By Andrew Klein
March 22, 2026
Introduction: The Boos That Told the Truth
On March 19, 2026, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese visited Lakemba Mosque in western Sydney to celebrate Eid al-Fitr with the Muslim community. Fifteen minutes into the visit, protesters began heckling. They booed. They told Albanese and Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke to “Get out!” They called them “genocide supporters”.
One heckler was tackled to the ground by security and escorted away.
When Albanese spoke to reporters afterward, he dismissed the incident. The mosque event was “incredibly positive,” he said. “If you got a couple of people heckling in a crowd of 30,000, that should be put in that perspective”.
He did not address the content of the protesters’ anger. He did not acknowledge the grief of families watching their relatives killed in Gaza with Australian support. He did not reflect on the two and a half years of Israeli crimes—over 72,000 Palestinians killed, millions displaced—to which his government has been “massively indifferent,” as one commentator put it.
Instead, he attributed the protest to “frustration” over the government’s designation of Hizb ut-Tahrir as a prohibited hate group.
This is not leadership. This is deflection. This is the man who will go down in history as one who was never responsible for the mischief he caused, never accountable because accountability was not part of his makeup.
Part One: What Actually Happened at Lakemba Mosque
The facts are clear. Albanese and Burke were invited by Muslim community leaders to join Eid prayers. About fifteen minutes after they arrived, protesters interrupted. Video images show demonstrators booing, telling the two ministers to “Get out,” and calling them “genocide supporters”.
One of the organisers tried to calm the crowd: “Dear brothers and sisters, keep calm a little bit. It is Eid. It is a joyful day”.
A security guard tackled one heckler to the ground and escorted him away. When Albanese and Burke left, protesters followed, yelling “Shame on you!”.
The protesters’ anger was not mysterious. It was not about a proscription order. It was about Gaza. It was about the Australian government’s support for Israel’s military campaign, which has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians, destroyed Gaza, and displaced millions. It was about a government that has repeatedly urged “ceasefire” while continuing to back Israel’s “right to self-defence”.
The people in that mosque were grieving. They were watching their families and their countrymen being murdered with support from the Australian government. And when they finally had the Prime Minister in front of them, they told him exactly what they thought.
Part Two: The Deflection – Dismissal and Distortion
Albanese’s response was a masterclass in political evasion.
First, he minimized the protest: “a couple of people heckling in a crowd of 30,000”. He did not acknowledge that the entire gathering had been disrupted, that security had manhandled a worshipper, that he had been forced to leave early. He reduced the anger of an entire community to a “couple of people.”
Second, he reframed the protest as something other than what it was. He suggested the “frustration” stemmed from the government’s designation of Hizb ut-Tahrir as a prohibited hate group. This is a deliberate misdirection. The protesters did not chant about Hizb ut-Tahrir. They chanted about Gaza. They called Albanese a “genocide supporter.” They told him to “get out.”
Third, he refused to engage with the substance of the criticism. He did not answer the question: why does Australia support this war? He did not explain how endless “ceasefire” rhetoric with no action constitutes leadership. He did not address the hundreds of thousands of Australians who have marched for Palestine, or the growing number of Australians who see through the government’s complicity.
This is not accountability. This is the avoidance of accountability. This is the man who will do anything to avoid looking in the mirror.
Part Three: The Man Who Is Never Responsible
Albanese’s behaviour at Lakemba Mosque is not an isolated incident. It is a pattern.
In July 2025, the Centre for Public Integrity gave the Albanese government an “F” on its integrity report card, accusing it of being less transparent and accountable than the Morrison government. The government failed in its commitment to transparency by trying to tighten freedom of information laws, making it easier for public servants to refuse requests on the grounds that documents could “embarrass the government”. It stalled reforms to end “jobs for mates” culture. It failed to adequately protect whistleblowers.
The same report noted that MPs can sponsor passes for lobbyists, giving them unfettered access to restricted areas of Parliament—and that no major party MPs voluntarily disclosed who they sponsored. Independent MP Helen Haines said suppressing transparency increased public distrust in parliament and politicians. “That’s the last thing we want,” she said, “when democracy in the free world is under attack”.
This is the context in which Albanese dismisses protesters, deflects criticism, and refuses accountability. He is a very good corporate manager—and a very bad political leader. He manages the narrative, manages the optics, manages the media. But he does not lead. He does not answer. He does not account.
Part Four: The Opportunity Grifter
Albanese is an opportunistic grifter, like many others who came to prominence in the 21st century. He has no fixed principles beyond staying in power. He has no commitment to justice beyond what polls well. He has no courage to stand against the lobbies that fund his party.
He kept his history of fighting against the BDS movement dark for a very good reason: it showed his true colours. Scratch the surface of this government, and what do we find? Supporters of genocide, curtailment of civil liberties, endless wars. Not blokes fighting for workers’ rights and equality. Just the same old politics of power dressed in a new suit.
The protesters at Lakemba Mosque understood this. They told Albanese: “You don’t even represent us.” “What are you doing here?”. They were not a “couple of hecklers.” They were the voice of a community that has been ignored, dismissed, and gaslit from the get-go.
Albanese has tarnished himself as a result of his blind acceptance of huge and sustained Zionist lies. Many of the people in that mosque were dealing with private family grief after two and a half years of terrible Israeli crimes against Gazans, Palestinians, Lebanese. So many murders. Crimes to which Albanese has been massively indifferent. No wonder it all became too much for them.
Part Five: The Choice Before Him
Albanese will go down in history as one who was never responsible for the mischief he caused, never accountable because accountability was not part of his makeup.
He had a choice. He could have listened to the protesters at Lakemba Mosque. He could have acknowledged their grief. He could have asked himself: what have we done? what are we doing? what will we answer for?
Instead, he dismissed them. He deflected. He blamed “a couple of hecklers” and a proscription order.
This is the man who will never be accountable. This is the man who will never be responsible. This is the man who will go down in history—not as a leader, but as a manager. Not as a statesman, but as a grifter.
The people of Australia are not idiots. Feelings are running high. He has chosen the wrong side in this war. And when history writes its final judgment, it will not remember his dismissals or his deflections. It will remember that he was there—and did nothing.
Conclusion: Reap What You Sow
The protesters at Lakemba Mosque told Albanese the truth. They told him he did not represent them. They told him they saw through him. They told him that the government he leads has chosen genocide, endless war, and the silencing of dissent.
Albanese dismissed them. He always does.
But the truth does not go away. The grief does not disappear. The dead do not stop being dead.
Reap what you sow, Prime Minister. Australians aren’t idiots. We’re done believing that Arabs and Muslims are the enemy. We see through Zionism. And we see through you.