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World

Australian election 2025 live updates: Dutton tells supporters not to listen to ABC, Guardian and ‘other hate media’; Albanese talks up telehealth plan | Australia news

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Last updated: April 27, 2025 4:46 am
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Dutton tells supporters not to listen to ABC, Guardian and ‘the other hate media’

Dutton moves to close out his speech, telling his supporters not to listen to “what you have been told by the ABC, in the Guardian and the other hate media”.

Forget about that. Listen to what you hear on the doors. Listen to what people say on the pre-polling. Know in your hearts that we are a better future for our country. Know we stand up for the values that are important more than ever for families and small businesses. If we stay true to our values and have a strength of leadership, if we have the ability to be truthful with the Australian public, to stand up and to fight for what we believe in, to deliver our vision, to make Australians better off with our petrol cut, with our $1,200 back, to make sure they can buy a home, that is so important to us.

Dutton then predicts that the Coalition will be able to claim victory by 6pm on election night.

There are millions of forgotten Australians, people who are living here, in outer metropolitan areas, people who live in regional towns, they are just starting to stir and they understand their vote will count more than ever this election.

Peter Dutton at a campaign rally at the Melton Entertainment Track on Sunday. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
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Updated at 03.05 BST

Key events

Healthy inflation data should help ease mortgage pain

Quarterly numbers are expected to show inflation has drifted into the Reserve Bank’s target range to set up a further interest rate cut.

Mortgage-holders are set for further relief, with economists declaring an interest-rate cut should be “[locked] in” an upcoming interest rate cut.

Quarterly numbers released on Wednesday are expected to show core inflation has dropped within the Reserve Bank of Australia’s target range, paving the way for a rate cut at its May 20 meeting.

Economists from Australia’s big four banks have all forecasted the Reserve Bank’s preferred measure of annual trimmed mean inflation will come in at either 2.8 or 2.9 per cent – within its target range of two to three per cent.

–AAP

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Bob Brown Foundation backs anti-salmon farming Tasmanian independent

The Bob Brown Foundation is holding a rally in Hobart today in support of independent candidate Peter George who is campaigning on a platform to end salmon farming in Tasmania.

Speakers include author Richard Flanagan, representatives from The Australia Institute, members of the Tasmanian Aboriginal community and George.

Independent candidate for Franklin Peter George says Labor and the Liberals are putting corporate interests and overseas profit before the people of Franklin. Photograph: Ethan James/AAP
Award-winning author Richard Flanagan addresses anti-salmon protesters outside parliament house in Hobart today. Photograph: Ethan James/AAP
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Updated at 05.37 BST

Ex-MP’s rare comeback bid in key marginal Adelaide seat

A marginal seat is the battleground for a former MP staging a comeback and a sitting member who is its first Labor MP since 1949.

A high-profile former member who has never lost an election is up against the first Labor member since 1949 in the intriguing battle for the South Australian seat of Boothby.

With a margin of 3.3%, the southern Adelaide seat is considered to be one of only two SA seats that could change hands this election.

Louise Miller-Frost won the seat in 2022, defeating Liberal Rachel Swift after two-term Liberal MP Nicolle Flint stepped back from politics.

Former member for Boothby, Liberal Nicolle Flint, during question time in the House of Representatives in 2021. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

Polling commissioned by AAP and modelled by YouGov puts Labor ahead on a two-party preferred basis on 52%, compared with 48% for the Liberals.

Labor has 32% of the primary vote, with the coalition on 30%t and the Greens on 14%.

Flint won the seat in 2016 and 2019, but decided not to run in 2022 because she was suffering from endometriosis.

Since then, medication has had a “miracle” impact on her health, she says, which has “never been better”, clearing the way for her to try to regain Boothby.

Boothby has a strong Liberal vote along the coast and affluent areas in the foothills and a large mortgage belt of Labor voters at its centre.

– AAP

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Updated at 05.30 BST

Australian Catholics commemorate the life of Pope Francis

Moving away from politics for a moment, the late Pope Francis has been remembered as a “voice for the voiceless” and a “beacon of light” at masses held across Australia after his funeral.

Australian Catholics have gathered to commemorate the life of Pope Francis at the first local services since his funeral, remembering him as a beacon of light for a world shrouded in darkness.

Bishop Vincent Long Van Nguyen holds a mass for the late Pope Francis at St Patrick’s Cathedral in Parramatta. Photograph: Dean Lewins/EPA

The funeral for Pope Francis held at the Vatican in Rome on Saturday was attended by about 250,000 people, including world leaders and royals.

On Sunday, churches across Australia held special masses in honour of the pontiff.

At Saint Patrick’s Cathedral in Parramatta, Bishop Vincent Long Van Nguyen held a mass for the repose of the pope’s soul.

Parishioners attend mass for the late pontiff at St Patrick’s Cathedral in Parramatta. Photograph: Dean Lewins/EPA

A memorial mass for Pope Francis was also celebrated at St Francis Xavier’s Cathedral in Adelaide. Archbishop Patrick O’Regan thanked the pope for being someone who “kissed the leper, washed the feet of prisoners, welcomed migrants and loved the church even when she failed”.

Melbourne Archbishop Peter Comensoli will lead the celebration of a Solemn Pontifical Mass at St Patrick’s Cathedral on Monday afternoon.

A conclave to elect the new pope is expected to start in Rome in 10 days’ time.

– AAP

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Updated at 05.15 BST

Labor just ahead in seats at heart of salmon farming fight, polling shows

Labor is ahead in two ultra-tight seats, including one at the centre of a heated salmon farming debate, polling shows a week out from the federal election.

