That is the central theme of a blistering recent analysis by Chris Kenny, who catalogues what he describes as a growing pattern of denial, backflips and outright porkies from the Prime Minister. (Sky News Australia)
The problem is no longer just political spin. Every politician spins. The problem is that Albanese increasingly appears to think reality itself is negotiable.
Chris Kenny highlighted repeated examples where Albanese has denied previous statements, rewritten history, or attempted to walk away from promises Australians clearly remember hearing. Energy bill reductions. Tax policy. Housing commitments. Economic promises. Again and again, the story changes once power has been secured. (The Australian)
And now comes the real test: the budget.
Treasurer Jim Chalmers is preparing to hand down a budget that reportedly abandons or waters down commitments Labor used heavily during the last election campaign. Australians were promised relief from soaring living costs, cheaper power bills, responsible spending and economic competence. Instead, families are facing stubborn inflation, crushing housing costs, rising debt and increasing pressure on household budgets.
Yet somehow, according to Albanese, none of this is Labor’s fault.
That is what makes this so dangerous.
When a Prime Minister refuses to acknowledge obvious reality, good policy becomes impossible. Governments can only solve problems they are willing to admit exist. If every failure is rebranded as success, if every broken promise is explained away, and if every contradiction is denied despite video evidence, then accountability disappears.
Chris Kenny argues this pattern has become habitual — almost reflexive. (The Australian) Australians are told not to believe what they saw, what they heard, or what Labor promised only months earlier.
It creates a corrosive effect on trust.
Democracy depends on voters believing that words still matter. Election campaigns matter. Commitments matter. If politicians can simply gaslight the public after every election, cynicism grows and public confidence collapses.
And there is another problem here. Weak leadership at home has consequences abroad. A government disconnected from reality domestically often projects confusion internationally as well. Australia faces major strategic and economic challenges — energy security, defence concerns, rising debt, declining productivity and cost-of-living pressures. This is not the time for a Prime Minister who appears more focused on narrative management than hard truths.
Australians can handle difficult news. What they resent is being treated like fools.
The coming budget may well expose the gap between what Labor promised and what it can actually deliver. If so, the real political issue will not just be broken promises — it will be whether Albanese once again tries to pretend the promises were never made in the first place.
Because eventually reality catches up.
Even with politicians.
Chris Kenny’s video:




