
Federal election 2025: Influencers flag intent to use press blackout in major moves against Coalition
Influencers with a political bent, and a dislike for Peter Dutton, are gearing up in their final push on social media to send their preferred party to parliament ahead of Saturday's vote.
The call to arms comes as the content creators have featured significantly in the lead-up to the Federal election, with Anthony Albanese and Peter Dutton appearing on the some of the biggest accounts and podcasts in the past month.
The latest push is led by Cheek Media's Hannah Ferguson, who has called on her followers to share content which 'keeps Peter Dutton out' as TV and radio advertisements are forced to fall silent in the traditional media blackout starting tonight.
'This is the moment to have influence,' Ferguson said.
'We have a clear three days to distribute as much information as possible that keeps Peter Dutton out.' From midnight, the traditional media blackout begins, which means no political advertising will be allowed on television or radio for three days.
That blackout doesn't include other election tools, such as websites, social media, streaming services, robocalls and text messages — newspapers are also exempt.
According to Ferguson the blackout was 'crucial' because 'while radio and TV have to fall silent ... our messages, our influence, our impact is far greater and we have clear air to distribute the message we want to share'.
'This is the time to call the disengaged or withdrawn or unsure voters in your life,' she continued.
The anti-Dutton message is nothing new from Greens member and teal supporter Ferguson, who says she runs her social media accounts with the aim of engaging Australians in discourse around the news.
Cheek Media has 173,000 followers, while Ferguson's personal profile boasts 71,500.
She is not alone in taking politics to social media with a number of other platform-users surfacing this year, including influencers like Konrad Benjamin from Punter's Politics, reality-star turned-podcaster Abbie Chatfield, author Trisha Jha, Freya Leach and Joel Jammal.
Camera Icon
Freya Leach (policy maker at the Liberal-affiliated Menzies Research Centre, Liberal member) Pictured with Peter Dutton.
Credit: Freya Leach
/ Instagram
Most of the influencers are left leaning, speaking to young voters on the platforms they use the most — Chatfield and Ferguson have emerged as faces of a national the Greens campaign against the Coalition. Leach and Jammal are the exceptions to the rule, spruiking conservative politics.
And with Gen Z and Millennials now making up the most powerful section of voters — there are 7.7 million of them, compared to 5.9 million Baby Boomers and 4.4 million in the Gen X category, according to the Australian Electoral Commission — the major parties have embraced the new wave.
The PM and Opposition leader have appeared with the many of the content creators, some of whom were even granted access to the tightly controlled Budget lock-in by the Albanese Government's team.
Others have received exclusive and unfettered access to the PM and Opposition leader than major traditional news outlets through long-form interviews, allowing the politicians to show a more personal side. Some of these interviews have faced criticism, namely around 'soft' questions and bias from a sympathetic interviewer, but they say they are not pretending to be impartial journalists.
Ferguson says she is 'transparent about her views'.
TikTok, Instagram and podcasts have been flooded with election content in the past month, something the blackout period won't stop.
These influencers will be able to continuing spreading their message online right up until the close of polls. However, the same goes for political hopefuls and the major parties hoping to harness the online trends to boost their message in a way which feels less like advertising and more like average social media use.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sky News AU
3 hours ago
- Sky News AU
‘Call election or fall on his sword': Tasmanian premier faces no-confidence motion
Sky News host Peta Credlin discusses the no-confidence motion held against Tasmanian Premier Jeremy Rockliff. 'It is a mess in Tasmania, this no-confidence motion against the Liberal premier has been on foot for what, five or six hours of debate today, it looks like it will carry,' Ms Credlin said. 'So, what, he has got a choice to call an election or fall on his sword.'

Sky News AU
3 hours ago
- Sky News AU
‘What a farce': Andrew Bolt slams Tasmanian government for AFL stadium budget blowout
Sky News host Andrew Bolt discusses 'the mess' of the Liberal government in Tasmania after getting 'up to its neck' in debt. 'Premier Jeremy Rockliff, he could become the first Australian premier to lose his job because we're just too crazy about sport,' Mr Bolt said. 'This stadium was supposed to cost $715 million – which is already crazy enough for a very small state which already has got stadiums ... this new one will cost another $200 million more than was first promised. 'It's all so stupid ... what a farce.'

Sky News AU
3 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Trump advisor encourages Australia to further invest in defence to show US it takes threats to national security 'seriously'
A senior advisor to President Donald Trump has issued a warning to Australia over its defence spending, suggesting it needed to improve in order to strengthen its relationship with the United States. Sebastian Gorka, who serves as the deputy assistant to the president and the senior director for counterterrorism in the Trump administration discussed Australia's defence investment during an exclusive interview with Sharri Markson on Sky News on Wednesday. Australia's investment in defence has come under the spotlight in the past week, after it was highlighted by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) that the government risks falling behind in its military preparedness amid rising global threats. In the report, former home affairs deputy secretary Mark Ablong concluded "the failure of this year's budget to meet that responsibility will make all Australians less secure". "Without urgent, coordinated and well resourced responses to those challenges, Australia risks a brittle and hollowed defence force, diminished industrial sovereignty, and compromised national security in a volatile Indo Pacific region," he wrote. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese brushed off the report, sticking by Labor's investment in defence, but the US has sent the message it is not satisfied with Australia's commitment. Mr Gorka said his relationship with Australian representatives had been positive so far, describing Australia as one of America's "closest partners in national security". "I think what (President Trump's) said to NATO nations, what he did in the first administration to get those who weren't paying enough into the collective defence alliance that is NATO and how he got them to do so speaks for itself. only been here for, what, four months. And I've had several meetings with our colleagues, our Australian counterterrorism, national security colleagues. It has been a delight," he said. However, he said Australia had to take national security seriously and the manner in which it responds to threats will determine how strong its relationship with the US will be. "I say to you what I say every nation. You are measured by how seriously you take the threats to your citizens, to your sovereignty. And if you wish to be understood as friends, as allies, and partners, that requires certain traits and certain behaviours to be met," Mr Gorka said. "Committing to your own defence so we are stronger together is clearly one of them So the people of Australia, the government they choose will decide the exact percentages of GDP, but I think the President will have an opinion when he meets with his Australian counterpart." Mr Gorka's comments come after US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth last week flagged Australia needed to lift its investment to about 3.5 per cent of GDP to his counterpart Defence Minister Richard Marles during a meeting in Singapore. The Deputy Prime Minister later said Mr Hegseth raised the issue of defence spending after the US had asked its NATO allies to raise their spending. "I wouldn't put a number on it. The need to increase defence spending is something that he definitely raised and you have seen the Americans in the way in which they have engaged with all of their friends and allies asking them to do more and we can completely understand why America would do that," he told ABC's Afternoon Briefing. "What I made clear is that this is a conversation that we are very willing to have and it is one that we are having already... but we want to make sure that we are contributing to the strategic moment that we all face. "We have done a lot already, but we are absolutely up for having this conversation and we want to calibrate our defence spending to meet the strategic moment that we all face."