Opposition (2013–2022) Chalmers was elected to parliament at the
2013 federal election, replacing the retiring ALP member
Craig Emerson in the
Division of Rankin. He defeated former MP
Brett Raguse for Labor preselection. Chalmers was made a shadow
parliamentary secretary in October 2013, a shadow minister in October 2015, and promoted to the
shadow cabinet after the
2016 election as Shadow Minister for Finance. Chalmers eventually chose not to stand for the position, allowing Albanese to become leader unopposed. He subsequently also ruled out standing for the deputy leadership. He was subsequently appointed Shadow Treasurer in Albanese's cabinet.
Albanese government (2022–present) Labor was victorious in the
2022 Australian federal election, and two days later, Albanese had himself, Chalmers and three other senior Labor frontbenchers sworn in as an interim five-person government, with Chalmers becoming the
Treasurer of Australia. He was also the interim
Minister for Home Affairs until the full ministry was sworn in after the
Quadrilateral Security Dialogue. In October 2022, Chalmers handed down his
first budget. In May 2023, Chalmers handed down his
second budget. After being initially predicted to deliver a surplus of over $4 billion, the budget ended up significantly exceeding expectations by delivering a surplus of $22.1 billion (equivalent to 0.9% of Australia's GDP); this was Australia's first budget surplus in 15 years, and the largest ever Australian budget surplus. In January 2024, Chalmers played a key role in championing the Albanese government's changes to the
stage three tax cuts. Chalmers handed down his
third budget in May 2024, which saw the government post a second consecutive surplus of $9.3 billion. He handed down the
2025 budget, which saw the budget return to a $42.1 billion deficit. The budget included a further $17 billion in personal income tax cuts for the lowest earners. During the
2025 federal election campaign, Chalmers participated in several
debates with shadow treasurer
Angus Taylor. ==Political positions==