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Australia poised to shift to the right

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Titanium
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Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby Titanium » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:00 am

14 million Australians are voting today in a national election that will send the socialist Labor party into the political wilderness and give conservative PM hopeful Tony Abbott a landslide victory.

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(Reuters) - Australia conservative leader Tony Abbott cast his vote at a Sydney surf club on Saturday, exuding confidence as polls pointed to a landslide victory over Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and an end to six years of Labor rule.

Abbott, who is often photographed in his swimming costume at his local beach, wore a suit to vote and was accompanied by his wife and daughters.

"I'm in a suit. I sort of wish I was out there on the waves. It's a nice wave for an elderly long boarder this morning," Abbott said, adding he did not trust the polls which pointed to an easy conservative win.

"Anything can happen today. I don't believe the polls, Kevin Rudd doesn't believe the polls. I think it's still very close."

Rudd's vote in his hometown of Brisbane in sub-tropical Queensland was disrupted by protests against tough new laws on asylum seekers arriving in Australia by boat, a hot button issue particularly in Labor's blue-collar suburban heartland.

Along with refugees, the election has been pitched as a choice on who is best to lead the resource-rich nation as it adjusts to an end to a prolonged mining investment boom, fuelled by China's demand for natural resources.

"If you are passionate about the future of the economy and jobs and job security and proper protection for pay and conditions, then I believe we would best to protect that in the future," Rudd earlier told undecided voters.

Last minute polls on Saturday predicted Abbott's Liberal-National Party coalition would win 54 percent of the national vote, compared to 46 percent for Rudd's Labor.

That would give Abbott an overwhelming majority of around 40 seats in the 150 seat parliament.

The super-fit Abbott, a keen cyclist who often exercises before dawn, has promised to restore government stability after three years of a hung parliament, with Labor relying on the support of the Greens and independent MPs.

PROTESTERS

Abbott later visited a southern Sydney polling booth to support one of his candidates, where he too was mobbed by angry refugee support protesters, forcing him to cut short his visit.

Abbott has built up a strong opinion poll lead on the back of promises to rein in government spending, scrap an unpopular tax on carbon emissions, and stop the flow of refugee boats arriving in Australia's northwest.

His campaign has had strong support from media magnate Rupert Murdoch and his Australian newspapers, which have urged voters to reject Rudd's Labor government.

Rudd, who replaced Australia's first female prime minister Julia Gillard in late June, has painted Abbott's planned spending cuts as dangerous European-style austerity and said his government is best placed to manage a slowing economy.

A record 1,717 candidates are contesting the election, including colorful mining entrepreneur Clive Palmer, and Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, who is holed up in the Ecuadorean embassy in London.

Abbott, who has pledged not to share power, urged Australians to avoid another hung parliament.

"Even now I think a lot of people are toying with the idea of voting for independents and minor parties, the problem with that is we could end up with another hung parliament," he said
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/09/ ... 3J20130907

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Re: Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby Casanova25 » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:04 am

WHO are u going to vote for?
Last edited by Casanova25 on Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:20 am, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby FarhanYare » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:10 am

labour brought this up on themselves. first it was kevin that the public elected and they got the redheaded witch; then the witch won the last election by forming coalition with the greens and three independent mps, and then what a month prior to this election the australian public got kevin back. it is like a circus show that is unpredictable :lol:.. this is public's vote of confidence you are gamnling with! so ofcourse iam expecting tony to win by landslide.. Julia will be loughing all the way to her confort melbourne house after she sees her nemesis (kevin) loose :lol:
Last edited by FarhanYare on Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:13 am, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby Titanium » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:13 am

WHO are going to vote for?
I don't live in Australia. I just like to follow international politics.

However, if I were Australian, I would abstain from voting since Julia Gillard is not on the ballot. She is the only one who can lead Australia during these not so difficult times. I would be given a fine for not voting but it's the principle.

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Re: Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby FarhanYare » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:15 am

i would've voted for kevin regardless but i cant i got finland passport

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Re: Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby Casanova25 » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:18 am

i would've voted for kevin regardless but i cant i got finland passport
you live in aussie but got soumi passport! or just finland

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Re: Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby Titanium » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:18 am

Why are you so well versed in Australian politics if you are Somali-Finnish?

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Re: Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby FarhanYare » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:19 am

yeah 8-)

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Re: Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby Titanium » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:22 am

So you live in Australia...

Isn't it difficult to immigrate there? Especially if you live in the West already?

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Re: Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby Casanova25 » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:23 am

yeah 8-)
Weird :dead: :dead: :lol:

I'm lost in this! am getting informations from this person, WHO claims he is from the other side of the world

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Re: Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby Twist » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:27 am

About 3 hours remaining when the polling closes in my area & still didn't vote. Lazies R Us!

@Titanium, do you know how Julia Gillard got the top job in the first place, and her political record? Also, do you know what the Labor's position was before Kevin was reinstated again?

Yes, switching the leaders back and forth messed up their chance of winning this election (as well as their position of the illegal immigrants, i.e. boat people, the carbon tax, among other things) but it would have been even worse if Julia was in office still. :idea:

PS: As I always did, I am going to the polling place near my place in an hour & deliberately make my vote not count, that's until they change the 'compulsory voting' system.

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Re: Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby FarhanYare » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:31 am

About 3 hours remaining when the polling closes in my area & still didn't vote. Lazies R Us!

@Titanium, do you know how Julia Gillard got the top job in the first place, and her political record? Also, do you know what the Labor's position was before Kevin was reinstated again?

Yes, switching the leaders back and forth messed up their chance of winning this election (as well as their position of the illegal immigrants, i.e. boat people, the carbon tax, among other things) but it would have been even worse if Julia was in office still. :idea:

PS: As I always did, I am going to the polling place near my place in an hour & deliberately make my vote not count, that's until they change the 'compulsory voting' system.
very true, infact the greens would probably gain most of those labour seats had julia been on the ballot sheet today :mrgreen:

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Re: Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby Twist » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:34 am

Faaraxoos, so are you planning to be citizen one day or? I always thought you were a Kiwi.

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Re: Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby Titanium » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:40 am

@Twist

Leadership spills are standard practice.

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Re: Australia poised to shift to the right

Postby FarhanYare » Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:46 am

titanium,
what makes you think that julia is good for the labour party as you said? lets discuss what she brings to the table


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