Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese yesterday called a national election for May 3, launching a five-week campaign that is set to be dominated by cost-of-living pressures.
Albanese’s Labor party won a majority at the last federal election in 2022, but most recent opinion polls show the party neck-and-neck with the opposition Liberal-National coalition when votes from smaller parties are redistributed.
“Our government has chosen to face global challenges the Australian way — helping people under cost-of-living pressure, while building for the future,” he told a news conference.
Photo: Reuters
“Because of the strength and resilience that our people have shown, Australia is turning the corner. Now on 3 May, you choose the way forward,” he said.
Albanese earlier in the morning met Australia’s Governor-General Sam Mostyn to seek permission to call a nationwide federal election.
Under Australia’s Constitution, the prime minister must formally seek permission to call an election from the governor-general, who represents the head of state, King Charles III.
Three-year term limits mean Australia must go to the polls by May 17 at the latest to elect a new parliament.
Albanese has announced a slew of measures aimed at pleasing families and businesses in recent months, including tax cuts in Tuesday’s budget, with the rising cost of living in the country set to dominate the campaign.
A close-run election could mean no single party or coalition of parties would be able to form a government on its own, instead relying on smaller parties to command a majority in the country’s lower house.
Albanese, a long-time Labor lawmaker who grew up in government housing, came to power on a wave of personal popularity, but has seen his popularity dented by the rising cost of living and a steep rise in interest rates during his tenure.
Falling inflation and the decision by Australia’s central bank to cut interest rates for the first time in five years at a meeting last month have done little to help Albanese’s polling numbers.
After having a healthy poll lead for much of his term, his approval ratings are now close to those of Liberal leader Peter Dutton, a former police officer and minister for home affairs in the previous Liberal-National government.
Dutton has campaigned on law and order and a plan to adopt nuclear power in the country, in opposition to Labor’s transition to renewable energy.
A French-Algerian man went on trial in France on Monday for burning to death his wife in 2021, a case that shocked the public and sparked heavy criticism of police for failing to take adequate measures to protect her. Mounir Boutaa, now 48, stalked his Algerian-born wife Chahinez Daoud following their separation, and even bought a van he parked outside her house near Bordeaux in southwestern France, which he used to watch her without being detected. On May 4, 2021, he attacked her in the street, shot her in both legs, poured gasoline on her and set her on fire. A neighbor hearing
DEATH CONSTANTLY LOOMING: Decades of detention took a major toll on Iwao Hakamada’s mental health, his lawyers describing him as ‘living in a world of fantasy’ A Japanese man wrongly convicted of murder who was the world’s longest-serving death row inmate has been awarded US$1.44 million in compensation, an official said yesterday. The payout represents ¥12,500 (US$83) for each day of the more than four decades that Iwao Hakamada spent in detention, most of it on death row when each day could have been his last. It is a record for compensation of this kind, Japanese media said. The former boxer, now 89, was exonerated last year of a 1966 quadruple murder after a tireless campaign by his sister and others. The case sparked scrutiny of the justice system in
DITCH TACTICS: Kenyan officers were on their way to rescue Haitian police stuck in a ditch suspected to have been deliberately dug by Haitian gang members A Kenyan policeman deployed in Haiti has gone missing after violent gangs attacked a group of officers on a rescue mission, a UN-backed multinational security mission said in a statement yesterday. The Kenyan officers on Tuesday were on their way to rescue Haitian police stuck in a ditch “suspected to have been deliberately dug by gangs,” the statement said, adding that “specialized teams have been deployed” to search for the missing officer. Local media outlets in Haiti reported that the officer had been killed and videos of a lifeless man clothed in Kenyan uniform were shared on social media. Gang violence has left
US Vice President J.D. Vance on Friday accused Denmark of not having done enough to protect Greenland, when he visited the strategically placed and resource-rich Danish territory coveted by US President Donald Trump. Vance made his comment during a trip to the Pituffik Space Base in northwestern Greenland, a visit viewed by Copenhagen and Nuuk as a provocation. “Our message to Denmark is very simple: You have not done a good job by the people of Greenland,” Vance told a news conference. “You have under-invested in the people of Greenland, and you have under-invested in the security architecture of this