Campaign security concern as Albanese ambushed by alt-right media at Melbourne hotel

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has been ambushed by alt-right video makers in the lobby of his Melbourne hotel, sparking safety concerns about the ability of extremists to infiltrate secure locations despite increased security on the campaign trail.
A Labor source said the incident was concerning and underscored the growing risk of extremism around politics. The AFP is understood to have been aware of the incident and the prime minister’s office declined to comment.
A video circulating on far-right social media accounts on Tuesday showed two men confronting Albanese, demanding answers about housing and immigration.
One man interrupts the prime minister mid-conversation with communications staffer Fiona Sugden, saying: “There are hundreds of thousands of Australians around the country, who are unable to afford housing … when are you going to put Australians first?”
Sugden asks the man his name before the prime minister’s security detail manages to push him away. The video then switches to the view of a second man, shouting after Albanese in the lobby: “Albo, how do you feel about the rise in immigration, mate? Do you think it’s fair?”
The man argues with the prime minster’s security detail before Sugden says: “Unfortunately, you’re not staying here, so you can leave.”
Neither man threatens anyone directly, but it is not known how the pair slipped past security or were able to approach the prime minister’s group in the hotel’s foyer without being stopped.
Heightened security concerns have meant both Albanese and Opposition Leader Peter Dutton’s movements have been kept under wraps this campaign.
The Australian Federal Police’s chief Reece Kershaw issued a warning just before the election was called that threats against politicians have doubled in the past two years, prompting the agency to increase protection for MPs and their staff during the election campaign.