Television Interview - Sunrise

NATALIE BARR, HOST: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese joins me now. Good morning, Prime Minister.

ANTHONY ALBANESE, PRIME MINISTER: Good morning Nat.

BARR: Power companies have really held this country for ransom this week, haven’t they? We are all going to pay the price down the track. What are you going to do to make sure this never happens again?

Television Interview - Today Show

ALISON LANGDON, HOST: The Prime Minister joins us now from Canberra. Good morning, Prime Minister. You’d like a night noodle market, wouldn't you?

ANTHONY ALBANESE, PRIME MINISTER: Good morning. Night noodle market is pretty sensational. It got suspended there for a couple of years like everything else, but it's very good. I don't mind that.

LANGDON: Good stuff, we're on the same page.

PRIME MINISTER: Is it back in Hyde Park is it?

Statement From The Meeting Of National Cabinet

Today the Prime Minister, along with state and territory First Ministers, met in Canberra to discuss their shared priorities.

They discussed how the National Cabinet can support strong collaborative relationships and drive progress on priorities for the nation.

National Cabinet will build on recent collaborative efforts to support the COVID-19 health response and support the delivery of additional areas of focus.

Press Conference Parliament House Canberra, ACT

ANTHONY ALBANESE, PRIME MINISTER: Today we've had a successful National Cabinet meeting, the first of which have had the great honour and privilege to chair. It was conducted in a very good spirit, a spirit of engagement, one that recognised our common interests and our common purpose to serve people in our respective state and territories, but from my perspective to serve people around the nation.

Press Conference - Melbourne

DANIEL ANDREWS, PREMIER OF VICTORIA: It's great to be at The Alfred with the Prime Minister, my good friend and a real partner when it comes to health services, And Friday's National Cabinet meeting showed that very clearly for all Victorians to see. And it is great to have someone who might be from Sydney, but he governs for the entirety of our nation. And that's a really important thing. So, welcome Albo. It's very good to see you here. Today's about better research, better treatment, changing lives, saving lives.

Interview with Paul Culliver - ABC Radio Capricornia Breakfast

PAUL CULLIVER, HOST: Today the new Labor Government will hold Federal Cabinet here in Gladstone. Anthony Albanese is the Prime Minister of Australia. Good morning to you.

ANTHONY ALBANESE, PRIME MINISTER: Good morning. Thanks for having me on the program.

CULLIVER: Worth noting the ALP does not hold a seat in regional Queensland outside the southeast corner. Did that inform your decision to come to Gladstone today?

A pay rise for Australian workers

Australia’s low-paid workers will be better off because the Albanese Labor Government fought to get them a pay rise.

During the election campaign, we promised to put in a new submission to the Fair Work Commission’s annual wage review to argue that people on low wages should not go backwards. We delivered on that promise in our first fortnight in office.

Today, the Fair Work Commission has delivered a 5.2 per cent rise in the minimum wage, slightly above headline inflation.

Press conference - Gladstone Convention Centre

ANTHONY ALBANESE, PRIME MINISTER: Thanks very much for joining us. And it's fantastic to be here in Gladstone at our first Regional Cabinet meeting right here in Central Queensland. And it has been terrific to bring the entire team here to Gladstone. I want to be a Prime Minister who represents the entire country, our cities, our regions, our rural communities. And I want to make sure as well that we listen to Australians wherever they live, whoever they voted for. We will be a Government that represents the entire nation.

Radio Interview - ABC RN Breakfast with Patricia Karvelas

PATRICIA KARVELAS, HOST: The Government will today formally pledge to the United Nations its commitment to cut carbon emissions by 43 per cent by 2030. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese joins us now. Good morning, Prime Minister.

ANTHONY ALBANESE, PRIME MINISTER: Good morning, Patricia. Good to be with you. And good that Warwick asked me the first question, which is that I was there in 1971 to see Souths beat St George on the SCG Hill.

KARVELAS: I know you were.

PRIME MINISTER: Had to get that in, Patricia.