
Anthony Norman Albanese
Prime Minister of Australia and leader of the Australian Labor Party
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
64/100
Raw Score
55/85
Confidence
70%
Evidence
Strong but contested on current governance
About
Australian prime minister with strong public-social policy instincts, a generally steady pressure record, and mixed results on some of his most ambitious national projects.
The evidence is strongest on repeated support for social programs, disaster relief, and inclusive public language. The record is more mixed on integrity and timing under political pressure because the 2023 Voice referendum failed and critics argued some later corrective actions, especially after the Bondi attack, came only after sustained pressure.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Raw score 55 out of 85 and weighted score 63.5 out of 100. Albanese's public record is strongest on state-backed social care, inclusive rhetoric, and steadiness during governing pressure. The main limits are mixed delivery on high-stakes commitments, contested timing on some corrective actions, and only partial public visibility into private faith and worship discipline.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Contribution to Others
Personal Discipline
Reliability
Stability Under Pressure
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Entered Parliament as member for Grayndler
Albanese was first elected to the Australian Parliament for Grayndler, beginning a long public career shaped by Labor politics and a publicly stated concern for working-class families.
→ Established the durable public platform from which his later ministerial and prime-ministerial commitments were made.
highSworn in as Australia's 31st prime minister
Albanese became prime minister after leading Labor back into government, framing his leadership around fairness, jobs, and a stronger social contract.
→ Moved from opposition rhetoric to direct responsibility for national decisions and delivery.
highBacked large flood recovery buybacks and relocation support in Lismore
After devastating floods, Albanese announced a major package for buybacks, home raising, and retrofitting in the Northern Rivers, explicitly arguing that repeated harm required more than symbolic sympathy.
→ Directed substantial public resources toward displaced residents and longer-term safety planning.
highCommitted government to the Indigenous Voice referendum question
Albanese publicly advanced the constitutional recognition referendum, presenting it as a way to hear Indigenous Australians more directly on matters affecting them.
→ Set the terms for the government's most morally ambitious and politically risky first-term reform.
highAccepted part of the blame after the Voice referendum failed
After the referendum was defeated, Albanese accepted a share of responsibility rather than claiming pure victimhood, but the loss still counted as a major failure of persuasion and execution for his government.
→ Showed some public accountability while leaving a lasting mark on the government's moral and political effectiveness.
highHelped stabilise a tense but economically important relationship with China
During talks with Premier Li Qiang, Albanese's government pursued a more stable channel with China while openly managing disagreements over trade, military conduct, and critical minerals.
→ Supported trade normalisation without fully removing geopolitical tension.
mediumPublicly acknowledged that Catholic faith remained part of him during mourning for Pope Francis
During the 2025 election campaign, Albanese attended Mass for Pope Francis and said he tried not to talk much about faith in public, but that Catholicism remained part of who he was.
→ Provided modest direct evidence for theistic belief without proving a highly visible devotional routine.
mediumWon a second term as prime minister
Albanese became the first Australian prime minister in 21 years to win a second consecutive term, suggesting a broad enough trust base to survive a difficult first term and polarised international climate.
→ Renewed his political mandate and extended the time horizon for policy delivery.
highAnnounced a royal commission into antisemitism and social cohesion after the Bondi attack
Following the Bondi Beach antisemitic mass shooting, Albanese announced a royal commission and broader social-cohesion response, though critics argued the move came later than it should have.
→ Showed a corrective response to a national trauma while also highlighting prior hesitation under pressure.
highCombined short-term fuel relief with a long-term national fuel security package
During the 2026 fuel crisis, Albanese's government halved fuel excise, coordinated a national plan, and announced more than $10 billion for fuel reserves and resilience infrastructure.
→ Paired immediate cost relief with longer-horizon supply protection during an international shock.
highPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
2022 eastern and southern flood disasters
2022Soon after taking office, Albanese faced severe flood emergencies across multiple states and communities with repeated displacement and uninsured losses.
Response: He leaned into federal-state coordination, cleanup funding, and buyback or relocation schemes rather than limiting the response to sympathy and short-term visits.
positive2023 Voice referendum defeat
2023A referendum he treated as a major moral commitment was defeated decisively, weakening his authority and disappointing the communities he had asked to trust the process.
Response: He accepted part of the blame and called for unity, which showed some accountability, but the failure still exposed limits in persuasion, coalition-building, and political timing.
mixed2026 Bondi attack and antisemitism backlash
2026A mass antisemitic attack and subsequent national debate put Albanese under intense pressure to show moral clarity, urgency, and practical follow-through.
Response: He eventually announced a royal commission and broader response measures, which showed corrective movement but also intensified criticism that he had hesitated too long.
mixedProgression
crisis years
His first term tested whether social concern could survive disaster response, national division, and international shocks without collapsing into drift.
mixedcurrent stage
He remains a socially oriented but contested leader whose moral instincts are more convincing than his cleanest strategic wins.
stableearly years
A working-class upbringing in public housing and life with a single mother on a disability pension shaped a durable fairness narrative.
upgrowth years
Long parliamentary service and major portfolios turned that fairness narrative into institutional experience and delivery capacity.
upBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Returns again and again to public spending or state coordination for people facing disaster, high living costs, or structural exclusion.
- • Uses relatively empathetic and inclusive language in public, especially toward Indigenous Australians and people under economic strain.
- • Keeps a broadly steady public temperament during crises instead of leaning into panic or culture-war performance.
Concerns
- • His most morally ambitious reform of the first term, the Voice referendum, ended in a major strategic failure.
- • He can appear reactive when pressure intensifies, which leaves opponents room to argue he moves only once delay becomes politically costly.
- • Public evidence of personal religious discipline and direct personal charity is limited compared with evidence about policy choices.
Evidence Quality
14
Strong
4
Medium
1
Weak
Overall: strong_but_contested_on_current_governance
This profile evaluates observable conduct and public evidence, not the unseen state of a person's soul.