The Star Malaysia

Queensland snap election to test support for populist Hanson

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SYDNEY: The Australian state of Queensland, home to the Great Barrier Reef, has called a snap election that is set to test support for both the populist party of Pauline Hanson and an environmen­tally sensitive Indian coal mine project.

Campaignin­g began yesterday in the state, a major tourist destinatio­n, after Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk of the Labour Party set down a poll date of Nov 25.

Labour won power from the Liberals in a 2015 landslide, but most opinion polls indicate it will be a closer call this time. The vote did not have to be called until May 2018.

The election is shaping as a political test of Hanson’s One Nation, which has enjoyed a tide of popular support in the state on its platform of zeronet migration and opposition to Islam.

Pundits are looking to see how the party fares in a traditiona­l stronghold as an insight into whether it could remain a force heading into national polls due in late 2018 or early 2019.

Palaszczuk called the election on Sunday while Hanson was in India on a trade mission, giving her an extra week of campaignin­g without the One Nation leader around.

Hanson accused her of “cowardice”, but Palaszczuk said it was a coincidenc­e.

“I didn’t know she was going to be overseas,” she said, adding that an election decision was made to give business leaders and voters certainty moving forward.

Hanson first gained prominence in the 1990s, when she warned Australia was in danger of being “swamped by Asians”.

After a 12year hiatus from politics she returned in 2014, this time targeting Muslims and was elected, along with three others from her rightwing party, to the national Senate two years later.

Coalfired versus renewable energy is set to be a central plank of the election, centred on the huge US$16bil (RM67.80bil) Carmichael coal mine being developed by Indian giant Adani.

The project gained government approval in July, but Adani has requested a US$800mil (RM3.39bil) loan guarantee to proceed, and that remains to be resolved.

Environmen­talists warn the massive mine will damage the underpress­ure Great Barrier Reef and many voters are opposed. — AFP

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