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Australia’s
Rudd leads Labor to election win
Foreign Desk Report
BRISBANE—Australia’s Labor leader Kevin Rudd, a Mandarin speaking former
diplomat, swept into power at national elections on Saturday on a wave
of support for generational change, ending 11 years of conservative
rule.
“Today Australia has looked to the future,” Rudd, flanked by his wife
Therese and family, told jubilant supporters. “I will be a prime
minister for all Australians.” The surge to Labor left conservative
Prime Minister John Howard struggling to win even his own parliamentary
seat, which he has held since 1974, putting him in danger of becoming
the first prime minister since 1929 to lose his constituency.
Rudd, 50, presented himself as a new generation leader by promising to
pull Australian combat troops out of Iraq and sign the Kyoto Protocol on
climate change, further isolating Washington on both issues.
Rudd is expected to forge closer ties with China and other Asian nations
and has said he wants a more independent voice in foreign policy, but on
Saturday again promised Australia would retain its close alliance with
the United States.
His message of new leadership attracted a swing of more than five
percent across the nation from the previous election, locking in only
the sixth change of government since World War Two. “We’ve all got goose
bumps that finally we might have a leader who is passionate about
fairness in this country,” Celeste Giese, 39, told Reuters at Rudd’s
victory party. “Finally, after 11 years, it’s happening,” she said.
The election was fought mainly on domestic issues, with Labor cashing in
on anger at workplace laws and rising interest rates which put home
owners under financial pressure at a time when Australia’s economy is
booming. During the campaign, Rudd said one of his first actions would
be to lead his country’s delegation to December’s international climate
talks in Bali, emphasizing that Australia hopes to take a lead role in
efforts to combat global warming.
Howard, who had won four consecutive elections and held power for 11
years, conceded his government had lost power in front of a crowd of
supporters in Sydney late on Saturday, saying he took full personal
responsibility for the defeat.
“This is a great democracy and I want to wish Mr. Rudd well,” Howard
said. “We bequeath to him a nation that is stronger and prouder and more
prosperous than it was 11-1/2 years ago.” Election analyst Antony Green
predicted Labor would win more than 80 seats in the 150-seat parliament,
giving it a clear majority in its own right for the first time since it
lost power to Howard in 1996.
The result will mean Labor is in power nationally and in all of
Australia’s six states and two territories, with the lord mayor of the
northern city of Brisbane now the senior ranking elected official in
Howard’s Liberal Party.
Howard had won four consecutive elections and was Australia’s
second-longest serving prime minister behind Liberal Party founder Sir
Robert Menzies. He had trailed in opinion polls all year.
A staunch U.S. ally committed to keeping Australian troops in Iraq, he
offered voters income tax cuts, but few new policies, instead
highlighting his strong economic record and attacking Labor’s links to
the trade union movement.
With 73 percent of the vote counted in Howard’s seat of Bennelong,
election officials put him just behind Labor’s high-profile rookie
candidate, former national television political journalist, Maxine McKew.
“This has been an amazing night, a wonderful night for Labor, a
fabulous, I hope transforming, moment for the country,” McKew told
cheering supporters, adding it might be weeks before a winner is
declared.
At a sombre Liberal Party headquarters, party faithful were putting a
brave face on the defeat.
“I just hope the public now gives John Howard some kudos for what he’s
done over the years,” said David Bennett, a member of the Young
Liberals, the youth wing of the Liberal Party.
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