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During a fiery session of Question Time, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese launched a sharp critique of the Coalition, capitalizing on emerging divisions within the Opposition. His move aimed to divert attention from the Reserve Bank’s recent decision to increase interest rates by 0.25 percentage points.
Education Minister Jason Clare drew an amusing comparison between the internal strife of the Liberals and Nationals and a reported family feud involving Brooklyn Beckham. The tensions allegedly arose following Brooklyn’s marriage to Nicola Peltz, which sparked disagreements over family dynamics and wedding plans.
Clare quipped, “They resemble a couple who booked a non-refundable holiday, broke up, and now have to endure it together… they make the Beckhams look like a harmonious family,” drawing laughter and highlighting the Coalition’s discord.
Albanese also set his sights on Alex Hawke, a key ally of Opposition Leader Sussan Ley. Hawke, known for his influential role within the NSW center-right faction, has been a steadfast supporter of Ley and instrumental in her leadership win over Angus Taylor following the Liberals’ significant electoral defeat in 2025.
Speculation is growing that Taylor might challenge Ley for leadership, especially after Andrew Hastie declared he would not pursue the top position.
Taylor is said to be considering a move against Ley, after leadership rival Andrew Hastie publicly ruled himself out.
‘But the great pretender to the throne, the member for Hume who inexplicably remains on the frontbench… a man with no apparent honour at all, [plotting] against his leader from the front bench,’ Health Minister Mark Butler said.
Hawke fired back, insisting comments against Taylor were a breach of parliamentary rules.
Albanese questioned Sussan Ley’s key ally Alex Hawke over his defence of Angus Taylor
Albanese, clearly amused, heckled Hawke from across the chamber.
‘Whose side are you on?’ Albanese taunted.
‘I wouldn’t want you on my side.’
Throughout Question Time, Labor repeatedly referenced Ley’s possible leadership challengers, continually pointing to Hastie and Taylor.
Energy Minister Chris Bowen went further, targeting Lindsay MP Melissa McIntosh, who has previously aired her own leadership ambitions, while discussing take-up of government home batteries in her electorate.
‘[McIntosh] has got some catching up to do. She’s installed 1,592 batteries in Lindsay. Which I read is about 1,591 more than leadership votes she has in any proposed ballot,’ Bowen said.
Meanwhile, Hastie, seated on the far backbench, appeared indifferent to the drama, spending much of Question Time texting on his phone.
Jason Clare compared the Liberals & Nationals to the dramas of the Beckham family (pictured)
A challenge to Ley’s leadership is unlikely this sitting week, the Daily Mail understands.
The drama occurred after the Reserve Bank lifted the cash rate by 25 basis points to 3.85 per cent on Tuesday afternoon, the first hike since November 2023.
Fresh figures from Canstar show the sting for homeowners will be immediate.
A typical owner‑occupier with a $600,000 loan and 25 years left will see monthly repayments jump by around $90, assuming banks pass the rise straight on to variable-rate customers.
The Opposition accused the Government of fuelling the rate hike with what it claims is reckless, inflation‑driving spending.
But the government hit back, insisting the RBA moved because of surging private‑sector demand, not public spending.