Saturday, July 2, 2016

Australia election too close to call

Australia election too close to call

25 minutes ago

   From the sectionAustralia

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Image copyrightREUTERSImage captionPrime Minister Malcolm Turnbull's image is displayed on a screen at a Liberal Party event in Sydney

Australia's election is too close to call and the final result may not be known for some time as counting continues in tightly run seats.

It is unclear if the ruling Liberal-National has won the 76 lower house seats it needs to form a ruling majority.

If it has not, it will need support from minor parties and independents to hold on to power.

The Labor Party will not gain enough seats to form government.

But it has improved strongly on its 2013 election result of 55 lower house seats, making particularly strong gains in Tasmania and New South Wales.

'Labor is back'

Opposition Leader Bill Shorten told party faithful at a function in Victoria that the close result was a vindication of Labor's policies.

"There is one thing for sure - the Labor Party is back," he said.

"Three years after the Liberals came to power in a landslide they have lost their mandate. And Mr Turnbull's economic program, such as it was, has been rejected by the people of Australia, whatever happens next week."

Labor was decimated at the 2013 election, when Tony Abbott led the party.

Postal and pre-poll votes are now being counted as a number of important seats go down to the wire.

More than 10 million people cast ballots on Saturday, on top of four million who voted early.

All 150 seats in Australia's lower house, the House of Representatives, are up for grabs at the election, as are 76 seats in Australia's upper house, the Senate.

Minor party success

Results so far suggest Australians voted in large numbers for independents and minor parties.

Image copyrightEPAImage captionSenator Nick Xenophon, leader of the Nick Xenophon Team, celebrates after taking the seat of Mayo off the government

Senator Nick Xenophon has been pegged as a potential kingmaker after his newly formed political party took the lower house South Australian seat of Mayo, formerly a safe Liberal seat.

Mr Xenophon is expected to be returned to the Senate and his party may gain additional upper house seats, particularly in South Australia.

Pauline Hanson's One Nation party has polled strongly in Queensland and although it has not won a lower house seat, its preferences have tended to flow to the opposition Labor Party.

Ms Hanson, who gained notoriety for her anti-immigration views in the 1990s, told the Nine Network that, based on early results, she was likely to secure two spots in the Senate.

Image copyrightEPAImage captionControversial politician Pauline Hanson appears likely to return to the parliament after a strong showing in Queensland

Opposition Leader Bill Shorten's claims that the government intended to dismantle Australia's public health system, Medicare, was widely being credited with creating a late swing to Labor.

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