In case you missed it, Anthony Albanese has been taking some advice and coaching from Daniel Andrews on how to better communicate (and also debate, which we will see the results of, tomorrow)

You can see some of that impact here.

Q: Prime Minister, the family you just met, the two parents – I think one works in finance, the other works for the TAFE here. Will you concede they won’t be impacted by Peter Dutton’s ‘Work from Home’ because they’re not Canberra public servants? And Chris Minns says he supports getting some public service back to the office, why is he wrong?
 
Albanese:

Well, your term ‘Canberra public servants’ shows you’re picking up on some of the language there. You know there are public servants who don’t work in Canberra. A majority of them do not work in Canberra. That’s one point.

The sort of people who are in Hervey Bay and in western Queensland, helping Queenslanders at this point in time deserve respect from the alternative Prime Minister.

Not to be denigrated, the sort of anti-Canberra rhetoric is, frankly, a bit unbecoming from a bloke who we know he doesn’t want to live in Canberra – we know he wants to live at Kirribilli House – but it’s a bit unbecoming. The truth is that public sector conditions then flow through and are used to argue in the private sector, that’s the way industrial relations works.