Thursday, March 28

Australia election: conservative government voted out after nearly a decade | Australian election 2022


Australia’s rightwing Coalition government has lost power after nearly a decade in office, with Saturday’s election showing a sharp shift to progressive parties that will see a Labor administration formed – possibly with the support of climate-focussed independents or Greens.

Within hours of polls closing, multiple election analysts said it was clear the ruling Coalition – led by Scott Morrison’s conservative Liberal party and the rural-based National party – could not retain the 76 seats it held, which is the minimum required to form a parliamentary majority.

The Labor opposition appears to have outperformed the Coalition, but by Saturday evening it was not apparent it could win a majority of seats to be able to claim victory – which would have been its first at an election since 2007.

Morrison and Albanese offer last election pitch to voters before casting their votes – video

Labor leader Anthony Albanese is seen as being the most likely to be able to form government, with results after four hours of vote counting indicating he could need the support of independent or minor party MPs to reach a majority.

The biggest surprise out of the election was the surge in support for the Greens party. By Saturday evening, the party – which has struggled to win more than the one seat it first picked up more than a decade ago – was on track to win as many as three additional seats, all focussed in progressive areas of Brisbane.

While both major parties were at pains throughout the campaign as to not appear overly ambitious on climate action, the legacy of recent natural disasters across several states, including deadly bushfires and floods, appeared to have resonated with inner city voters.

Morrison’s Coalition appeared to have lost several seats to the “teal independents” – candidates running in traditionally safe Liberal party seats on a strong climate action platform, some backed by substantial funds from the Climate 200 organization.

Many adopted the color teal, nodding both to the traditional Liberal blue and their green credentials, and performed well in seats in affluent parts of Melbourne and Sydney.

Early results indicated the teal independent movement could have taken as many as five seats from the government. If their leads sign up, it would mean a decimation of the moderate faction of the Liberal party.

Liberal losses to these independents include prominent government MPs, including the country’s treasurer, Josh Frydenberg, who appeared to have lost his wealthy Melbourne seat of Kooyong to independent Zoe Daniels, a former journalist.

During the campaign, several of those facing challenges from these MPs warned party supporters frustrated with the Liberal party’s position on climate that their ousting would only serve to shift the party further to the right.

Rather than shift policy to appeal to moderate Liberals concerned about climate, Morrison was seen to focus on voters in outer metropolitan, regional and mining seats, some former Labor strongholds, others held by the Nationals.

Albanese, who made much of his upbringing as the child of a single mother in Sydney public housing throughout the campaign, is a party stalwart from Labor’s left faction, although far from a radical firebrand.

A near-fatal car crash near his home last year made him refocus his life, he says, and he has since made a point of his healthier diet and lifestyle, while accessing to superficial image changes.

But he has struggled to inject inspiration into Labor’s campaign, which has kept its policy offering to a minimum after the ambitious program of his predecessor, Bill Shorten, was effectively torn down by Morrison at the 2019 election.

Following six gruelling weeks on the hustings, both leaders began election day with a last-minute campaign stop in marginal seats in Melbourne, before they flew to Sydney to vote in the electorates they represent.


www.theguardian.com

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