CANBERRA, Australia — Australia’s conservative opposition
swept to power Saturday, ending six years of Labor Party rule and winning over
a disenchanted public by promising to end a hated tax on carbon emissions,
boost a flagging economy and bring about political stability after years of
Labor infighting.
“I know that Labor hearts are heavy across the nation
tonight, and as your prime minister and as your parliamentary leader of the
great Australian Labor Party, I accept responsibility,” Prime Minister Kevin
Rudd said in a speech to supporters, after calling opposition leader
Tony
Abbott to concede defeat. “I gave it my all, but it was not enough for us to
win.”
A victory for the conservative Liberal Party-led coalition
comes despite the relative unpopularity of Abbott, a 55-year-old former Roman
Catholic seminarian and Rhodes scholar who has struggled to connect with women
voters and was once dubbed “unelectable” by opponents and even some supporters.
The Liberal Party’s election victory may signal a
strengthening of ties between Canberra and Jerusalem. Abbot told reporters last
month that the last two Labor governments had not maintained Australia’s strong
relationship with the Jewish state, something he said he aimed to fix,
according to the Australian Associated Press.
“There’s been a bit of wobbling under the current government
but I would expect our standard rock-solid friendship with Israel to resume
should the coalition win the election,” he said. ”I’m a friend of Israel —
always have been, always will be.”
But voters were largely fed up with Labor and Rudd, after a
years-long power struggle between him and his former deputy, Julia Gillard.
Gillard, who became the nation’s first female prime minister after ousting Rudd
in a party vote in 2010, ended up losing her job to Rudd three years later in a
similar internal party coup.
The drama, combined with Labor reneging on an election
promise by imposing a deeply unpopular tax on the nation’s biggest carbon
polluters, proved deadly for Labor’s re-election chances.
“I now look forward to forming a government that is
competent, that is trustworthy and which purposefully and steadfastly and
methodically sets about delivering on our commitments to you the Australian
people,” Abbott told supporters after claiming victory.
In his concession speech, Rudd said he would be stepping
down as party leader.
“The Australian people, I believe, deserve a fresh start
with our leadership,” he said.
Former Labor Prime Minister Bob Hawke blamed the party’s
loss on its inability to unite. “This is an election lost by the government
rather than won by Tony Abbott,” he told Sky News.
Abbott, who becomes Australia’s third prime minister in
three months, will aim to end a period of extraordinary political instability
in Australia.
The swing away from Labor was a resounding rejection of
Australia’s first minority government since World War II. Voters disliked the
deals and compromises struck between Labor, the minor Greens party and
independent lawmakers to keep their fragile, disparate and sometime chaotic
coalition together for the past three years, including the carbon tax.
Abbott has vowed to scrap the carbon tax from July 2014 —
two years after it was implemented — and instead introduce taxpayer-funded
incentives for polluters to operate cleaner.
It is unclear whether Abbott will be able to pass the
necessary law changes through Parliament, but he has threatened to hold early
elections if the Senate thwarts him.
Abbott’s popularity seems to have peaked at the right time.
Two polls published this past week by Sydney-based market researcher Newspoll
are the only ones in which Abbott beat Rudd as preferred prime minister since
Newspoll first began comparing the two leaders in 2010.
There is unlikely to be any honeymoon period for Abbott, as
he inherits a slowing economy, hurt by the cooling of a mining boom that kept
the resource-rich nation out of recession during the global financial crisis.
Australia’s new government has promised to slash foreign aid
spending as it concentrates on returning the budget to surplus. Labor spent
billions of dollars on stimulus projects to avoid recession. But declining
corporate tax revenues from the mining slowdown forced Labor to break a promise
to return the budget to surplus in the last fiscal year.
Abbott has also promised to repeal a tax on coal and iron
ore mining companies, which he blames in part for the downturn in the mining
boom. The 30 percent tax on the profits of iron ore and coal miners was
designed to cash in on burgeoning profits from a mineral boom fueled by Chinese
industrial demand. But the boom was easing before the tax took effect. The tax
was initially forecast to earn the government 3 billion Australian dollars
($2.7 billion) in its first year, but collected only AU$126 million after six
months.
Abbott was a senior minister in the government of Prime
Minister John Howard, who ruled for 11 years until Rudd first took office in
2007.
Under Howard, Australia — one of the world’s worst
greenhouse gas polluters on a per capita basis — and the United States had been
the only wealthy countries to refuse to ratify the Kyoto Protocol on reducing
global warming.
One of Rudd’s first acts as prime minister was to ratify the
Protocol, and he became Australia’s most popular prime minister of the past
three decades with his promise to introduce a carbon emissions trading scheme.
His popularity fell after he failed to persuade the Senate to deliver the
scheme.
Abbott also faces the politically thorny challenge of
figuring out how to curb a growing number of asylum seekers reaching Australia
by boat. The Liberals have promised new policies requiring the navy to turn
asylum seeker boats back to Indonesia, where they launch, and the government to
buy back aging fishing boats from Indonesian villagers to prevent them from
falling into the hands of people smugglers.
“In three years’ time, the carbon tax will be gone, the
boats will be stopped, the budget will be on track for a believable surplus and
the roads for the 21st century will finally be on the way,” Abbott said
Saturday night.
The election likely brought Australia’s first Aboriginal
woman to Parliament. Former Olympian Nova Peris is almost certain to win a
Senate seat for Labor in the Northern Territory, but the final results will not
be known for days. Less likely is WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s bid for a
Senate seat in Victorian state.
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