PM candidates disrupted by protesters on first day of Australian election campaign

IANS March 29, 2025 171 views

The Australian election campaign kicked off with dramatic protests targeting both major party leaders in Queensland. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese faced questions about immigration's impact on healthcare services during a Labor event. Opposition leader Peter Dutton was interrupted twice by climate activists opposing his nuclear energy plans. With Queensland holding 30 critical seats and the Greens threatening traditional strongholds, the state could decide whether Australia gets a majority or minority government.

"no new gas or nuclear" - Climate protester at Peter Dutton event
Canberra, March 29: Australia's two candidates for Prime Minister have spent the first day of the general election campaign in the battleground state of Queensland where they were both disrupted by protesters.

Key Points

1

Both leaders faced multiple protest disruptions on campaign trail

2

Queensland emerges as crucial election battleground state

3

Greens threaten major parties in key Brisbane seats

4

Healthcare and climate dominate early campaign issues

Incumbent PM Anthony Albanese, leader of the governing Labor Party, and Peter Dutton, leader of the opposition Coalition, both made multiple stops in Queensland on Saturday at the start of a five-week campaign before the election on May 3.

Despite the leaders' events being carefully planned and subject to strict security, both Albanese and Dutton faced protesters on Saturday, reports Xinhua news agency.

A Labor event in Brisbane focused on the party's plan to boost spending on healthcare was interrupted when an audience member accosted Albanese with questions about the impact of immigration on healthcare and housing pressure before he was escorted away by security.

Hours later, an anti-coal and gas protester from a climate activist group interrupted Dutton's first official appearance of the day at a Brisbane brewery.

The female protester carried a sign carrying the message "no new gas or nuclear" referring to Dutton's proposal to build nuclear power plants.

It was the first of two disruptions of the day for Dutton, whose second event of the day in Brisbane was again interrupted by a protester from the same climate action group.

Also campaigning in Brisbane on Saturday was Adam Bandt, leader of the Greens - Australia's third-largest political party.

The presence of the three leaders on the first day of the campaign confirms the status of Brisbane - and Queensland - as a key battleground in the election.

Of the 150 electorates that make up the House of Representatives -- the lower house of parliament where the government is formed -- 30 are in Queensland.

Labor enters the election holding 77 seats in the lower house but only five in Queensland, traditionally considered a Coalition stronghold.

Both major parties are targeting three Brisbane seats that were surprisingly won by the Greens in 2022.

If neither Labor nor the Coalition can make gains in Queensland it would increase the likelihood of a minority government -- an eventuality where neither party wins a clear majority of seats in the house and must negotiate with minor parties and independents for their support.

Comments:

Michael T.

Protesters making their voices heard loud and clear on day one! This is democracy in action 👏

Sarah L.

I get why people protest but disrupting events just makes it harder to actually hear the policies. Wish they'd ask questions during Q&A instead.

Raj P.

Queensland is always the decider in our elections. Interesting to see both leaders starting there instead of NSW or Victoria.

Emma W.

The Greens winning those Brisbane seats last time was a wake-up call. Major parties can't take Queensland for granted anymore!

David K.

Not impressed with either leader's response to the protesters. Albanese looked uncomfortable and Dutton just dismissed them. We deserve better.
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