I’ve never been afraid to speak my mind. That hasn’t always served me well, even though I make a genuine effort to be honest and clear. I suspect this will be one of those times, but it needs to be said.
Another round of polls is out, and frankly, they’re depressing. Not just because of what they show, but because of what they say about us. Either too many people aren’t taking them seriously, or too many are making decisions without really thinking through the consequences. Neither is reassuring.
And then there’s how these polls are used. They’re no longer just a snapshot of public sentiment, they’ve become a tool to shape it. Headlines are crafted to steer opinion, to build momentum, to make outcomes feel inevitable. That should concern anyone who values genuine democratic choice.
Meanwhile, the country feels like it’s sliding. That trajectory didn’t start yesterday, but it’s hard to ignore that it has accelerated in recent years. Yet despite that, current polling suggests Anthony Albanese and Labor would still be in a winning position if an election were held now. That disconnect is hard to reconcile.
At the same time, One Nation is polling strongly, not because it offers a fully formed pathway forward, but because it is tapping into something very real: frustration, pressure, and a sense that people are not being heard. “We hear you, we’ll fix it” is a powerful message. But slogans are not solutions.
We’ve seen that before. Many believed Anthony Albanese was the answer. Twice. It’s worth asking, honestly, where that has left us.
Meanwhile, the Coalition continues to be dismissed. Not necessarily because it lacks capability, but because it isn’t playing the same game. It isn’t shouting the loudest or promising the quickest fix, it’s arguing for a more difficult path back to stability.
And here’s the part that should give people pause: figures like Angus Taylor and Matt Canavan bring significant economic and policy experience to the table, experience grounded in portfolios, markets, and the real-world mechanics of how economies function. You don’t have to agree with them, but dismissing that level of economic literacy in favour of whoever has the simplest or loudest message is a risk we shouldn’t be taking lightly.
Here’s the uncomfortable truth: if we keep rewarding whoever tells us what we want to hear, rather than who is prepared to deal with reality, nothing will change. In fact, it will get worse.
I don’t say this lightly, but I do say it plainly, I’m losing faith in our willingness to confront hard truths and back those prepared to act on them. Two elections in a row suggest we’re not learning. If that continues, the next one won’t just be disappointing, it will deepen the very problems so many say they want fixed.
At some point, we either start thinking more critically about who and what we’re voting for…or we accept the consequences of not doing so.