New Straits Times

AUSSIE PM BEGINS ELECTION BID

Morrison promises to keep nation safe, says he can deal with all threats

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PRIME Minister Scott Morrison fired the starter’s gun on his re-election drive yesterday, promising to keep Australian­s safe in a dangerous and sometimes “evil” world.

Painting a grim picture of a country threatened by terrorism, people smuggling, drugs, natural disasters and crime, Morrison argued the opposition Labor Party under its chief, Bill Shorten, were “asleep at the wheel” on security.

Australian­s are expected to go to the polls in mid-May to decide whether Morrison’s conservati­ve Liberal Party gets a third term.

Polls show Morrison is popular, but his party is heading for its biggest defeat in decades, something he hopes to turn around by pointing to a strong economy and an uncompromi­sing stance on security and immigratio­n.

A Newspoll for The Australian newspaper showed opposition Labor retained a lead of 53 per cent to 47 per cent over the Liberal-National government led by Morrison, unchanged from the previous poll in December, despite recent efforts to frighten voters on Labor’s tax plans.

“The election is about the Australia you want to live in for the next decade,” Morrison said.

“Do you want to live in a stronger Australia under my government? Or do you want to live in a weaker Australia under Bill Shorten and Labor?”

Morrison argued he was uniquely suited to “dealing with the world as it is — uncertain, often dangerous, uncompromi­sing, and at its worst — simply evil.”

“Foreign interferen­ce. Radical terrorism. People smuggling. Natural disasters. Organised crime. Money laundering. Biosecurit­y hazards. Cyber security. The evil ice trade. Violence against women... online predators and scammers who seek to rip off older Australian­s — cyber bullying. Elder abuse,” he said, listing a myriad of threats.

“We have led, we haven’t followed. We have taken decisions rather than put them off to another day. And we have embraced tough calls rather than seeking to buy weak compromise­s for the purpose of politics.”

Morrison’s message is likely to resonate strongly with the hard right of his party and with Australia’s powerful conservati­ve media outlets.

Morrison’s minority government will face an early test of its policies this week, when members of parliament vote on a bill that would allow doctors to decide when asylum seekers in offshore detention centres can be transferre­d to Australia for treatment.

The government has vowed never to allow asylum seekers who try to reach the country illegally by boat to set foot in the country.

Morrison said the bill backed by Labor and independen­ts would provide a back door for entry to Australia for such asylum seekers and fuel a resumption of peoplesmug­gling operations that have largely been choked off by the tough offshore detention policy.

No government has lost a vote on a substantiv­e matter of policy in almost 100 years. A loss for Morrison could trigger an early election.

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