The Phnom Penh Post

Australia’s Labor Party set to anoint new leader

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AUSTR A LI A’S opposit ion is set to anoint Anthony Albanese as its new leader, hoping to win back the working class a f t e r a s h o c k e l e c t i o n defeat to t he conser v at ive government.

The Austra lian Labor Part y unexpected­ly lost to incumbent leader Scott Morrison on May 18, despite lead i ng i n t he pol ls r unning up to t he elect ion.

Albanese, from Labor’s left faction, replaced Bill Shorten when the former union chief stepped down hours after losing the vote.

The 56-year-old will be officially confirmed by the Labor c auc us on T hu r sday a f ter t he unconteste­d leadersh ip ballot.

Albanese vowed to create a “larger, more inclusive party” amid soul-searching within the ranks over the defeat.

“I understand that it is a big mountain that we have to climb,” Albanese told reporters in Sydney, where he holds his lower house seat, on Monday.

“I want to build relationsh­ips between the Labor Party and those people who voted for us, but also those people who wanted to vote for us, who were open to vote for us, but who felt like they couldn’t.”

Labor’s large and progressiv­e policy reform agenda, which it campaigned heavily on, as well as Shorten’s unpopulari­ty with voters, have been blamed for the election upset.

Morrison successf ully cast Labor’s proposals, including tack l i ng cl i mate cha nge, as too r isk y a nd da maging to household finances at a time when the national economy is slow ing down.

The Labor party performed particular­ly poorly in Queensland state, where Shorten was perceived to be lukewarm about a potential large Indiabacke­d mine that promises to create thousands of jobs.

But Albanese argued it was possible to grow the economy, and create jobs while still pursuing a progressiv­e agenda.

“The economy must work for people, not the other way around. I view unions and business as having common interests,” he said.

“But . . . we can’t judge the economy separate from the people it’s meant to serve. I believe in an inclusive society, one that looks after the most vulnerable.”

An economics graduate, Albanese was first elected to parliament in 1996 and has been on Labor’s frontbench since 1998.

He briefly served as deputy prime minister under former Labor PM Kevin Rudd in 2013, and was also infrastruc­ture, transport and regional developmen­t minister.

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