Australian PM calls poll to move country forward
SYDNEY, July 17, AFP-- Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard
Saturday called an August 21 election, vowing to tackle the flashpoint
issues of refugees, the economy and global warming, just weeks after
taking power.
Gillard, 48, said she would ask the Australian people to endorse her
leadership after she ruthlessly deposed former prime minister Kevin Rudd
in a party coup.
“Today I seek a mandate from the Australian people to move Australia
forward,” Gillard said, officially kicking off the five-week campaign.
“This election I believe presents Australians with a very clear
choice whether we move Australia forward or go back.” Australia’s first
woman prime minister said the nation had “come too far as a country and
evolved too much as a society to risk the kind of backward looking
leadership” offered by her conservative opponent Tony Abbott.
The former industrial lawyer laid out her case for re-election on the
issues of asylum seekers, economic management and climate change,
painting herself as a progressive optimist who was “asking the
Australian people for their trust.”
But after just three weeks in office in which she insisted she had
made some “big strides forward” she warned it would be a “very close
election” and that a “close, tough, hard-fought campaign” lay ahead.
She faces an uphill battle to deliver the centre-left ruling Labor
party a second three-year term in office, after a spectacular fall from
the dizzying heights of popularity it enjoyed for its first two years in
power.
|