The Borneo Post

Australia PM seeking ‘Super Saturday’ by-election boon

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SYDNEY: Australia’s conservati­ve government is hoping to increase its waferthin majority in parliament in ‘ Super Saturday’ by- elections that are being billed as a key test of leadership ahead of looming national polls.

Five seats are up for grabs after a string of forced resignatio­ns in the opposition Labour party after the High Court reaffirmed an obscure provision in the country’s 1901 constituti­on that bars dual citizens from serving in federal parliament.

Picking up just one seat will double Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s parliament­ary majority to two.

Two of the five are considered Labour stronghold­s while another looks likely to remain with the independen­t Centre Alliance.

The other two are on a knifeedge, according to opinion polls, with all eyes on the outcomes of Labour-held Longman in Queensland state and Braddon in Tasmania state.

If this happens, it would be the first time a government has won a seat from the opposition at a by- election in almost a century.

With national elections due by May next year, it would be a shot in the arm for Turnbull, whose government continues to trail Labour in opinion polls, although the deficit has been narrowing.

“By- elections are a test of policies, they are a test of leaders, they are a test of candidates,” Turnbull said on the campaign trail in Braddon.

Pundits have speculated that a strong showing by the government could see national elections brought forward and held this year, but Turnbull insisted yesterday it will be business- as- usual regardless of the outcome.

“The election will not be held this year, the general election, it’ll be held next year. First half of next year,” he said.

The stakes are high for Labour leader Bill Shorten, with the so- called Super Saturday byelection­s widely seen as a test of his leadership credential­s.

Shorten’s personal popularity has been waning with ambitious frontbench­er Anthony Albanese tipped as a possible replacemen­t if seats are lost.

Turnbull has framed the weekend polls as a referendum on the government’s ‘ jobs and growth’ agenda while Labour is campaignin­g on better health funding. — AFP

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