5 May 2025

Albo gets back to work while Coalition blame game begins

| Chris Johnson
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Hon Anthony Albanese MP, Prime Minister of Australia

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is back in The Lodge and working on his new ministry. Photo: Thomas Lucraft.

Anthony Albanese has returned to Canberra as a newly re-elected Prime Minister, deciding the shape of his next Cabinet and ministry while promising to get straight back to work on shaping Australia’s future.

Meanwhile, the Coalition is leaderless, with accusations and incriminations being cast around the Liberal Party over its trouncing at the polls on Saturday (3 May).

Labor secured a convincing victory, having won at least 85 seats, with close counts continuing in other electorates that remain too close to call.

Political commentators are suggesting the size of Labor’s win could see the party in power for at least another decade, while the Coalition scrambles to rebuild itself after what looks set to be its worst electoral loss in 80 years.

Mr Albanese said his government will remain disciplined and focused on the next term, despite the magnitude of the ALP’s win.

“We’re not getting carried away with it,” the Prime Minister said.

“We’ve got a big job to do. We thank the Australian people for having faith in us.

“I think we’ve been a good government, but we’ve got a good, positive agenda, and that’s what Australian people voted for.”

READ ALSO Australia rejects Dutton in landslide win for Labor

Liberal Senator Hollie Hughes has blasted her own party during Monday morning media interviews.

She said the Coalition’s strategy was woeful and there was a “complete lack of policy” being presented to the electorate. Even shadow ministers were kept in the dark over election announcements.

“I really don’t know what was going on at the senior levels of those people that were supposed to be putting together the policy, because it wasn’t filtering down to other members of the parliamentary team,” she said.

“But as well as that, there was more mud being slung in this election than I have ever seen and nothing done to combat that.

“There were people that just were MIA [missing in action] and I just don’t think there was enough being done to combat the Albanese narrative.”

Senator Hughes also took a swipe at shadow treasurer Angus Taylor, who some in the Coalition are touting as the next Liberal leader.

“I have concerns about his capability. I feel we have zero economic policy to sell,” she said.

“I don’t know what he’s been doing for three years. There was no tax policy, there was no economic narrative.”

The ACTU welcomed the federal government’s re-election, saying the nation couldn’t stomach the thought of being led by Peter Dutton.

Secretary Sally McManus said Australians have rejected the path of Donald Trump’s far-right populism.

“The Liberal Party should learn the lesson that touching workers’ rights will hurt them,’ she said.

“They were forced to flip-flop on policies such as same job, same pay and working from home during the election campaign, and this hurt them badly.

“People knew that Peter Dutton was a big risk. You cannot help people with cost-of-living pressures by cutting their rights.”

READ ALSO Days of political entitlement are gone forever, even in the ACT

The Activate Australia’s Skills campaign has also welcomed the re-election of the Albanese government, saying the result offers a renewed chance to fix one of Australia’s biggest productivity roadblocks – the failure to recognise and fully harness the skills of migrants already living and working here.

“This term must be the one where we finally fix skills recognition in this country,” campaign spokesperson Violet Roumeliotis said.

“Australia is missing out on $9 billion in economic activity every year because migrants are working below their skill level and locked out of their professions. It’s wasteful, it’s unfair, and it’s holding the country back.”

Universities Australia has congratulated the PM, with chief executive officer Luke Sheehy saying the umbrella organisation is keen to continue working constructively as a “partner of the Albanese Government” to support Australia’s future.

“Universities are central to much of Labor’s second-term agenda and to meeting Australia’s skills and economic needs,” he said.

“They educate the skilled workers and undertake the research needed to lift productivity and drive a stronger economy, guide the energy transition, deliver quality healthcare and to keep Australians safe.

“We are very supportive of the Australian Universities Accord and are eager to work alongside the government to continue implementing this transformational vision for higher education.”

CPA Australia, Australia’s largest accounting body, has urged the re-elected government to focus its new term in office on the “three Rs to revitalise, reform and repair” the Australian economy.

“Amid so much global uncertainty, the government should implement a long-term strategic plan to improve Australia’s economic prospects, not just for this term but for future generations,” CEO Chris Freeland said.

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I did enjoy Michaelia Cash whinging that Labor only won because of their campaign which was mean…she’s not just a head of hair….lol.

Meanwhile besides not looking with any real depth into the reasons they deservedly lost, Cash has apparently backed Hastie as leader, yikes. But no one seems keen on drinking from Dutton’s poison chalice.

I suspect they’ll throw Sussan (I wonder if she needs another “S” in her name for even more luck) Ley under the bus at least until they feel like things have stabilised before they swap her out for another mediocre Dutton clone.

HiddenDragon10:15 pm 05 May 25

The comments from Sally McManus quoted above go some way towards explaining the election outcome but they also highlight the huge challenges facing this government.

The relationship thus far between this government and the union movement generally seems to be the government saying “how high?” when the union movement says “jump!” – that will have to change a lot to achieve the productivity gains required to fund Labor’s considerably expanded welfare state, or even to implement the paint-by-numbers stuff which will likely emerge from this process –

https://ministers.treasury.gov.au/ministers/jim-chalmers-2022/media-releases/new-pc-inquiries-five-pillars-productivity

Yes there’s going to be some serious recriminations within the Coalition and the greens.

