Australia election 2025 live: ‘We made a mistake’ – Dutton apologises as Coalition backflips on work from home policy and public sector cuts | Australian election 2025

Dutton: ‘we made a mistake’ on work from home policy

Peter Dutton has apologised over the Coalition’s policy to force more public servants to return to the office.

The Opposition leader is on the Today Show and says he’s “listening to what people have to say”, and like Hume, has also blamed Labor for implying that the policy would also apply to the private sector.

Sarah Abo grills him, starting off by asking: “will you be asking for forgiveness from female voters?”

Dutton replies: “I think I am today”:

We never had any intention for work from home changes that we were proposing in Canberra to apply across the private sector, but the Prime minister was out there saying that, it was just a lie …

We’ve made a mistake in relation to the policy. We apologise for that. And we’ve dealt with it.

There’s been a fair bit of confusion over how exactly the party would axe 41,000 public service jobs. The Coalition’s policy on that has also taken a big step back, with the promise of no redundancies. But Dutton claims that was always the policy.

That was always the plan, that there would be natural attrition and a hiring freeze and that achieved.

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A little earlier this morning, shadow housing minister Michael Sukkar was on ABC RN Breakfast, talking about the Coalition’s policy announcement over the weekend that they’ll cut international student numbers to help fix the housing crisis.

Labor had tried to legislate a cap on international students last year, but the Coalition had refused to give their support (and so had the crossbench).

While experts and industry groups have said international students only make up around 4-6% of rentals in Australia, Sukkar says he think Australians would be “utterly startled” by that figure.

I think they [Australians] would be utterly startled to find that 6% of our rental stock in this in the entire nation is taken up by international students… 6% of our entire rental stock is being occupied by foreign students. I don’t think that makes the point that those are suggesting, I think it makes the exact point we’re making. A huge number of our homes are being occupied by international students.

Sukkar says the Coalition’s policy would cut around 80,000 international students, but that there will still be a “very significant” number of the cohort in Australia, by international standards.

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