Australia’s Albanese claims election victory, riding anti-Trump wave

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epa12071074 Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Partner Jodie Haydon and son Nathan acknowledge the crowd at the Labor Election Night function for the 2025 Federal Election at Canterbury-Hurlstone Park RSL Club on Election Day of the 2025 federal election in Sydney, Australia, 03 May 2025. EPA-EFE/LUKAS COCH AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND OUT

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, partner Jodie Haydon and son Nathan acknowledge the crowd at a Labor election night event in Sydney.

PHOTO: EPA-EFE

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SYDNEY - Australia’s Anthony Albanese claimed a historic second term as Prime Minister on May 3 in a dramatic comeback against once-resurgent conservatives that was powered by voters’ concerns about the influence of US President Donald Trump.

Mr Peter Dutton, leader of the conservative Liberal party, conceded defeat and the loss of his own seat – echoing the fate of Canada’s conservatives and their leader, whose election losses days earlier were also attributed to a Trump backlash.

Supporters at Labor’s election party in Sydney cheered and hugged each other as Mr Albanese claimed victory and said his party would form a majority government.

“Our government will choose the Australian way, because we are proud of who we are and all that we have built together in this country,” Mr Albanese told supporters.

“We do not need to beg or borrow or copy from anywhere else. We do not seek our inspiration from overseas. We find it right here in our values and in our people,” he added.

Mr Albanese ran an almost faultless campaign,

turning around polls

at the start of the year that had suggested he was headed for defeat. In contrast, Mr Dutton struggled, frequently contradicting himself and backflipping on policies.

Mr Albanese would be the first Australian prime minister to win a consecutive term in two decades. He said Australians had voted for fairness and “the strength to show courage in adversity and kindness to those in need”.

The Australian Electoral Commission website projected Labor would win 81 of 150 seats in the House of Representatives, increasing its majority in Parliament, with 68 per cent of the vote counted.

Mr Dutton – whose Liberals had been leading in opinion polls as recently as February until he became dogged with comparisons to Mr Trump – said he had phoned Mr Albanese to congratulate him.

Australia's opposition leader Peter Dutton delivers his concession speech while surrounded by his family at the Liberal-National Coalition election night event in Brisbane, Australia.

PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

He said he told Mr Albanese that the Prime Minister’s late mother, who raised him on a disability pension, would be proud of what he had accomplished.

Mr Dutton, a former policeman with a reputation for being tough on crime and immigration, also said he had spoken to Labor’s candidate in the seat of Dickson he had held for two decades, and congratulated her on her success.

“We have been defined by our opponents in this election which is not the true story of who we are,” Mr Dutton said in his speech, promising the party would rebuild.

“We didn’t do well enough during this campaign. That much is obvious tonight, and I accept full responsibility for that,” Mr Dutton said in a televised speech.

Trump comparisons

Mr Albanese’s government had struggled during its first term with headwinds such as inflation, high interest rates and a housing crunch that risked a voter backlash. The government sought to soothe those concerns with additional tax cuts and rebates in a pre-election budget.

Labor’s recovery was aided by

global volatility sparked by Mr Trump’s tariff programme

, which he unveiled during the first week of the campaign.

Labor supporters celebrate at Canterbury-Hurlstone Park RSL Club in Sydney, as the party wins the election.

PHOTO: EPA-EFE

The prime minister campaigned on a platform of stability, while drawing comparisons between Mr Dutton and Mr Trump, who is deeply unpopular in Australia.

“If you sling enough mud, it will stick,” said Liberal Senator for the Northern Territory Jacinta Price, whose comments that her party would “make Australia great again” had fuelled comparisons to Mr Trump’s own “Make America Great Again” slogan.

“You made it all about Trump,” she said on ABC. Mr Dutton had said he would appoint Ms Price to a ministry of government efficiency, one of several echoes of Mr Trump’s policies.

“Losing Peter Dutton is a huge loss,” she added.

The opposition Liberal Party spokesman, Senator James Paterson, defended the conservative campaign, which he said was negatively affected by “the Trump factor”.

“It was devastating in Canada for the conservatives... I think it has been a factor here, just how big a factor will be determined in a few hours’ time,” he earlier told ABC.

Earlier, as counting got under way, Labor Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the government had been “in all sorts of trouble” at the end of 2024 but got back into the contest because of Mr Albanese’s strong campaign performance, policies that addressed concerns about the cost of living, and the Trump effect.

As the results started emerging, he told ABC the projected victory was “a win for the ages”. Mr Albanese “has pulled off one of the great political victories since federation,” he said.

The results were “absolutely unbelievable”, Labor supporter Melinda Adderley, 54, said through her tears at the election party. REUTERS, BLOOMBERG

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