Anthony Albanese is accused of failing a major leadership test – so could this be the beginning of the end of Labor’s political reign?

Anthony Albanese has been accused of failing a major leadership test as criminal asylum-seeking migrants continue to roam free in the community – after a landmark Supreme Court ruling freed 150 detainees.

Three released inmates – including a pedophile and a sex offender – have been arrested and charged in separate incidents since leaving prison.

But despite mounting public anger over the Albanian government's handling of the issue, Albanians have yet to respond to coalition calls to sack ministers or fire front cameras to reassure Australians that the crisis is under is control.

Social commentator Prue MacSween claimed that the Albanians failed a leadership test by not acting to address the issue.

“Anthony Albanese is a weak leader, he is in panic mode, and he is still sulking about the outcome of the Voice to Parliament,” MacSween told Ny Breaking Australia.

'He doesn't have the ticket to deal with the disaster he himself caused. He ran away; he has been away from the country more than in it.'

Anthony Albanese has yet to respond to coalition calls to sack ministers or personally install cameras to reassure Australians the crisis is under control

A new preventive detention regime to try to put detainees back behind bars was passed by the Senate on Tuesday and will clear the lower house on Wednesday evening.

But the opposition argues that legislation should have been a good thing once the court ruled so no one was released.

MacSween said not addressing this sooner had exposed Labour's “inexperience” in office.

“They are probably suffering from political paralysis,” she continued.

'They have no idea how to deal with this crisis of their own making. Labor treats voters like fools and pushes the blame aside.

'They have proven to be completely incompetent and arrogant. They think they can talk everything out, but the voters see through them.'

Among those arrested is Afghan refugee Aliyawar Yawari, 65, who was accused of attacking a woman at a hotel in South Australia on Saturday. Meanwhile, Mohammed Ali Nadari, 45, was arrested on drug charges in New South Wales.

Then on Monday, 33-year-old Emran Dad, a registered sex offender and leader of a child exploitation gang, was arrested in Melbourne for allegedly contacting minors on social media and breaching his reporting obligations.

MacSween criticized Home Secretary Clare O'Neil after she remained silent for three days about the alleged crimes committed by the released prisoners and only addressed the media this morning after facing calls to resign.

“She can appear on as many TV shows as she wants, the problem is she is incompetent and she is putting Australians at risk,” she said.

“And this woman who was allegedly attacked, I hope she throws the book at the government, at taxpayer expense, of course.

“How many more people are going to be exposed to these people who were in detention because they failed a good character test.”

Social commentator Prue MacSween (pictured) has accused the Albanian government of 'political paralysis' as a result of the Supreme Court ruling

MacSween called Home Secretary Clare O'Neil and Immigration Minister Andrew Giles (pictured) 'incompetent' for their lackluster response to released prisoners

MacSween said the Albanian government was developing into a one-term government due to a lack of strong leadership.

'They have to man up and come out of hiding. Right now they're probably sitting in their office sucking their thumbs, or maybe they're in the fetal position.”

The latest debacle comes just days after a poll showed Albanese's popularity has fallen to the lowest level since he became prime minister.

Labor's vote has fallen by four points to 31 percent in the past three weeks, while the Coalition's has risen by one point to 38 percent – the highest since the May 2022 election.

On a two-party preferred basis, Labor and the Coalition are tied 50-50 in the poll, which would likely result in Labor losing five seats and its majority if an election were held this weekend.

Albanese's personal approval rating, which fell two points to 40 percent, is now at the same level as Liberal Leader Peter Dutton.

This represents a decline of 12 percent in just the four months since July.

Making matters worse, the Prime Minister's dissatisfaction level has risen to 53 percent, giving him a net approval rating (satisfaction minus dissatisfaction) of minus 13.

Although Dutton's approval rating remains lower than that of Albanians at 37 percent, his disapproval rating is also lower at 50 percent, making the two political leaders equally unpopular at minus 13.

This was the second poll in a row showing more voters becoming more dissatisfied with Albanese's performance than with Dutton's.

The Prime Minister's decline in popularity began after the Voice referendum on October 14 was a resounding defeat in all states.

Rising interest rates since he came to power and Australia's cost-of-living crisis have also deterred voters.

Anthony Albanese is pictured with partner Jodie Haydon

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