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Saturday, November 23, 2024

Counting begins in Australia’s polls

The first polls closed and counting was under way on Saturday in Australia’s fiercely fought national election that could end a decade of unbroken conservative rule.

Election frontrunner Anthony Albanese asked voters to give his centre-left party a “crack” at running the country, and urged people to spurn “divisive” Prime Minister Scott Morrison.

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Albanese, the 59-year-old Labor Party leader, said he was “very positive” about the outcome as Australians went to the polls in their millions.

The long and often bitter campaign has focused on the character of the two leaders, with policy largely put on the back burner.

Morrison—behind in the pre-election polls—has been buoyed by a resurgent post-lockdown economy and a 48-year-low jobless rate.

He has painted his rival as a “loose unit” who is unfit to steer the economy, but has been plagued by low personal approval ratings, accusations of dishonesty and of putting spin before substance. AFP

Albanese – who himself has been described as bland and uninspiring – focused heavily on Morrison’s alleged failings in the final days of the campaign.

Australians “want someone who is fair dinkum, someone who will ‘fess up if they make a mistake” said the Labor leader.

After three years marked by punishing bushfires, drought, floods and the pandemic, Morrison will have to beat the odds to emerge victorious.

The 54-year-old has not led in the polls for months, and entered election day with a duo of surveys putting his Liberal National Party coalition six points behind Labor, well outside the margin of error.

Young Australians are increasingly angry at the government’s pro-coal policies and a housing market that is largely out of reach.

“I grew up in a community that’s been really heavily affected by the fires and the floods over the past five years,” first-time voter Jordan Neville said in Melbourne.

“To see something be done about that and stop that happening again would be amazing.”

But Morrison has defied the pundits before. Three years ago he was behind in the polls but emerged with what he himself called a “miracle election win.”

This time, though, the gap is a little wider.

“I believe we have the wind at our back, and I’m very positive about a good outcome,” Albanese said after casting his vote at a town hall in the Sydney suburb of Marrickville with his son Nathan, partner Jodie Haydon and pet dog Toto.

“I’m in it to change the country and that’s what I intend to do,” he said.

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