Australian Election Thread

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Peter Parka

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PM Howard condemns fake leaflets
Australia's prime minister has condemned members of his own party for distributing leaflets implying the Labor opposition supports terrorism. John Howard, who trails Labor's Kevin Rudd in opinion polls ahead of a Saturday's general election, said the Liberal Party had not authorised them.
The flyers purported to be from an Islamic group thanking Labor for its sympathy for the Bali bombers.
Two Liberal activists have been expelled from the party.
The leaflets were distributed in the Sydney constituency of Lyndsay - a marginal seat in a keenly fought election campaign.
'Unjustly sentenced'
Two local activists - Gary Clark and Greg Chijoff - admitted involvement and issued statements apologising for the leaflet campaign.
It was not immediately clear if they were the two activists who had been expelled.
Mr Clark is married to current Liberal MP for Lyndsay, Jackie Kelly. Mr Chijoff's wife is her would-be Liberal successor, Karen Chijoff.





Mr Howard said he accepted the men's assertion that neither of their wives had known of the leaflet campaign.
The BBC's Nick Bryant, in Sydney, says that this kind of scandal is just about the last thing Mr Howard's beleaguered party needs.
Party activists were caught distributing the leaflets on Wednesday.
They purported to be from the Islamic Australia Federation - a made-up organisation - and referred to the men imprisoned for the 2002 nightclub bomb attacks in Bali, which left more than 200 people dead, many of them Australians.
"We gratefully acknowledge Labor's support to forgive our Muslim brothers who have been unjustly sentenced to death for the Bali bombings," it said.
Labor supported the building of new mosques, the leaflets added, thanking the party for backing the entry of controversial cleric Sheikh Taj el-Din al-Hilali - who likened scantily-clad women to uncovered meat.
'Unfair and dishonest'
Mr Howard said that this type of material should never have been distributed.
"It was not authorised by the Liberal Party, it is no part of our campaign, it was wrong and unfair and dishonest for any pamphlet to be distributed suggesting that the Labor Party was sympathetic to the Bali bombers," he said.
Mr Rudd has urged the Liberals to clarify who knew about the leaflets.
"This says everything about the desperate and desperation politics on the part of the Liberal Party on the eve of the election," he told Australian radio.
The issue has been referred to the Australian Electoral Commission, and Labor has asked it to investigate whether the authors acted illegally by appealing to anti-Muslim sentiment.
The president of the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils, Ikebal Patel, told ABC radio that while election campaigning to date had been "fairly good" on the issue of migration, the use of the flyers was "quite despicable".

Story from BBC NEWS:

Come on Rudd! Anyone but the war mongering Howard!
 
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Peter Parka

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Woohoo! John Howard is out and Kevin Ruud is the new prime minister!:rockon:

PM Howard concedes Australia poll


Australian Prime Minister John Howard has admitted defeat in the country's general election, and looks set to lose his parliamentary seat. Mr Howard said he had telephoned Labor leader Kevin Rudd "to congratulate him on an emphatic victory".
Mr Rudd said the country had "looked to the future" and he pledged to be a prime minister "for all Australians".
With 70% of votes counted, Labor were on course to win the 76 seats needed to form a government.

More than 20 constituencies from a total of 150 are still to produce a result, but Labor already has 72 seats compared with 48 for Mr Howard's Liberal-National coalition.
Rare fate
Amid cheers from Liberal Party faithful, Mr Howard said it had been a privilege to have served as prime minister since 1996.







"We've bequeathed to [Mr Rudd] a nation that is stronger and prouder and more prosperous than it was 11 and a half years ago," he said.
Mr Howard, who had been bidding for a fifth term in office, conceded the national election and accepted it was "very likely" he would also be defeated in his Bennelong constituency.
If unseated, the 68-year-old would be only the second prime minister in Australia's history to suffer such a fate.
Voters in Bennelong had elected Mr Howard in 13 consecutive elections over 33 years.
But with more than 50% of the votes counted in the constituency, figures from the electoral commission suggested he had lost the seat to Maxine McKew, a former TV journalist.
An exit poll conducted by Sky News and Channel 7 suggested a similar result.
Anti-government backlash
Labor leader Mr Rudd, a 50-year-old former diplomat, had led in opinion polls throughout the election campaign.
In his victory speech, he thanked Mr Howard for his "dignity" in defeat and for his "extensive contribution to public service".
He promised to "forge a new consensus" by ending the "old battles of the past" between business and unions, and between economic growth and environmental concerns.





