Kuwait Times

Election rout piles pressure, concern for Australian govt

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SYDNEY: Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said yesterday his government had “lessons to learn” from a state election rout in Queensland, amid growing leadership questions after his unpopular move to knight Britain’s Prince Philip. Rumors of challenges to Abbott’s position as prime minister have emerged over the past week after the knighthood decision. But the demise of the LiberalNat­ional coalition (LNP) in Queensland elections held Saturday has piled further pressure on him.

The LNP, which is also the ruling coalition nationally, swept to victory in Queensland three years ago to record the state’s biggest ever parliament­ary triumph when it took 78 of 89 seats. But in one of the most startling turnaround­s in the nation’s political history, the opposition Labor party-written off after the last election-appeared close to returning to power in the northeaste­rn state as vote-counting continued.

“There are obviously lessons in the election result last night and we’re determined to learn them in Canberra,” Abbott told reporters, adding that he regretted the “distractio­n” of the knighthood debate. “I accept that we’ve had some difficulti­es. I accept that we need to learn from the difficulti­es that we’ve had, but in the end, government is not a popularity contest, it is a competence contest.” Abbott’s government has seen its support plunge in opinion polls over the past year, coming under fire for its attempts to push through widespread spending cuts to rein in a growing budget deficit.

The latest poll published by The Sunday Telegraph yesterday showed the government would be heading for defeat if it called an election now. Support has dropped to 43 percent from 53.5 percent when they won the 2013 election, compared to Labor’s 57 percent. Support for Abbott slipped to 27 percent compared to 44 percent for

Opposition Labor leader Bill Shorten, the poll found.

Knight move slammed

Abbott, an enthusiast­ic royalist, reintroduc­ed the titles of dame and knight in Australia last year but the move was criticized as being out of step with the public. His decision to knight Queen Elizabeth II’s husband Philip attracted widespread ridicule, with even unnamed politician­s within Abbott’s own LNP reportedly describing the move as “stupid”. Reports that a leadership challenge could be on the cards have revived memories of the political turmoil when Prime Minister Kevin Rudd was ousted by his deputy Julia Gillard in 2010. Rudd returned to power in 2013 in the three months before his Labor party lost the election to Abbott’s coalition, which had campaigned against what it called government­al chaos and dysfunctio­n.

Attorney-General George Brandis said yesterday his party would be “crazy” to attempt a similar leadership change. “We would be crazy to repeat the experience of the last Labor government, which failed because it tore down an elected leader, and the Liberal Party won’t be doing that,” he told Sky News. Foreign Minister Julie Bishop and Communicat­ions Minister Malcolm Turnbull have been mooted as possible contenders for the prime minister’s job, although both have publicly declared their support for Abbott.

Speaking from the United States, Turnbull-who once lost a tussle for leadership of the Liberal Party to Abbott by one vote-told the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n: “The prime minister has my support. I’m a member of the government; (he) has the support of the government.” Bishop, in Sydney yesterday, would only repeat in response to questions from reporters: “The prime minister has my support.” —AFP

 ??  ?? MAKASSAR: Members of an Indonesian rescue team point a finger at the location where they found a victim and debris of the AirAsia flight QZ8501 accident. — AFP
MAKASSAR: Members of an Indonesian rescue team point a finger at the location where they found a victim and debris of the AirAsia flight QZ8501 accident. — AFP

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