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Anthony Albanese wins on landslide

    Anthony Albanese wins on landslide

    Anthony Albanese wins on landslide

    Watch: Three things to do about the results of Australia's election

    Labour's Anthony Albanese has violated the so-called “serving curse” and is about to be re-elected as Australian Prime Minister in a landslide.

    Official voting statistics will not be completed for several days, but the centre-left government in Albany will significantly increase its majority after the conservative Free National League suffered a nationwide failure.

    “Today, the Australian people vote for Australian values: fairness, desire and opportunity for all; in order to show adversity and the power of kindness to those in need.”

    Co-leader Peter Dutton, who lost his seat for 24 years, said he took “full responsibility” for the party's losses and apologized to members of Congress.

    After the result, British Prime Minister Sir Kyle Stamer and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio both said they were looking forward to deepening bilateral relations with Australia.

    Concerns about the cost of living — especially health care and housing affordability — dominated the five-week campaign, but international relations also raised the minds of how to deal with Donald Trump’s imminent elections.

    Despite his attempts to get rid of policies on immigration, public sector cuts, China and the Trump administration, he sees Dutton as Australia's Trump and seems to be having a bad time with voters.

    Labour has waved at them nationwide, a rare feat of Australia's second government – Albanys became the first prime minister to win back-to-back elections in 20 years.

    The party's success also eases the trend of voters abandoning two major parties, a major story of the last general election in 2022.

    According to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) forecast, Labor is expected to win 86 seats, about 40 coalitions and one or two green parties. Other secondary parties and independents lead the way in nine seats.

    This represents nine increases in the workforce, with support for greens falling sharply. But most “Blue Green” independents return among their more conservative downtown voters.

    It was an amazing shift from the beginning of the year when polls put Albanys at a record low in popularity amid global economic pain, tense national debates and government dissatisfaction.

    Getty Images Anthony Albanese delivers victory speech on election nightGetty Images

    Anthony Albanese says his election is a vote on equality and childishness

    Albanis talked about some of the key issues of the election in his victory speech on Saturday night, including immigration, climate change and energy.

    He reiterated his commitment to doing health care – the most important GP appointment – ​​more affordable, making buying more Australian homes addressing climate change and protecting the environment.

    It is worth noting that he also vowed to reconcile the Aboriginal people: “When we bridge the gap between native and non-Indigenous Australians, we will become a stronger country.”

    It's about the biggest moment of the Albanians' tenure, the failed voice referendum in October 2023, which attempts to recognize the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in the Constitution and to establish a parliamentary advisory body for them.

    Australia remains the only Commonwealth country that has never signed a treaty with its indigenous peoples.

    Soul search after highlighting the results

    Voice is one of Albanes' most defined policies and his most compelling setbacks-it was overwhelmingly rejected after months of often toxic and divisive national debate.

    Aboriginal Australians told the BBC they felt policymakers have forgotten them since then.

    The Prime Minister also found it difficult to walk a middle road in the Israeli Gaza War, buying millions of dollars of beach pads in the housing crisis, caught the attention of him, like other global leaders, dealing with a tough economic situation.

    With the number of tank polls, Albanis is widely seen as the weaker in the election and is expected to be the next victim of the “incumbent curse”, a term that explains a global trend in which the struggling component is abandoning the government after a term.

    On the other hand, Dutton looks like he is writing a great political comeback – he is on the brink of bringing the party from the worst losses in 70 years.

    It has been nearly a century since the first-year government failed to win reelection, but as Australian National University professor emeritus John Warhurst said: “Dutton was in the front. It was his failure.”

    Instead, Dutton oversees a party’s losses tonight, so he lost Dickson’s voters and lost to Labour’s Ali France.

    Getty Images Peter Dutton delivers concession speech on election nightGetty Images

    Peter Dutton is one of the most opposition members of Congress

    He told Brisbane supporters: “I love this country and fight for it.”

    “Our opponents defined our definition in this election, which is not a true story about who we are, but we will rebuild from here, we will do that because we know our values, we know our beliefs, and we will stick to them forever.”

    His campaign was undermined by non-compulsory errors: including a series of policy back-lifting flows that cause confusion, embarrassing mistakes such as cost of living, and perhaps most memorable, accidentally directing the AFL ball to the photographer's head.

    Professor Wohurst said: “The opposition has always been mean.”

    But the government has unwaveringly disciplined during its campaign – cowardly. Analysts say its strategy allows voters to judge Dutton and its political parties to a large extent, rather than promote bold or compelling policies.

    This is what we hear from voters throughout the campaign.

    Watch: “Bored” and “Freak”: Australians sum up their elections with one word

    While the league turns to licking the wound and choosing the next leader, it will once again have to consider its direction.

    In the last election, analysts and some of the party’s own MPs warned against moving to the right. They question Dutton – many polarized figures who are considered by many as hard people to be conservative – are the right candidates for rebuilding support, especially in the mild areas where they lose a lot.

    After a dying campaign that ventured into the territory of cultural warfare, some say the coalition will have to ask these questions again after “Trump” politics – maybe a different answer would be found if they wanted to stay competitive.

    “We have to stop drinking Cool aid from the fire hose, we need to do a serious review … we cheat ourselves, we are just a few tactical equipment, not winning the election,” former liberty strategist Tony Barry told ABC.

    But, meanwhile, Labour must decide that the Australian large authorization will hand them to them.

    Albanis's “current curse” turned out to be a gift, and international uncertainty seemed to have freed countries like Canada from change. Similarly, Australia voted for stability.

    Amy Remeikis, chief political analyst at the Australian Institutes think tank, said the Labor Bureau has attacked a “middle path” with its policy platform, but can be brave now.

    “That's their way into the election, and that's what they see, bringing them dividends. But the question now is: 'Will Labour actually do something with power?'''

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