Thanks for reading our rolling coverage of today’s election campaign, defined by the prime minister’s visit to flood-ravaged rural Queensland and the opposition leader’s Scott Morrison-style bungle on the football field.
Here’s what you need to know:
- Labor’s primary vote is weak in NSW and Victoria compared to the last election, putting key seats at risk despite a recent political recovery, polling analysis shows.
- Opposition Leader Peter Dutton campaigned in Darwin and committed to ending Chinese ownership of the Port of Darwin within six months if elected.
- Prime Minister Anthony Albanese called ABC Darwin last night to make a similar announcement, beating Dutton to the punch, but today refused to put a deadline on his efforts to re-lease or acquire the port.
- Dutton wound back his work-from-home edict for public servants, saying only bureaucrats in Canberra would be subject to stricter rules.
- The opposition leader kicked a footy that accidentally hit a cameraman and bloodied his forehead. Dutton apologised and offered the injured man a beer.
- Dutton also used the incident to repeat his attack line that Albanese has been untruthful on the campaign trail: “If the prime minister kicked it, he would have told you that it didn’t hit anyone,” he said on Sky News.
- Albanese spent the day in the Coalition’s safest seat of Maranoa. He met farmers impacted by Queensland’s devastating floods and announced more than $100 million of local grants to aid recovery.
- Our correspondents Matthew Knott and Paul Sakkal wrote Albanese looks strongest on the road so far. Read why here.
That’s where we’ll end today’s live updates. Join us bright and early tomorrow as the second week of the election campaign continues in the lead-up to May 3.