31 января 2013 12:28

Australia to go to the polls on September 14: PM

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Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard on Wednesday broke with tradition and announced the nation would go to the polls on September 14, saying she wanted to give "shape and order" to the year, AFP reports. Australians usually know only weeks before when an election will be held, but the Labor leader, whose minority government holds power by only a narrow margin, surprised pundits by ending speculation and giving a date. "I do so not to start the nation's longest election campaign, quite the opposite," Gillard told the National Press Club in Canberra during a speech setting out the priorities for Labor in the year ahead. "It should be clear to all which are the days of governing, and which are the days of campaigning." Opinion polls suggest Gillard, who made global headlines last year with a fiery speech about misogyny on the floor of parliament, will lose the election to conservative opposition leader Tony Abbott. She said announcing the date of the polls would give individuals, businesses and investors the ability to plan ahead. "It gives shape and order to the year, and enables it to be one not of fevered campaigning, but of cool and reasoned deliberation," she said. Parliament will be dissolved on August 12. Gillard, the nation's first female prime minister, last went to the polls in 2010, just weeks after she staged an overnight party room coup against her former leader and then prime minister Kevin Rudd. But the Welsh-born ex-lawyer failed to win over an electorate still stunned by her ousting of the popular Rudd, and the elections resulted in a hung parliament which forced her into a coalition with independents to retain power. Gillard said even when the "hysteria" regarding the 2010 election was at its peak, she had always said parliament would serve a full three-year term and she did not think it was right there was a "guessing game" on the poll date. "So in the interest of certainty, in the interest of transparency, in the interest of good government I have made the date clear today," said Gillard, wearing glasses for the first time in fronting the media. The 51-year-old has struggled in opinion polls, particularly after she introduced a pollution tax for industry to combat climate change despite promising there would be no carbon tax if she was elected. The latest Newspoll published in The Australian earlier this month found that Labor had about 49 percent of the vote compared with 51 percent for the Abbott-led opposition. Flame-haired Gillard, who is unmarried and an atheist, has also survived speculation about her leadership within Labor -- trouncing Rudd 71 to 31 in February 2012 when he challenged her for the top job. Australian prime ministers traditionally name the election at a date to their political advantage, but Gillard said by announcing the schedule early the opposition would have time to develop and cost its policies. "Not everything about the tenor and temperature of debate this year is in my control," Gillard said. "But I can act to clear away the carry-on that comes with speculation about when the election will be held. "And I can act to create an environment in which the nation's eyes are more easily focused on the policies not the petty politics." In her speech, Gillard said the government had a clear plan to make sure Australia tapped into economic growth in Asia, and would announce savings to maintain the sustainability of the budget.


Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard on Wednesday broke with tradition and announced the nation would go to the polls on September 14, saying she wanted to give "shape and order" to the year, AFP reports. Australians usually know only weeks before when an election will be held, but the Labor leader, whose minority government holds power by only a narrow margin, surprised pundits by ending speculation and giving a date. "I do so not to start the nation's longest election campaign, quite the opposite," Gillard told the National Press Club in Canberra during a speech setting out the priorities for Labor in the year ahead. "It should be clear to all which are the days of governing, and which are the days of campaigning." Opinion polls suggest Gillard, who made global headlines last year with a fiery speech about misogyny on the floor of parliament, will lose the election to conservative opposition leader Tony Abbott. She said announcing the date of the polls would give individuals, businesses and investors the ability to plan ahead. "It gives shape and order to the year, and enables it to be one not of fevered campaigning, but of cool and reasoned deliberation," she said. Parliament will be dissolved on August 12. Gillard, the nation's first female prime minister, last went to the polls in 2010, just weeks after she staged an overnight party room coup against her former leader and then prime minister Kevin Rudd. But the Welsh-born ex-lawyer failed to win over an electorate still stunned by her ousting of the popular Rudd, and the elections resulted in a hung parliament which forced her into a coalition with independents to retain power. Gillard said even when the "hysteria" regarding the 2010 election was at its peak, she had always said parliament would serve a full three-year term and she did not think it was right there was a "guessing game" on the poll date. "So in the interest of certainty, in the interest of transparency, in the interest of good government I have made the date clear today," said Gillard, wearing glasses for the first time in fronting the media. The 51-year-old has struggled in opinion polls, particularly after she introduced a pollution tax for industry to combat climate change despite promising there would be no carbon tax if she was elected. The latest Newspoll published in The Australian earlier this month found that Labor had about 49 percent of the vote compared with 51 percent for the Abbott-led opposition. Flame-haired Gillard, who is unmarried and an atheist, has also survived speculation about her leadership within Labor -- trouncing Rudd 71 to 31 in February 2012 when he challenged her for the top job. Australian prime ministers traditionally name the election at a date to their political advantage, but Gillard said by announcing the schedule early the opposition would have time to develop and cost its policies. "Not everything about the tenor and temperature of debate this year is in my control," Gillard said. "But I can act to clear away the carry-on that comes with speculation about when the election will be held. "And I can act to create an environment in which the nation's eyes are more easily focused on the policies not the petty politics." In her speech, Gillard said the government had a clear plan to make sure Australia tapped into economic growth in Asia, and would announce savings to maintain the sustainability of the budget.
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