Australian federal election 2025 LIVE: Anthony Albanese reveals special connection to the cafe he visited morning after election win – and the first leader who called him

Anthony Albanese has won the 2025 federal election with a massive landslide. 

Peter Dutton’s political career is over. He has even suffered the indignity of losing his own seat of Dickson to Labor’s Ali France, at the third time of asking. 

The Coalition now faces the difficult task of deciding who will replace Dutton as Opposition Leader. 

Follow Daily Mail Australia’s live coverage of the aftermath of Labor’s historic Federal Election victory. 

Anthony Albanese reveals special connection to the cafe he visited morning after election win – as he reveals the first leader who called him

Anthony Albanese has made his first appearance following his election win, visiting Bar Italia in Sydney’s Leichhardt, a coffee shop he used to go to with his late mum.

‘I used to visit this coffee shop with my mum,’ he said.

‘I grew up just down the road here. And I did certainly think of her last night as well.

‘She would be very proud.’

It was a point made by Peter Dutton in his gracious concession speech.

‘I said to the PM that his mum would be incredibly proud of his achievement tonight,’ Dutton said at Liberal HQ in Brisbane.

The PM appeared alongside Finance Minister Katy Gallagher and Jerome Laxale, who retained his ultra-marginal seat of Bennelong in Sydney’s lower North Shore last night.

Albanese also revealed the first international leader who called him was James Marape, Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea.

‘He called me at about 7.45pm,’ Albanese said.

‘Since then, I’ve had good discussions with New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, and I’ve exchanged messages with world leaders, including Emmanuel Macron of France, Keir Starmer, and others.

‘I have some phone calls booked this afternoon, including one with President Noboa of Indonesia, a great friend of Australia, and President Zelenskyy, who has shown immense courage in leading the Ukrainian people against the aggression of Vladimir Putin and the Russians.’

Albanese said the Government would continue to support Ukraine.

Albo’s sympathy for dumped Dutton

Anthony Albanese has promised to lead a united government in his second stint as prime minister, following Labor’s decisive election win.

Speaking for the first time since his landslide victory, Mr Albanese thanked supporters in his home electorate of Grayndler in Sydney’s inner-west.

‘The Australian people voted for unity rather than division,’ he told reporters on Sunday.

‘We will be a disciplined, orderly government in our second term, just like we have been in our first.

‘We’ve been given a great honour of serving the Australian people, and we don’t take it for granted, and we’ll work hard each and every day.’

With 71 per cent of the vote counted, Labor has won 85 seats with the coalition going backwards to sit on 37 seats, while 18 seats remain in doubt.

Labor has increased its majority through substantial swings across all states, picking up marginal seats and formerly coalition strongholds.

Among the significant wins for Labor was Peter Dutton’s electorate of Dickson, as he became the first opposition leader to lose his seat at an election.

Labor’s Ali France won the seat in her third time contesting the electorate, booting Mr Dutton out of parliament after a 24-year career.

Mr Albanese expressed sympathy for Mr Dutton following the election outcome.

‘I feel for Peter Dutton. He was generous in his comments. I wish him and (wife) Kirilly and his family all the best,’ he said.

‘It’s a tough business, politics, there’s no doubt about that, and it would have been a tough night for Peter.’

The outgoing Liberal leader said he would take full responsibility for the election loss as the coalition looks to rebuild.

‘We didn’t do well enough during this campaign, that much is obvious,’ Mr Dutton told party supporters in Brisbane on Saturday.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers said Mr Albanese will go down in history as a Labor hero following the result.

‘This was beyond even our most optimistic expectations,’ he told ABC’s Insiders program on Sunday.

‘It was a history-making night, it was one for the ages.’

Bugle of Failure

The Trumpet of Patriots leader Suellen Wrightson has acknowledged that the ‘Australian people have spoken’.

She sent her congratulations to Albanese and shared her commiseration with Dutton, who, she claimed, ‘gave it his best’.

‘Importantly we will use this decisive Labor victory to re-evaluate our position, listen, learn and continue to present the important political issues to the Australian people,’ she added.

Wrightson ran in the seat of Hunter in NSW and received just 2,801 votes.

Well, I think we can all agree that was $60 million of Clive Palmer’s money well spent.

Major Medicare change coming

Iconic image sums up Coalition’s campaign

Insiders on the ABC has now moved on to ‘Talking Pictures’ with photographer Mike Bowers.

One of the first images to be analysed is a now-iconic photograph of Peter Dutton on the campaign trail with Kooyong candidate Amelia Hamer and Senator Jane Hume.

To read a full analysis of why the picture will come to symbolise the campaign, click below:

Albo’s arch-nemesis no more

Key detail missed in Albo’s speech

Cowardly act from Trumpet of Patriots leader

After bombarding almost every Australian with constant text messages throughout the campaign, it seems Suellen Wrightson doesn’t like a taste of her own medicine.

The Trumpet of Patriots leader has now locked her Facebook profile.

Perhaps she is not a fan of being on the receiving end of incessant messages.

Teal MP slams ‘vicious’ campaign

Teal MP Zali Steggall, who retained her Sydney electorate of Waringah, has hit out at how ‘vicious’ the election campaign has been.

‘Nationally there were pockets where it was vicious,’ she told Insiders.

She slammed ‘third party actor organisations’ who allegedly sought to undermine many independent candidates.

‘You got a lot of these attack fronts for the Liberal Party with a lot of money from fossil fuels attacking in these communities,’ she added.

What will three more years of Labor look like?

PVO: Frontbench bloodbath for the Coalition

It has been a frontbench bloodbath for the Coalition.

Apart from losing the election, delivering Labor a clear majority and Peter Dutton losing his seat, a stream of shadow ministers have also been defeated, alongside up and comers who had been viewed as the future of the party.

