The young man joined Abbott, his wife Margie and their three daughters after the Liberal leader had given a triumphant speech at a luxury Sydney hotel following yesterday's national polls.
Dressed in a suit and with the aid of a faked media wristband, he managed to shake Abbott's hand and pat the arm of daughter Bridget before the family grouped together to block him out and he was tackled by security.
He said he had been having "a private chat" with Abbott about whether he could run in a Sydney seat at the next election before he lingered on stage with the new first family for about a minute in what was described as a security breach.
"After a small chat with Tony, they respectfully escorted me off stage," he said. Footage of the incident however showed him being grabbed and shouting as he was dragged off.
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He managed to address the crowd through the platform microphone, shouting in an exaggerated Aussie twang: "I just wanted to say a big thank to Tony too" and claiming to be an MP.
The Business Insider website named him as Fregmonto Stokes, and said he was a 25-year-old playwriting student originally from Melbourne.
He told the website that he had been trying to draw attention to "the increased coal activity and mining under an Abbott Government".
"He shouldn't have been there, it looked as though he was there officially, obviously he wasn't, that was a bit of a worry," he said.