"It built like a runaway train, and that was the mystery secret of the song."
Mr Cutler, a former Labor party staffer, believes Labor ran very strong local campaigns. But he also thinks Dutton's policy flip-flopping and the aura of instability that projected was potent.That included announcing, and then walking back, public service job cuts and plans to end work-from-home arrangements, as well as a fluctuating stance on electric vehicle taxes.
Such optics were especially damaging, Mr Cutler argues, when contrasted with the image of strong, decisive leadership Dutton tries to convey."I almost think the Australian people would have respected him more if he stuck to it… and said, 'This is what I'm putting forward - if you don't like it, don't vote for it'," Mr Cutler tells the BBC.Back in Dickson, Rick - a retiree and fresh Liberal Party member - said on election night that he also felt confusion played a role in the party's defeat, particularly among young people.
"I think people couldn't understand Dutton's policies," he said.But 30-year-old April, who didn't provide her last name, says it is Dutton who didn't understand.
She can't remember a time when he wasn't in power in Dickson, and feels that over time he has lost touch with his own constituents and the country more broadly.
For her, the last straw was his instrumental role in the defeat of the Voice to Parliament referendum, which sought to recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the constitution and simultaneously establish a parliamentary advisory body for them.22-year-old English striker Liam Delap has held talks with both
andover a potential summer move.
Viktor Gyokeres' uncle says the 26-year-old Swedish striker made a decision during a family dinner to snuband