Not anymore, unless they make a comeback in three years time.

The shadow foreign minister David Coleman lost his seat of Banks.

New manager of opposition business and shadow housing spokesman Michael Sukkar lost his Melbourne seat of Deakin.

Frontbencher and salt of the earth Liberal MP for Petrie in Queensland Luke Howarth lost his seat.

Those are the fronthbenchers whose parliamentary careers are over, at least for now.

Added to that list are up and coming backbenchers Jamie Stevens in Sturt and Keith Wolahan in his Melbourne electorate of Menzies.

These are two of the last remaining Liberal MPs to hold inner city seats. Also two moderates their defeats have further gutted the moderate ranks of the Liberal Party after teals did the same three years ago.

Outspoken maverick backbencher Bridget Archer (pictured, below) has also lost her Tasmania seat of Bass.

The Coalition only has 37 confirmed wins in the 150 seat House of Representatives.

More will join them when counting is completed amongst the 19 seats in doubt, but the Opposition’s best case scenario is a total somewhere in the mid 40s, more than a dozen fewer seats than it won at the disastrous 2022 election defeat.

Teals have unanimously been re-elected, with likely new additions to their ranks. The only sitting teal whose seat remains up in the air is that of Zoe Daniel in Goldstein, but late counting last night had her slightly extending her lead over Tim Wilson who was attempting a comeback.

The Greens are looking at wins and losses, but the biggest news is that its leader Adam Bandt looks like scrapping home after appearing in deep trouble last night during the count.

As a result his leadership might come under pressure.

The real game in the next parliament for the Greens will be in the senate, where it will continue to play a role controlling the balance of power. A leader based in the senate would make more sense for the minor party.

Single most important reason why Dutton blew up

There’s an avalanche of criticism that can be levelled at Peter Dutton’s lacklustre election campaign.

From his pie-in-the-sky nuclear power plan, to the ill-advised proposal to create an Australian version of Elon Musk’s DOGE, and his pledge to hold a referendum on deporting dual citizens convicted of serious crimes.

PVO: Insiders reveal who’s tipped to be next Coalition leader

It has been a groggy start for many Liberals this morning, as they contemplate the train wreck from last night.

MPs I have talked and texted with this morning seem to think that shadow treasurer Angus Taylor will emerge as the clear frontrunner to take over the leadership now that Peter Dutton has lost the election as well as his seat.

But they have concerns that Taylor’s stewardship of the Opposition’s economic messaging was poor, including during the campaign, coupled with his questionable performances in parliament.

‘He’s not great but might be all we have for now,’ one Liberal MP said.

The feeling is that deputy leader Sussan Ley might be ‘too risky and too loose’ to take over.

Ley is also 63 years of age, older than the PM.

‘But as a woman perhaps that will help us at this time,’ the Liberal MP said.

Ley might be worth considering as a stop gap contender, but it’s hard to think she wouldn’t risk being undermined from day one.

At any rate, as part of Dutton’s leadership team she was part of the failure that played out last night. That has to count against her.

Other options who would involve renewal include defence spokesman and WA MP Andrew Hastie or Victorian MP Dan Tehan, but if they are to emerge as serious contenders ‘it will only become clear in the days to come, not this weekend’, the Liberal source argued.

Hastie is certainly a long-term option seen as capable of winning, but is he ready right now?

Tehan might be too folksy to be taken seriously. One name I would like to throw in the mix is Sydney MP for Berowra Julian Leeser.

A moderate who resigned from Peter Dutton’s frontbench over the Voice, he might serve as a clear sign of a clean out and new direction for the party, which voters seem to want.

But who are the moderate Liberals left in the parliament to get behind him?

Most have lost their seats, both at this election and the last against Teals. It is slim pickings for the Liberals when considering new leaders.

Dutton has largely been a one-man band for the last three years. The dominant figure to be sure.

The lesser names now left don’t jump out at you as natural successors.

Which is perhaps why Taylor is the favourite, simply because he’s the most obvious contender.

But how long will Taylor last if he doesn’t shine quickly after taking over? Liberals have a habit of blowing themselves apart in opposition, especially when times are tough….and these are certainly the toughest of times.

Coalition a ‘complete catastrophe’, ScoMo’s adviser says

Scott Morrison’s former adviser Andrew Carswell has unleashed on the Coalition campaign, describing it a ‘complete catastrophe’.

‘It’s a complete catastrophe for the Coalition, an unmitigated failure,’ he told AM.

‘This is a party now staring down the barrel at three terms in opposition, having watched the Liberal rump of the Coalition get decimated.’

He said the Dutton experiment had ‘failed’, adding that the new leader had to unite the shattered party.

‘There are some very good up-and-coming MPs and Andrew Hastie is one of those that should be putting up his hand to lead the party,’ he added.

Chalmers reveals why Labor won

Treasurer Jim Chalmers has revealed the two reasons why Labor won such a historic landslide: voters’ desire for stability and Anthony Albanese.

‘One of the reasons we gained such a big majority last night is that people recognised that if they wanted stability while the global economy was going crazy, then a majority Labor government was the best way to deliver that,’ Chalmers told Insiders.

And that desire for stability amid an increasingly uncertain world found its answer in Albanese, who Chalmers described as a ‘Labor hero’.

The Treasurer insisted he was keen ‘not do dance on the political graves of our opponents’.

But then he stuck the knife in.

‘There was a real kind of darkness at the heart of the Coalition’s campaign, this kind of backwards looking pessimism, which Australians rejected,

‘And in rejecting that I think they embraced the kind of leadership which Anthony Albanese provides which is practical, pragmatic, it is problem solving and it’s very forward-looking.’

And the work has already started.

Chalmers said he had already had a briefing from the Treasury today at 6.45am.



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