During the campaign, Labor sought to capitalise on the Howard administration's refusal to sign the Kyoto protocol on climate change.
Mr Howard campaigned on his record of sound economic management.
The BBC's Nick Bryant, in Sydney, said Labor had swept back into power by harnessing an anti-government backlash.
Mr Howard had found himself on the wrong side of public opinion on the Kyoto protocol and the war in Iraq, our correspondent said. Many people also seemed to be simply tired of Mr Howard after 11 years of his rule.
Participating in elections is compulsory under Australian law and more than 13.5 million people were expected to vote.

Story from BBC NEWS:
 

Peter Parka

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From the Washington Post
Australia's Rudd Gets Straight to Work

By ROHAN SULLIVAN
The Associated Press
Sunday, November 25, 2007; 4:04 AM



SYDNEY, Australia -- Newly elected leader Kevin Rudd moved quickly Sunday to bring Australia into international talks on fighting global warming, and to head off potentially thorny relations with the United States and key Asian neighbors.
The emphatic victory for Rudd's Labor Party swings Australia toward the political left after almost 12 years of conservative rule, and puts it at odds with key security ally Washington on two crucial policy issues _ Iraq and global warming.


The day after sweeping to power in general elections, Rudd went straight into work mode, holding meetings with government officials about the mechanics of signing the Kyoto Protocol on cutting greenhouse gas emissions.
He also took phone calls from foreign leaders highly relevant to Australia.
Britain, New Zealand and Indonesia noted that Rudd's election would boost international efforts to address climate change _ ousted Prime Minister John Howard had refused to sign the Kyoto pact.
Malaysia's leader said Rudd's plan to pull Australia's 550 combat troops from Iraq would also improve the country's international standing, the Malaysian national news agency Bernama reported.
Rudd spoke by phone with President Bush late Saturday. Rudd declined to give details of the conversation, but said he plans to visit Washington next year.
The leaders agreed during the call that they looked forward to working together, said White House National Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe.
Rudd, a Chinese-speaking former diplomat, also talked with Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, accepting his invitation to attend a December U.N. meeting in Bali to map out the world's next steps against climate change.
On Sunday, at his first news conference, Rudd promised "action, and action now" on climate change and nominated education, health and a high-speed Internet network as other top priorities of his government. He said Labor lawmakers were due to meet on Thursday, and he hoped his Cabinet would be sworn in soon after that.
ad_label_leftjust.gif


Rudd's election brought a sharp and mortifying end to the 11-year rule of Howard, Australia's second-longest serving leader and a strong ally of Bush. Howard also faces the possible embarrassment of losing his own district seat in Parliament _ a fate suffered only once before by a sitting prime minister in 106 years of federal government.
Howard, who reshaped Australia's image abroad with his unwavering support for the U.S. war on terrorism and in Iraq, failed to read the signs that voters had grown tired of his rule.

But aside from Iraq and Kyoto, the bulk of Australia's foreign, trade and economic policies are not expected to change much under Rudd.
"The Australian people have decided that we as a nation will move forward," Rudd said in a victory speech late Saturday. "To embrace the future and together as Australians to unite and write a new page in our nation's history."


With 75 percent of the more than 13.5 million ballots counted, Labor had won more than 53 percent of the vote and a clear majority of at least 83 places in Parliament's 150-seat lower house, official Australian Electoral Commission results showed.
Howard's Liberal-National coalition had 46.6 percent of the vote, and 47 parliamentary seats. Howard's district of Bennelong hung in the balance, with the final outcome to be decided by postal votes to be counted in the next few days.
Howard had campaigned on his economic management, arguing that Rudd could not be trusted to continue Australia's 17 years of unbroken economic growth, fueled by China's and India's hunger for Australian coal and other minerals.
Rudd, 50, had argued that Howard, at 68, was out of ideas.
____
Associated Press writer Rod McGuirk contributed to this report from Brisbane.
 

Peter Parka

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I do, the're probably the craziest politics in the Western world, got to laugh at Pauline Hanson and the One Nation party!:24:
 

Ria

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Well seeing it affects my wifes country and my in laws, yes I do!;)

Yeah, I know hun - it's just quiet tonight and wanted to post and.......................................................................................................




















































































































posting anything is good right now LOL ;)
 

Peter Parka

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I notice none of the Americans posting in here. I do find it strange they only seem to show interest in America and Iraq in general in this section. I mean, this new government of Australia will affect them seeing it will involve Australian troops pulling out of Iraq and most probably a cooling of relations with the USA.
 

Breath

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I notice none of the Americans posting in here.

I think that since Australia is so far away and is almost an entity unto itself and tends to be peaceful, that Americans don't really pay much attention to what goes on politically down under. It doesn't "feel" like it affects me as much as other world politics might.
 
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