Yahoo – AFP,
July 4, 2016
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Australian
Labor leader Bill Shorten (L) has called Prime Minister Malcolm
Turnbull (R)
the 'David Cameron of the southern hemisphere' (AFP Photo/William
West, Lukas
Coch)
|
Australia's
opposition Labor Party urged Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull to resign Monday,
calling him the "David Cameron of the southern hemisphere" after he
failed to secure an emphatic election victory.
Millionaire
former banker Turnbull took the country to the ballot boxes on Saturday, but
his Liberal/National coalition has so far failed to win enough seats to form a
government.
Labor
leader Bill Shorten, whose party appears to have gained seats in the 150-member
House of Representatives but also fallen short of the 76 needed to govern, said
Turnbull had to go.
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Malcolm
Turnbull has been prime minister
since September 2015 (AFP Photo/Gal Roma)
|
"He
has taken this nation to an election on the basis of stability; he has
delivered instability."
He said
Turnbull's decision to put every seat in the upper house Senate up for grabs in
a so-called double dissolution election rather than have the usual half-Senate
vote had "made a bad situation worse".
"He
Brexited himself. This guy is like (the) David Cameron of the southern
hemisphere," the Labor leader said.
"He
leads a divided party, he has had an election and he has delivered an inferior
and unstable outcome."
Britain's
Cameron called a referendum on whether the country should stay in the EU and
led the "Remain" campaign. He announced he was quitting after the
nation voted to leave.
Turnbull is
the country's fourth leader since 2013 after he ousted fellow Liberal Tony
Abbott as prime minister in a party coup last September. He called elections
early hoping to shore up support for his ruling coalition.
With the
vote count still incomplete, the anti-immigration One Nation party of Pauline
Hanson, who once claimed Asians were in danger of swamping the country, looks
set to win multiple Senate seats.
"How
on earth did Mr. Turnbull think that an idea of reform could end up with two or
three One Nation senators in the Senate?" Shorten asked.
The vote
count in Australia is due to resume on Tuesday, with the Australian
Broadcasting Corporation reporting that the government has 68 seats to Labor's
67 with five minor players and 10 in doubt.


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