National Library of Australia

Landslide: The 2025 Australian federal election

The Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia hosts the launch of Landslide, published by ANU Press and edited by Marian Sawer, Jill Sheppard, and John Warhurst.

ACT Arts Guide

Event Details

Category

ACT Arts Guide

Event Starts

Apr 16, 2026 18:00

Event Ends

Apr 16, 2026 19:00

Venue

National Library of Australia

Location

Parkes Place West, Parkes ACT, Australia

The Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia hosts the launch of Landslide, published by ANU Press and edited by Marian Sawer, Jill Sheppard, and John Warhurst.

Veteran journalist Nick Bryant will be in conversation with Associate Professor Jill Sheppard to discuss this new publication, exploring the unexpected landslide victory for the Labor Party in the 2025 election.

Last year’s federal election saw the Liberal Party’s worst ever election result and the continued rise of the non-major-party-vote. Australia’s leading election analysts explore what contributed to this outcome, including campaign effectiveness, changing demography, increased cultural and linguistic diversity, and external factors such as the ‘Trump effect’.

Attend in person

Entry to this event is free but bookings are essential.

Watch online

The presentation will also be available online. Please make a booking and the Library’s Events team will send you a direct link to the livestream event via email. Or you can join anytime through the Library’s YouTube channel.

About Associate Professor Jill Sheppard

Dr Jill Sheppard is an associate professor in the School of Politics and International Relations at the Australian National University. Her research interests are elections and voting, compulsory voting, political participation, and public opinion, particularly in Australia but also in a comparative context. She is a contributor to the ABC’s federal election coverage and an investigator on several major survey studies of Australian public opinion and behaviour, including the Australian Election Study, World Values Survey, and Asian Barometer Survey.

About Nick Bryant

During a career spanning almost thirty years, Nick Bryant came to be regarded as one of the BBC’s finest foreign correspondents. He has been posted in Washington, South Asia, Australia and New York, where he covered the Trump years. His writing has appeared in The Economist, The Washington PostThe AtlanticThe Sydney Morning HeraldThe AgeThe Monthly and The New Statesman. He broadcasts regularly on the BBC and ABC. Nick studied history at Cambridge and has a doctorate in American politics from Oxford.

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