analysis

Federal election 2025 debate: Albanese polished, but some in the room described his performance as ‘arrogant’

Ellen Ransley
The Nightly
Cross Icon
Save
Anthony Albanese at the People’s Forum debate.
Anthony Albanese at the People’s Forum debate. Credit: Jason Edwards/AAP

Anthony Albanese won the night but he only did so based on a number of cut-through moments in an otherwise status-quo performance that he failed to land the knockout blow he needed to harden soft voters.

He may have won the People’s Forum, but one-in-five of the 100 voters remain unconvinced he’s the right man to be Prime Minister come May 3.

For the most part he played it safe, whipping out his favourite prop - his Medicare card - as he butted heads with Peter Dutton over bulk-billing, and talked up Labor’s first term agenda.

Sign up to The Nightly's newsletters.

Get the first look at the digital newspaper, curated daily stories and breaking headlines delivered to your inbox.

Email Us
By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.

He was focused, disciplined and on-message, delivering well-polished campaign lines in a gaffe-free delivery, but he struggled to keep up with Dutton on topics like migration and energy.

Albanese was polished, but was described by some in the room as a “smart arse” and “arrogant”.

Others described him as “confident”, a positive quality they told The Nightly outside the venue.

The more personable approach he took to questioners, like walking towards audience members as he answered their question and asking them details about their lives to inform his answer, also cut through.

He posed for a few selfies at the end, to the delight of some audience members.

Both leaders fell a little flat. Dutton was the best he’s been so far this campaign, but Albanese delivered the best line of the night as he took aim at Dutton’s about face on work from home: “Peter hasn’t been able to stand up for his own policies. I don’t know how he can stand up for Australia”.

His second best came as he criticised the Coalition’s gas policy: “the only gas policy the Coalition has is gaslighting the Australian public”.

He was effective in invoking the Coalition cuts of the past, and reminding voters of the Medicare co-payment Dutton tried to introduce while health minister.

Albanese came across as assured and across the detail, he had more positive policy to speak about than his opponent and he was sure to use that to his advantage.

But there was nothing new. Neither he nor Dutton were victors apparent in an hour of more-of-the-same.

Voters who want more answers about the big questions they care about, and facing the country, deserve a more inspiring performance at the next debate.

Comments

Join the conversation

Log in or create a free account to make comments

Already have an account?Log in here

Latest Edition

The Nightly cover for 17-04-2025

Latest Edition

Edition Edition 17 April 202517 April 2025

Albanese and Dutton at the campaign crossroads as election battle hits the Easter break. Who will make it count?