LIVE

Fri 2 May

Australia Institute Live: the 2025 election campaign's final day. As it happened.

Amy Remeikis – Chief Political Analyst

This blog, much like the election campaign, is now closed.

Key posts

The Day's News

Where are the leaders?

Peter Dutton is in Adelaide where he is hoping to defend the seat of Sturt from the Labor surge in that state – and also starve off a potential senate seat loss to One Nation.

Anthony Albanese is back east after his whirlwind west coast visit yesterday and is starting the last day of the campaign where he began it – Brisbane.

Labor is hoping it has a chance in one or more of the Greens seats – Brisbane, Griffith and Ryan, as well as the LNP held Bonner and Leichardt. The Coalition are hoping to pick up Ryan and Brisbane as well, but Dutton is unlikely to spend too much time in those seats in these final hours as he is a drag on the inner city vote.

Coalition’s foreign aid funding cut plans criticised

We raised this yesterday – the Coalition’s planned $800m cut over four years to foreign aid and international development, which was buried in the costings document.

This is something, as Bill Browne also noted yesterday, the Coalition’s own charities spokesperson, Dean Smith, thought would seem “counterintuitive or counterproductive” when he was asked about the potential for the Coalition cutting aid at a press club event, just last week.

As Bill reported yesterday:

Australian aid is already low, by international standards and by historical standards in Australia.

The Coalition Government cut aid dramatically, and the Labor Government has been content to let it wither further.

The cuts are also a blow to the authority of Senator Dean Smith, the Coalition’s charities spokesperson.

One week ago he was asked at the National Press Club whether he could rule out cuts to foreign aid.

He demurred, pointing out that he does not have the authority to make that commitment (the charities sector employs over a million Australians, but doesn’t get a minister or shadow minister).

But he did say (at 50:00 in the Press Club video):

“I think, having made a $21 billion defence commitment like the one that’s been made [by the Liberal Party] today, it would seem counterintuitive or counterproductive to then remove foreign aid funding at a time when a vacuum is clearly emerging… 

“Where vacuums get created in the international order, people fill them, and more often than not at the moment they are filled by our opponents.”

The Coalition has said funding for the Pacific will be kept separate from any cuts and has promised $2bn in infrastructure funding if it wins government, mostly through grants and loans.

That policy has been criticised by those in the know who say most Pacific nations do not have the funds to repay loans like the ones the Coalition is proposing and those nations will look to other nations to help fund their needs.

As AAP reports, since taking office in 2022, Anthony Albanese’s Labor government has increased foreign aid each year, but at a slower rate than Australian prosperity has grown.

As a share of gross national income (GNI), Australia spends 0.19 per cent on aid – ranking it 28th of 32 developed nations. On that measure, just four nations spend less: Czech Republic, Greece, Slovakia and Hungary.

A decade earlier, Australia spent 0.31 per cent of GNI, and was ranked 13th.

Trashing a treasure. 28 days after the election, the Australian government faces a critical test of its priorities  

Just 28 days after tomorrow’s federal election, the government faces a critical decision, which will send a message to the world about its priorities. 

The stakes could not be higher. The very existence of one of the world’s most important artworks is at risk.

The Murujuga Rock Art is a unique 40,000-year-old collection of rock engravings on the Dampier Archipelago in the Pilbara region of Western Australia. 

These irreplaceable petroglyphs are twice as old as France’s Lascaux cave paintings and eight times older than the pyramids. 

Murujuga is nationally heritage-listed and could soon be recognised by UNESCO for its world heritage value. 

But it is facing destruction from acid rain caused by nearby gas processing. 

On May 31, the Australian government will decide whether to approve another 50 years of acid gas emissions from the gas hub, which would signal the death knell for Murujuga.

Most of this gas is exported, and pollution from the largest and most destructive project, the North West Shelf gas export terminal, produces close to 8,000 tonnes of acid gas emissions annually.

“Without intervention, our cultural heritage could be lost forever,” said Mark Ogge, Principal Advisor at The Australia Institute

“No other nation on earth would stand by and let this happen.

“This is one of the most important decisions facing the government after the election – and it will send a signal to the world about its priorities.

“Some great Australians have already had their say on this issue. I would urge anyone who cares about Murujuga to join them.”

Good morning and welcome to the last full day of campaigning!

We have made it.

Everyone take a moment for reflection, and some snaps.

You are almost at the finish line.  Or at least at the finish line of having to listen to the same talking points every single day.

I’m proud of you.  This campaign has gone places, and not many of them good, but you have made it all bearable.

Albanese is on his six state blitz, which means he’ll be bouncing around electorates like a determined little pin ball today.

Dutton will be trying to shore up as much of the furniture as possible, so he’ll also be bouncing around, but he’ll be more like an angry little terrier at the dog park.

Now that the joke of the costings is out of the way for both parties, it is just bare bones stuff.  Talking points until you see colours all round.

We’ll be there to take you all through it, answer any questions you might still have and try and do the real time fact checks, but my Dolly are we running out of patience with them all, so goodness knows how you feel.

Grab your coffee – I am on my third already having gotten up even earlier to talk the Brits through our election (I left out Albanese being called a “sick c*nt” by a passer-by making national news, because after all they are British  but did help spread ‘Temu Trump’ internationally.

Ready?  Let’s get into it.

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