But let’s see what Labor have promised with their mandate. Apparently we’ll get:

* a lower cost of living
* 1.2 million new homes
* growing our economy
* a stronger Medicare
* lower power prices
* higher wages
* cheaper childcare
* free TAFE

They promised all this, let’s see how it goes. Let’s hope a bit better than the 2022 promises.

GrumpyGrandpa12:10 pm 06 May 25

G’day Penfold,
This election has been a one horse race, from day one, which, regardless of whom you support, is not a good thing. It’s always much healthier when the cross-benches are healthy.
I found the Preference arrangements interesting. We know that the Greens preferenced ALP ahead of Libs. We know that the Libs preferenced ALP ahead of Greens and although Albo wouldn’t publicly admit it, my gut is telling me the ALP preferenced Greens ahead of the Libs.
When we look at say Adam Brandt’s seat, it appears that the ALP may take the Green’s Leaders seat on Liberal preferences. In the seat of Bean, Smith is at risk, once again from Lib preferences to the Independent.
Whilst the Greens’ leader is scoffing that through their preferences, they have ousted the Libs leader and secured an ALP victory, it also seems to be at the expense Greens seats. I guess it’s fashionable to polished a turd!
Yes, the Libs have a huge amount of soul searching to do, and I’m inclined to think they may need some major crisis within the ALP, to crawl their way back.
As for Albo’s promises, I think we can all remember John Howard using the term “core promises”? Albo has a long list of promises that I feel will remain unfilled at the end of this term.

Sterling Stillwater2:10 pm 06 May 25

That is a bit of a weird post Grumpy Grandpa.

What is ‘Albo’ supposed to ‘admit’ when printed preference sheets are handed out on the day for all to see? Have you tried reading?

Preferences belong to the voter. Not all have the motivation or capacity to work it out for themselves but it is still their writing and their sequence on the voting slip, nobody else’s.

A Liberal thinker will preference Labor over Green, because Greens are further left. A Green thinker will preference Labor over Liberal because Libs are further right. It is not hard to see.

Mostly, Liberal How-To-Vote handouts preferenced One Nation, even further right. Did you mention that? But there were none in Bean.

If you like a ‘healthy cross-bench’ can you point me to your posts where you advocated for independents and minority government? I strongly suspect you did no such thing.

It’s not compulsory to follow anyones preferences. Either the voters are too dopey to have an opinion or they’re the rusted on doing as their told if they did. You get no how to vote instructions if you postal vote which a lot did. The results are what they are. Me personally would always vote for and preference the major parties rather than for a populist candidate who won’t put themselves anywhere near voting for something controversial regardless of their personal opinion.

It’s weird how people bang on about preferences as if parties have control of anything other than their How To Vote cards. Voters decide preferences not parties no matter what’s recommended on the HTV cards.

Betting we get a lot more of Labor’s promises delivered because they actually all make sense for the country than we would have any of Peter Dutton’s…nuclear was a bizarrely stupid hill to die on….which is why he’s out of a job right now.

Hi Grumpy – you’re right about healthy democracy but the Libs only have themselves to blame.

Albo has proven probably the most dishonest PM in history so presume the lies will continue.

As for the future – the ALP vote was around 34.7% in 2025 and they’ve got 89 seats. It was around 38% in 2013 and they got 55 seats. Sure the majors primary share has fallen but it shows how important preferences are.

“Albo has proven probably the most dishonest PM in history so presume the lies will continue.”

This nonsense rhetoric is why you’re going to lose in 2028 as well.

@Penfold
Nothing whatsoever is “proven” by your opinion, Penfold.

That’s quite correct JS. Much like on the other blog you had no idea what all these extra APS are up to but proceeded to opine regardless.

And I won’t even mention confusing Canberra for Australia. Oops, I did. But we all make mistakes.

@Penfold
“you had no idea what all these extra APS are up to but proceeded to opine regardless”
… err that would be because you asked me a question, Penfold. If you don’t want my opinion, then don’t ask me a question … it’s that simple – surely even you should be able to understand.

However, when you say “Albo has proven … (insert whatever perjorative conclusion you are drawing)”, you are making a statement of fact – when, in reality, it is just your jaundiced opinion, with which, I hasten to add, the majority of Australian voter’s obviously disagree.

JS i asked what all these APS were doing, a question of fact not one of opinion. You seem to regularly struggle with the difference. Facts are provable, opinion is a view or a judgement.

Albo has proven himself the most dishonest PM in memory, imho. Australian voters may or may not have passed judgement on that, we’ll never know. And that last statement is a fact 🙂

Penfold.
@Penfold
Ok – I understand now. You wanted me to provide a run down on what all 41,000 public servants were doing. Wow – the only come back I’ve got, is you are truly delusional.

As for “Albo has proven himself the most dishonest PM in memory, imho.”?
Yes it is your opinion, which I am free to ignore. Consider it done.

While you are correct that Australians did not specifically vote on your perception of Albo’s honesty, it clearly wasn’t enough to dissuade a majority of voters – hence his party’s overwhelming victory.

Well JS as the champion of “show me the evidence”, you’ve some up a bit short on your own self-declared standards.

And if you describe that as “truly delusional”, some might argue confusing opinion as fact, or Canberra as Australia, fits that description nicely.

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