The Borneo Post

In boost for Australian PM, right-wing party loses power to block his bills

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SYDNEY: A defection from Australia’s most prominent rightwing political party, Pauline Hanson’s One Nation, yesterday robbed it of its ability to block Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s legislatio­n, raising the prospect he can introduce tax cuts.

Brian Burston, who will now sit in the upper house Senate as an independen­t, resigned from One Nation over infighting, the latest blow to the party that re- emerged as a force in Australian politics in 2016.

Turnbull had often needed the support of One Nation to get legislatio­n passed although the third-largest party in the Senate had recently blocked plans for corporate tax cuts, and threatened to block income tax cuts.

“Turnbull will now not run into a situation where Hanson rejects the government legislatio­n,” said Nick Economou, senior lecturer in politics at Monash University in Melbourne.

Burston has said he would support both tax cuts, although a vote is still likely to be very tight with widespread opposition from left-leaning lawmakers.

Turnbull, speaking after Burston’s resignatio­n, said the government would seek closer ties with independen­ts in parliament.

“Treating people with respect, seeking to persuade them, listen to their point of view, reach a compromise where necessary, that’s all about getting things done,” Turnbull told reporters in Tasmania.

Hanson made an unlikely but successful first run for parliament while managing a fish and chip shop in 1996. After using her maiden speech to warn the country would be ‘swamped by Asians’, she co-founded the One Nation party. It enjoyed early electoral success, before imploding over infighting.

Hanson re- entered the federal parliament in 2016 on a platform of restrictin­g Islamic migrants and foreign acquisitio­ns of Australian assets, after a near two- decade absence. — Reuters

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