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Australia election 2025 live: Dutton recalls Father’s Day memory when he feared he’d nearly killed his dad; vice-chancellor calls for attacks on international students to stop | Australian election 2025

Dutton tells of the day he bought his dad some wild drive time

A slightly odd personal story from Peter Dutton to end his campaign event in Tasmania and segue into another spending announcement for the southern state, as the opposition leader tells of how he bought his father a ride in a Porsche around a racetrack for Father’s Day that nearly killed him, as he announces $18m to upgrade a local racetrack.

There are some things that you’ll remember during these election campaigns, and some of it’s just a whirlwind – you’re going from one place to the next – but I do remember most of a fast lap that I had not too far from here … around the track at at Symmons Plains raceway.

File shot of a car at Symmons Plains raceway in Tasmania. Photograph: Daniel Kalisz/Getty Images

The fast lap Dutton did reminded him of the Father’s Day racetrack gift he bought Dutton Snr a few years ago.

Now, I thought it was a great thing, a good thing to do as a son, and I remember it was about three or four laps, and about halfway through the second or third lap the guy decided to put his foot down and really give Dad the ultimate experience. But instead, what happened is that the car – and I can watch this in my mind as I speak to you in slow motion – started to do 360s and the car started to spin off the track into the sand.

Now, the story ended well, so I’ve got a good story to tell, ultimately, but I did have this passing thought that out of an active sort of good son interest in thinking about my dad that I’d killed my dad on Father’s Day … I did have flashbacks back to that moment when I was out on the track only a week or so ago …”

And then he segues neatly into a spending announcement:

We’ve committed $18 million to upgrade that racetrack, and I think that’s going to be a phenomenal investment in Tasmania.

What a whirlwind.

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Key events

Former Tasmania premier Tony Rundle dead at 86

Tony Rundle, the premier of Tasmania from March 1996 to September 1998, has died aged 86.

A Liberal, Rundle was sworn in as the premier of the state six weeks before the Port Arthur massacre.

Jeremy Rockliff, Tasmania’s current premier, described Rundle as “a kind, intelligent man, and one that I was truly fortunate to count as a mentor,” adding:

As Premier, he remodelled TAFE Tasmania and established Service Tasmania, negotiated Australia’s first Regional Forest Agreement, got BassLink underway, and delivered the State’s apology to our Aboriginal community.

I well recall Tony being a tower of strength and compassion as he led Tasmanians through the shock, grief and trauma of the tragedy at Port Arthur. In unity with prime minister John Howard, he drove critical gun law reform that all Australians benefit from today.

Vale Tony Rundle.

We’ve lost a fine Tasmanian.

Tony will always be remembered as a tower of strength and compassion, as he led Tasmanians through the shock and grief of the tragedy at Port Arthur.

He was a kind, intelligent man, and one that I was truly fortunate to count… pic.twitter.com/VWU3xsrEFt

— Jeremy Rockliff (@jeremyrockliff) April 6, 2025

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