Australia’s ruling coalition ahead of Labor in election count

Rumblings of discontent can be heard in the Liberal Party about PM Malcolm Turnbull

Counting in the Australian election resumed on Tuesday and saw the ruling Liberal-National coalition pull ahead of the Labor opposition.

The coalition has now won 70 of the lower house of parliament’s 150 seats. Labor has 67, independents and minor parties have five, and eight seats are still too close to call.

Prime minister Malcolm Turnbull said he took "full responsibility" for the government's poor election performance, but said voters were duped by claims the coalition planned to privatise Medicare. "There is no doubt that Labor cynically abused the trust of Australians by lying to them about this and it is something for all of us, politicians and the media, to contemplate," he said.

Kingmaker role

There are rumblings of discontent in the right wing of the

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Liberal Party

about Mr Turnbull’s future, but nobody has gone on record to date. If the eight undecided seats go to the party currently leading in the count, the coalition will get to 73 and Labor to 72, meaning the other five become kingmakers as 76 seats are needed for a majority.

Two of the five – Adam Bandt of the Greens and Tasmanian independent Andrew Wilkie – are likely to back Labor, while Queensland maverick Bob Katter backed the coalition the last time there was a hung parliament, in 2010, and will almost certainly do so again. This leaves Cathy McGowan in the Victorian seat of Indi, and Rebekha Sharkie in the South Australian seat of Mayo. Both Ms McGowan and Ms Sharkie have previously worked for Liberal MPs, but both defeated Liberals to win their seats.

Labor leader Bill Shorten says Mr Turnbull may call a snap poll: "This is a divided government led by a weak prime minister so . . . the easy option for him would be to pull the rip cord and look at having another election."

The senate count will take longer to finalise, but is already notable for the return of anti-immigration party One Nation. Its leader, Pauline Hanson, is back in parliament after 18 years. In her maiden speech in 1996, Ms Hanson said Australia was at risk of being "swamped by Asians". She says time has proved her right.

Australia's race discrimination commissioner, Tim Soutphommasane, of Asian heritage, recalled hearing Ms Hanson's speech.

“There was a great deal of ugliness and division unleashed by Ms Hanson . . .” he told ABC TV. He has invited Ms Hanson to join him for a pho soup and a chat.

Pádraig Collins

Pádraig Collins

Pádraig Collins a contributor to The Irish Times based in Sydney