It’s Week Two of Peter Dutton’s Campaign and (Almost) Everything is tightly Scripted

“Who won the election?” 12-year-old Sammy Asks Peter Duttonleaning through the window of the passenger seat where the opposition leader sits.

The Coalition Leader has just finished his last pit stop in Melbourne’s Eastern Suburbs for the Day: A Petrol Station. By this point, he’s bone to six of them in the last seven days – mostly cleared of regular punters – selling his party’s promise to bring down petrol costs by about $ 14 per car a week. Economic Analysts Put that estimate a lot Lower – About $ 7.56.

“Are you related to Albanian?” Sammy asks, pepping dutton with questions he can’t duck and weave from like in a regular press conference.

Sammy’s unexpected intervention at a caulfield petrol station lasts just two minutes – and is a rare moment in an otherwise scrupulously controlled federal election campaign.

Before sammy wandered through the tangle of cameramen with their lenses on dutton, the only people attending the seven-minute bowser visit were politicians, their staffers, media and the petrol station staff, who were informed of the impending visit.

The meticulous planning is a regular feature of the modern Australian election but 2025 marks another change in how tightly scripted every handshake, smile, wave and petrol fill up has been.

The Australian Federal Police warned in march threats against elected officials have continued to rise. In the first days of both major parties’ campaigns, protests crashed press conferences, masquerading as media and capturing headlines about their causes.

Peter Dutton Visits A Steel Facility in Erskine Park, in Western Sydney on Day 11 of the Election Campaign, Wednesday, April 9, 2025. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

For those in the press pack, these interventions add color and movement to the day’s story – a welcome addition for media trying to attract attention from a public typical uninterested or disillusioned by the political news cycle. But for politicians and protective personnel, these breaches demonstrate how quickly threats can become disasters if the intruders have violent intentions.

While the threat might be very real, further locking down a politician’s visit results in an even more sanitized campaign.

Australia is a fortnight into a five-week election campaign and there’s cells a glimpse in the Nightly News of Leaders Having Unvetted Public Interactions, Let Alone on Social Media.

For two men enifing to become leaders of the Australian people, neither have spent very much time with them – those outside the political class anyway.

While a public street walk was already a rarity in previous elections, it’s now a national security risk.

Both the public and the media are worse off for it, but politicians are too too. When Public Trust in Democratic Institutions is at an all-time low, genuine engagement with the public, without all the smoke and mirrors, is crucial.

On Friday, Dutton denied there had been any chemical this election campaign because of security concerns.

“It has not stopped me from doing anything, and it won not on this campaign,” he said.

“I think this is an opportunity to speak to the Australian people, to see as many people as humanly possible, and we’ll continue that over the course of the campaign.”

Bringing order to the press pack

Back in Dutton’s Camp, the Mood and Strategy has shifted.

After a train wreck opening campaign week, the former policeman turned property investor turned mp is taking back control.

At the start of the week, the Coalition Announced a spectacular about-face on its working from home policy, worried it was further bleeding votes from women. It also sought to put to bed some of the confusion around its promise to Sack 41,000 Public Servants.

While many questions still remain remout how the opposition would actually achieve the target with no forced redundancies, the opposition at least ruled out immediate mass cuts in canberra.

On tuesday, after dutton apologized for the misspell – something the former coalition Prime Minister often refrains from – The Opposition Leader was back in charge.

Dutton muzzled the press pack in a way Albanian has often struggled to achieve. Instead of pitting traveling Journalists against each other in order to get Dutton’s Attention during Press Conferences, the Opposition Leader has prioritized order.

In three press conferences between Wednesday and Friday, Dutton methodically gave each journalist a question in order of where they were standing.

Dutton at a press conference after visiting a manufacturing facility in Bayswater, in Eastern Melbourne on Day 13 of the Campaign, Thursday, April 10, 2025. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

The result mean media didnt scream over one another to get their questions in. It also gave dutton time to respond to each answer and disrupted any control the press pack might have tried to gain over a politician only wanting to deliver speaking points, not answerers.

In a staid, scripted election campaign, press conferences can offer the only windows into a politician’s mindset, or sometimes the cracks in their facade. It’s not about the media gaining a scalp, but showing the unpolished parts of a person hellbent on being a perfect specimen for voters.

The whole script for election campaigns should be thrown out, but that’s unlikely to happen, given the major parties and the political conventions that benefits them. And it’s unclear what an election campaign without the major political parties controlling them could even look.

In the absence of difficult press conferences and leaders visiting real voters in real scenarios, it is more challenging for the australian public to determine which leads the most sense for them.

Personal safety and control is paramount for those who want to lead, but it can only lead to worse outcomes for democratic institutions if it comes at the cost of genuine engagement.

And genuine engagement should not be defined by Campaign Managers and Political Party Strategists.