Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
ABC News
ABC News
National
political correspondent Brett Worthington

Scott Morrison and Anthony Albanese in battle to be prime minister as Australia heads to election

The election will determine if Scott Morrison or Anthony Albanese will be the prime minister. (ABC News: Emma Machan)

Both men have spent a good part of their lives in politics but, come May 21, one will be prime minister and the other will likely face the end of his political career.

Scott Morrison heads to the election as the first Prime Minister since John Howard, more than 14 years ago, to serve a full term as the nation's leader.

The man trying to stop him from securing the Coalition a fourth term is Labor's Anthony Albanese, a 26-year veteran of the federal parliament. 

Compare the pair:

Scott John Morrison

Anthony John Albanese

Party

Liberal

Labor

Born

13/05/1968

02/03/1963

Family

Married, two children

Divorced, one child

Education

Bachelor of Science (Hons)

Bachelor of Economics

Elected

November 2007

March 1996

Electorate

Cook, southern seat, Sydney

Grayndler, inner-southern seat, Sydney

Cabinet minister

2013 - present

2007 - 2013

Portfolios

Prime minister, treasurer, immigration and social services

Infrastructure, regional development and communications

Leader since

August 2018

May 2019

Prime Minister Scott Morrison

Scott Morrison has been the Prime Minister since 2018. (ABC News: David Sciasci)

Once dubbed an accidental prime minister after coming to power in a leadership spill that toppled Malcolm Turnbull, Morrison has served a full term with largely no speculation about his leadership.

He all-but-single-handedly led his party to win an election few thought possible in 2019, stamping his authority on the Coalition.

However, later that year, Morrison faced broad condemnation, even from his own side of politics, when it was revealed he was taking a secret holiday to Hawaii while Australia's east coast burned.

The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic gave Morrison a political reset, with the shutting down of the nation giving him a chance to reassert himself. 

His standing in opinion polls surged and, in late 2020, he appeared on track to secure the Coalition a fourth term in power.

But issues with the vaccine rollout, a lack of rapid antigen tests when Omicron hit and scandals around grant programs saw Morrison and the Coalition take a hit in the public's standing. 

Scott Morrison is unlikely to continue to lead the Liberal Party if the Coalition loses the election. (ABC News: Adam Kennedy)

After famously saying, "I don't hold a hose, mate" while defending his Hawaiian holiday, the 2022 floods saw Morrison using a new approach, immediately travelling to devastated communities after leaving COVID-19 isolation.

With Russia invading Ukraine, and China ever-assertive, Morrison and the Coalition are keen for an election on national security and an economy recovering from Australia's first recession in three decades.

Morrison entered parliament as Labor rose to power in 2007. The married father of two represents a coastal seat in southern metropolitan Sydney.

A former Liberal state director and head of Tourism Australia, Morrison quickly rose through the political ranks and has been on the Liberal frontbench since 2008.

If the Coalition loses the election, few expect him to continue to lead the Liberal Party, with Treasurer Josh Frydenberg and Defence Minister Peter Dutton the likely candidates to replace him.

Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese

Anthony Albanese has led Labor since his party lost the 2019 election. (ABC News: Ian Cutmore)

Anthony Albanese arrived in the nation's parliament as John Howard rose to power after 13 years of Labor governments.

He has spent just six of his 26 years in office on the government benches, and while he's no stranger to federal politics, he's spent the past year trying to reintroduce himself to the public.

A former deputy prime minister during Kevin Rudd's second stint as PM, he has been on Labor's frontbench for more than two decades.

Albanese lost a leadership ballot to Bill Shorten in 2013 but, after two lost elections, he finally got his chance to lead Labor in 2019.

As leader, he has deliberately kept a low profile and insisted he would be "kicking with the wind" as the election loomed.

But the Cold War winds blowing from Eastern Europe risk limiting Albanese's opportunities to differentiate himself from Morrison and also land political blows on a nine-year-old government. 

Anthony Albanese is unlikely to continue to lead Labor if his party loses the election. (ABC News: Ian Cutmore)

Some in Labor feared he was a creature of opposition and might not have what it takes to lead Labor from the political wilderness to government.

But he capitalised on issues with the COVID-19 vaccine rollout and the availability of RATs to drive up his personal approval ratings and the political stocks of Labor.

The son of a single parent, Albanese has talked often about how his upbringing in government housing shaped the politician he has become.

Divorced and with one son, Albanese has a new partner and represents an inner-western Sydney electorate on the south side of the Parramatta River.

Albanese rose to the leadership uncontested in 2019. If Labor loses, the ALP is expected to have a wide field of candidates seeking to replace him. 

The seats that will shape the election:

The ABC has been tracking the Liberal and Labor leaders since the start of the year, to get a sense of the electorates that will determine the election. 

The trend so far suggests seats in Western Australia, northern Tasmania, Central Queensland, suburban Brisbane, New South Wales' South Coast and Western Sydney will determine who wins the election.

The key battlegrounds in the 2022 Federal Election.
Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.