there were a couple of ‘moments’ in second Albanese-Dutton encounter
- Written by Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

Two “moments” stuck out in Wednesday’s leaders’ debate, the second head-to-head of the campaign.
Peter Dutton cut his losses over his faux pas this week when he wrongly named Indonesian president Prabowo Subianto as having said there had been a Russian approach to base aircraft in Papua.
So that was a mistake, ABC moderator David Speers asked. “It was a mistake.”
The other “moment” was in a discussion about negative gearing, when Anthony Albanese denied the government had sought modelling on that. The public service “certainly wasn’t commissioned by us to do so”. In fact, we know Treasurer Jim Chalmers asked Treasury to do it.
That enabled Dutton to repeat a favourite Coalition line. “This prime minister has a problem with the truth.” (Albanese has given grist for this line by his denial earlier in the campaign that he fell off a stage, when the footage contradicted him.)
While the leaders were predictably well-rehearsed across the broad sweep of issues, they could not prevent their weak spots being put on display.
Albanese struggled with something that has not been canvassed enough.Wasn’t there a case for more means testing of some of the big spending the government has undertaken?
Then of course there was the perennially unanswerable question: when will power prices come down? The PM squirmed.
Authors: Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra