the knapsack, Guy Barnett is ambitious and Madeleine Ogilvie is ambitious," he said. Mr Stansfield, who has advised the Liberals to four straight election wins, said the Liberals' charge to an election was "lemming-like behaviour". "They have willingly chosen to go to their own political execution rather than change their policies or change their leader in order to stay in power," he told the FontCast podcast. Former Liberal Premier Will Hodgman attacked the vote of no confidence, saying it was "politically reckless, and seriously damaging to Tasmania's reputation" on social media. AAP has spoken with multiple past and present MPs and advisers, who have confirmed Liberal MPs are privately canvassing options to topple Mr Rockliff and avoid an election. Mr Stansfield - who confirmed dissenting voices in the partyroom over the election position - said Mr Rockliff's position was secure. "The die is cast. They have chosen to follow their leader to an election that they will lose," he said. Liberal senator for Tasmania Jonno Duniam was incredulous about the leadership speculation. "They could choose to change leader - I'm not a part of that party room, I'm not going to tell them what to do," he told the ABC. "This is nuts that we're going to an election." Mr Rockliff on Friday travelled to his home region of the north-west coast, the same community which experienced the deaths of six children in a 2021 bouncy castle tragedy. He opted against a public appearance, given it came on the same day a verdict was finally reached on workplace health and safety failings behind the incident. "Today politics must be put aside. Another heart wrenching day, as we relive the trauma of the Hillcrest tragedy," he posted on social media. After losing the no-confidence vote, Mr Rockliff gave an emotional address to parliament where he revealed he fought off internal opponents to stand by the billion-dollar Hobart waterfront stadium which would house a Tasmanian AFL team - but is unpopular with voters. "I've been advised by all the hard-heads in my party not to go down that track. Why? Because it's bad for votes," he said. "Well, I've always said 'stuff votes' ... I'll say it for the stadium for as long as I damn well live, because I believe in it."

He stopped women joining the Australian Club. Now he's rewriting the NSW Liberals' rules
He stopped women joining the Australian Club. Now he's rewriting the NSW Liberals' rules

Sydney Morning Herald

time8 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

He stopped women joining the Australian Club. Now he's rewriting the NSW Liberals' rules

The Liberal elder who said women were 'now sufficiently assertive' has tasked retired Federal Court judge Peter Graham, KC, a key instigator in blocking female membership to the male-only Australian Club, with rewriting the rules governing the NSW party. Former Victorian treasurer Alan Stockdale, who is one of the administrators running the troubled NSW division of the party, has appointed Graham and one-time party deputy president Rhondda Vanzella to redraft the NSW Liberal constitution. Stockdale was widely criticised this week after he told the NSW Liberal Women's Council on Tuesday night that women were 'now sufficiently assertive that we should be giving some thought to whether we need to protect men's involvement'. Graham, meanwhile, was a driving force behind the campaign against allowing women to join the Australian Club, telling members in a 10-page missive in 2021 that the club was 'a place where you could get away from bossy women'. He also insisted women who might be considered for membership, 'were the club to be a mixed-sex club', would not be assessed for membership on 'the basis of their positions in business, politics or the law, medicine, dentistry, architecture etc or the arts or in agriculture. Loading 'Rather whether they were ladies, congenial, well-liked and honourable and whether they would respect confidences,' Graham wrote on May 31, 2021. Former leader Peter Dutton last year appointed Stockdale, former Victorian senator Richard Alston and one-time NSW MP Peta Seaton as administrators to run the NSW division after its spectacular failure to nominate 144 candidates for the local government elections. Since the administrators set up the constitution committee of Graham and Vanzella, its operations have been a closely guarded secret, according to several party members who are not authorised to speak publicly about the intervention.

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