The Borneo Post

Australia stares at hung parliament as by-election count goes to the wire

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SYDNEY: As the count from a crucial Australian by- election dragged into Sunday, Prime Minister Scott Morrison faced the possibilit­y that his Liberal party may have been too quick to concede a contest that would reduce his administra­tion to a minority government.

Morrison became Australia’s sixth prime minister in 10 years in August after his predecesso­r Malcolm Turnbull fell victim to infighting among the Liberals, and the suspense over the count in Sydney’s affluent Wentworth constituen­cy was in keeping with the unpredicta­ble politics of recent times.

On Saturday, Morrison had surrendere­d the seat, vacated following Turnbull’s retirement from politics, after the early count showed a swing of more than 20 per cent away from the Liberals.

But by Sunday evening, his candidate trailed an independen­t rival by 1,600 votes with several thousand votes still to be counted, the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) said.

Still claiming victory, but sounding less sure, the independen­t candidate Kerryn Phelps described the wait for the result as a “white knuckle ride” in a post on her Twitter account. “Holding our breath for the AEC outcome,” she tweeted.

Should the Liberals lose Wentworth, Morrison’s conservati­ve coalition will probably have to rely on support from independen­t lawmakers to survive the next few months, as a general election is due by May next year.

The contest had gathered internatio­nal attention after Morrison’s late attempt to garner support from Jewish voters, who account for 13 per cent of Wentworth’s electorate, by suggesting Australia could recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and move its embassy there from Tel Aviv.

What impact that gambit had was unclear, but with his parliament­ary majority hanging by a thread as the count continued, Morrison acknowledg­ed that whatever the outcome, voters were clearly disillusio­ned with his party.

“The gap has closed by several hundred votes. There are still many postal votes to be counted,” Morrison told reporters in Sydney.

Morrison said if the vote gets as close as 100 votes an automatic recount would be triggered, giving his conservati­ve coalition a slim chance of retaining its one seat majority in parliament.

It could be some days before the uncertaint­y is cleared as postal votes received within 13 days after the ballot are still counted. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A supporter of Kerryn Phelps holds up a placard of her outside a polling station during the Wentworth by-election in Sydney. — AFP photo
A supporter of Kerryn Phelps holds up a placard of her outside a polling station during the Wentworth by-election in Sydney. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Scott Morrison
Scott Morrison

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