The government has the edge in Tasmania’s ultra-marginal seat of Lyons as well as Liberal-held Braddon, shows YouGov polling commissioned by AAP.

Labor holds Lyons, a sprawling rural seat covering the island state’s centre and east, by a thin 0.9% margin.

Salmon aquaculture in Macquarie harbour in the Tasmanian seat of Braddon. Photograph: Mark A Johnson/Alamy

The party threw former state leader Rebecca White into the race to replace retiring Brian Mitchell, who had represented the region since 2016.

Polling of 446 Lyons voters has Labor ahead 56-44 on a two-party-preferred basis.

The party was also ahead in Braddon 54-46 after a survey of 419 people, last week, which was modelled by YouGov.

The Liberals have pinned their hopes on mechanical engineer Mal Hingston, while Labor called in experienced senator Anne Urquhart who left the upper house role for a tilt.

Prime minister Anthony Albanese and Opposition Leader Peter Dutton made multiple trips to Braddon before official campaigning to show support for salmon farm workers.

Anti-salmon farming protesters gather outside parliament house in Hobart as the prime minister and the opposition leader continue on the hustings in NSW. Photograph: Ethan James/AAP

The seat has been at the centre of a heated debate about the future of the aquaculture industry in Macquarie Harbour after a challenge to farming approvals by environmentalists.

– AAP

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Updated at 04.57 BST

Opposition crisscrosses country in final week

As Anthony Albanese and Peter Dutton prepare to face off for the final time in a leaders’ debate to be aired on Channel 7, the opposition leader will start a blitz of key seats.

Polling throughout the five-week race has consistently shown Albanese cement his lead as preferred prime minister over Dutton, as the coalition began to increasingly trail Labor on a two-party preferred basis.

The two leaders will meet face-to-face in tonight’s debate to be aired on Channel 7. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP

The coalition needs to gain 21 seats to secure a majority, and believes this election is winnable. Dutton fights for every vote.

The election stops will include high visibility events and strong crowds as the Coalition maintains it is still in the fight, and that voters have an appetite for change.

The two leaders have already clashed three times, with two of the debates held in western Sydney, where political analysts believe the election could be decided.

– AAP

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Updated at 04.26 BST

RACGP: Albanese’s 24/7 telehealth offering a ‘positive step forward’

The Royal Australian College of GPs has approved the Albanese government’s promise of a new 24/7 telehealth line.

In a statement, RACGP president, Dr Michael Wright, says it is “essential that this service integrates with existing general practice care”.

This is a positive step forward that will help more people access care when they need it. It will help more GPs across Australia provide after-hours care on weekends and during the week.

After-hours care is a key part of what GPs do in communities nation-wide, every day, and this announcement recognises that. So, we look forward to understanding the detail of this program, and working with the government to make sure that general practice is consulted every step of the way.

GPs and practice teams are needed by their communities more than ever before. There’s no substitute for the high-quality care you get from a specialist GP who knows you and your history. We’re the ones with the training and expertise to make sure that patients have all their health needs properly seen to.

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Updated at 04.07 BST

Bowen indulges in some social media mockery

Climate change and energy minister Chris Bowen has seized on Nationals Senator Bridget McKenzie’s reaction to a question from David Speers about the Coalition’s plan to lower emissions.

Bowen has posted on social media a clip of McKenzie laughing in response to the question, adding a one word comment: “unbelievable”.

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Updated at 03.58 BST

Analysis: Peter Dutton’s team has looted economic policies used to fight past wars – and it’s not working in 2025

As the economy turns, the Coalition finds itself out of step with the electorate.

Committed to a strategy of reminding Australians about the past three miserable years, Peter Dutton has overlearned the lessons of 2024, when voters angry at the soaring cost of living toppled a swathe of governments.

If Anthony Albanese was unlucky to inherit the most inflationary economy in a generation, the tide has turned at the right moment as he battles for a second term.

The surest marker of this sea change was the Reserve Bank of Australia’s interest rate cut on 18 February – the first in more than four years and confirmation that the battle to contain inflation was largely won.

The mortgage relief may have been minor but the change in psychology has been profound.

It’s a major reason why the killer question, “Are you better off now than three years ago?” has lost some of its potency in 2025.

For more on this, read the full analysis here:

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Updated at 04.29 BST

McKenzie cites UNSW report about availability of water for nuclear power plants

Going back to Bridget McKenzie’s interview on ABC Insiders this morning, the Nationals senator was asked by ABC Insiders host David Speers about whether there would be enough water for the Loy Yang power plant in Gippsland.

McKenzie cited a University of New South Wales report that examined the availability of water for use in nuclear power generation.

Well, David, University of NSW has done a study into this. It says our water capacity is not a constraint in developing a nuclear industry here in Australia. They are the experts.

McKenzie appeared to refer to the headline of an ABC news report on the study that read: “Enough water for nuclear reactors in NSW but scientists worry about wildlife.”

The text of the story makes clear the study was looking explicitly at sites proposed for New South Wales at Liddell in the Hunter Valley and Mount Piper near Lithgow.

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Updated at 03.21 BST

PM says Australians can choose between ‘building’ a future or a ‘nasty’ reboot of the past

Albanese closes out the speech by clearly spelling out how he sees the choice on voting day.

The prime minister tells the party faithful voters can seize opportunities with Labor or go backwards by voting for the opposition. Photograph: Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images

In the coming days Australians have a real choice, a choice between seizing the opportunities before us all letting the world overtake us. Between reaching for Australia’s extraordinary potential or cutting into it.

A choice between building Australia’s future or a darker, meaner, nasty reboot of the past. A choice between going forward or getting dragged backwards, a choice between backing Australians or stacking Australians.

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Updated at 04.04 BST

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