Bill Shorten Concedes Labour’s Defeat In Australian Federal Election

Bill Shorten Concedes Labour’s Defeat In Australian Federal Election

CANBERRA, Australia, May 19 (NNN-AGENCIES) – Bill Shorten conceded Labour’s defeat in the Australian federal election on Saturday evening.

He also stepped down as leader of the Australian Labour Party (ALP).

Before the announcement, chief election analyst of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), Antony Green, had predicted that the Liberal-National Party Coalition (LNP), led by Prime Minister Scott Morrison, would win the election.

“Without wanting to hold out any false hope, while there are still millions of votes to count and important seats yet to be finalised, it is obvious that Labour will not be able to form the next government,” said Shorten, as ABC live report showed that about 68 percent of the votes were counted.

“This has been a tough campaign. Toxic at times. But now that the contest is over, all of us have a responsibility to respect the result, respect the wishes of the Australian people and to bring our nation together,” he said.

“I wish we could have formed a government for these Australians this evening. I wish we could have won for the true believers, for our brothers and sisters in the mighty trade union movement. I wish we could have done it for Bob,” he added.

Bob Hawke, Shorten’s political hero and the longest-serving Labour PM in history, passed away only two days before Saturday’s election, aged 89.

For Shorten himself, however, the road was bumpy. Chosen to lead the ALP after the party lost the 2013 election, in a landslide, he was defeated three years later when Malcolm Turnbull claimed victory.

Speaking in Melbourne, where earlier in the day he said he was “quietly confident” of victory, Shorten said, “Labour’s next victory will belong to our next leader and I’m confident that victory will come at the next election.”

For many, Saturday was considered the “unloseable election” for Labour and party leader Bill Shorten, who built his campaign on promising action on climate change and significant investment in healthcare, education and infrastructure.

Morrison, who became Australia’s 30th PM in Aug, 2018, when he was chosen to replace Malcolm Turnbull as leader of the LNP, campaigned on a message of stability, promising fiscal stability and tax cuts across the board.

Every opinion poll suggested that Labour was set for victory on the back of strong swings towards the party in electorates in Victoria and Queensland.

However, the LNP was able to mitigate its losses in Victoria, considered the most progressive state in Australia, while also winning seats from Labour in Queensland.– NNN-AGENCIES

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