Australia election 2025 live: Anthony Albanese insists he is not taking a win for granted as Peter Dutton predicts election night ‘surprises’

Importance Score: 60 / 100 🔵

PM insists he’s not taking election win for granted

Anthony Albanese says he has “a mountain to climb” – a line he’s used a lot recently – and implored Australians to vote for stability in a time of uncertainty.

This morning Peter Dutton has said he believes tomorrow’s result could be a miracle for the Liberal party, like the 2019 election.

Speaking to ABC AM Sabra Lane, Albanese is asked whether he’s worried this election could deliver a surprise result for the opposition. Albanese says he “certainly take[s] nothing for granted”.

I think 2019 shows the folly of pretending that you know the outcome of an election before the ballots are counted.

Anthony Albanese alongside Labor’s candidate for Longman in Queensland, Rhiannyn Douglas (right), at a Medicare urgent care clinic in Morayfield this morning. Photograph: Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images

While both parties have been saying voters will be better off under their respective parties, neither will promise people will be better off in three years from now.

Lane asks whether Albanese will “guarantee” Australians will be better off by 2028. Albanese says:

As we speak today, Sabra, we have inflation down to 2.4%, we have wages increasing, we have unemployment low, and interest rates have started to fall. Every one of the key economic indicators is improving. Under the former government, we inherited interest rates going up, inflation with the six in front of it, wages going backwards…

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A little earlier this morning, Angus Taylor joined RN Breakfast, to talk through the Coalition’s costings.

Host Sally Sara puts to Taylor, that he and his party have said government spending has fuelled home grown inflation, but the Coalition’s costings show they’re increasing deficits for the first two years if they win government.

We’re reducing the overall or improving the overall budget position by $14bn over the forwards and reducing $40bn of debt. We know that borrowing adds to interest rates as inflationary pressures, and that’s why we’re improving the position.

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source: theguardian.com


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