That's a wrap! Here's what happened on day 22
Here's a rundown of what Scott Morrison, Anthony Albanese and their teams were up to:
Where the leaders campaigned
- Prime Minister Scott Morrison: Sydney (Parramatta), Geelong (Corio) and southwest Victoria (Corangamite)
- Labor leader Anthony Albanese: Brisbane (Brisbane)
What the Coalition wanted to talk about
- An extra 50,000 older Australians will get access to the Commonwealth Seniors Health Card.
- A $10 reduction for medicines on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, taking the co-payment from $42.50 to $32.50.
What Labor wanted to talk about
- Labor has a plan to help people buy their first home, make medicines cheaper, roll out electric car charging stations and overhaul care for children and seniors.
- A commitment to match the coalition's promise to expand eligibility for the senior's health card.
- A $12.50 reduction for medicines on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, taking the co-payment from $42.50 to $30.
What made news
- Newspoll shows Labor ahead 53-47 on a two-party preferred basis.
- Resolve poll shows Labor ahead 54-46 on a two-party basis.
- Job advertising suffered a small fall in April, but still pointed to strong employment growth in the months ahead.
- Independent South Australian candidate Nick Xenophon called for gambling industry advertising on TV to be more tightly controlled and sponsorship of sporting clubs banned.
- Mr Morrison attended an Eid prayers event in western Sydney marking the end of Ramadan where he was approached by a woman who begged him to help rescue her family trapped in Afghanistan.
What they said
Mr Albanese: "If you're working today (Labour Day), you deserve your penalty rates."