Prime Minister Anthony Albanese addresses a Labor caucus meeting at Parliament House in Canberra on Friday 9 May 2025.
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In his first address to the Labor caucus after the party’s major victory, Albanese—starting with an admission that celebrations were “a bit loose” on Saturday night—highlighted a range of his government’s accomplishments over the past three years and emphasized unity within his now larger party room.

“I repeated the message a number of times in this room of the importance of unity,” he said.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese addresses a Labor caucus meeting at Parliament House in Canberra on Friday 9 May 2025.
Anthony Albanese has address Labor caucus for the first time since the party’s landslide election win. (Alex Ellinghausen)

“Not getting ahead of ourselves, of being focused not on ourselves – because I have seen that happen as well, we know where that ends.

“Focus out on the Australian people. On the people who voted for us.

“That has got to be our focus each and every day. How do we improve their lives, how do we make a positive difference for them, for those families, many of whom backed Labor for the first time in their life, some of whom came back to us.”

This speech follows news that two respected, senior ministers—Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus and Industry and Science Minister Ed Husic—will be removed from the cabinet due to maneuvers by the party’s right faction, with an announcement expected in the coming days.

Mark Dreyfus attends the Labor Governments first Caucus meeting on May 09, 2025 in Canberra, Australia.
Mark Dreyfus is set to be removed from cabinet. (Getty)

Senior senator Murray Watt said this morning that those demotions aren’t due to their ability, but instead the heightened competition for the 30 cabinet positions from a much larger party room.

“I don’t think this is a reflection on their performance,” Employment Minister Murray Watt said this morning.

“It’s a reflection on the fact that we have a lot of good people and some of whom have understandable ambitions.”

Labor has secured at least 90 seats in the House of Representatives – a number that could rise further as counting in undecided seats continues, and a significant increase from its previous total of 78, and it has also gained at least two extra Senate seats.

Under party rules, the factions decide the MPs who make up the cabinet, but their specific positions are assigned by the prime minister.

Anthony Albanese speaks to Members of the Labor Government in the caucus meeting on May 09, 2025 in Canberra, Australia.
Albanese is set for formally unveil his new cabinet in the coming days. (Getty)

Former prime minister Paul Keating, who was in the right faction during his time in politics, yesterday labelled the demotions of Husic and Dreyfus as “a showing of poor judgement, unfairness and diminished respect for the contribution of others”.

Meanwhile, the Liberal Party and Greens are set to decide their leaders next week.

Sussan Ley and Angus Taylor have both nominated for what will be a two-horse race to become the next opposition leader on Tuesday, while the likes of Sarah Hanson-Young and Mehreen Faruqi are firming as the likely contenders to replace Adam Bandt as Greens leader.
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