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Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull. Photo: EPA

Will Australian voters stick with Malcolm Turnbull or elect Bill Shorten as fifth prime minister in three years?

Turnbull insists his government provides “calm heads, steady hands and a strong economic plan”.

Australians go to the polls on Saturday with the opposition leader vying to become the country’s fifth prime minister in three years. Global market turmoil since the Brexit vote, Australia’s success in turning back asylum seeker boats, gay marriage, housing prices, corporate tax rates and union corruption have been major issues in the eight-week campaign.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has urged Australians to vote for continuity and stability by re-electing his conservative coalition which dumped the country’s last prime minister less than a year ago.

Mr Turnbull says this is the time for stability. You cannot have stability without unity
Opposition leader Bill Shorten

Opposition leader Bill Shorten, who played a key role in his centre-left Labor Party ousting two of its own prime ministers in the space of three years, says the government remains deeply divided and that Labor is the stable option.

“Mr Turnbull says this is the time for stability. You cannot have stability without unity,” Shorten said this week.

Polling suggests Labor will gain some seats in the election but not the 21 needed to form a majority government in the 150-seat House of Representatives. Labor currently holds 55 seats, the coalition 90 and five seats are held by minor parties or independents.

The government has promised to generate jobs and economic growth through tax cuts to big business, while Labor says it will keep the higher tax rates and use the revenue to better fund schools and hospitals.

There has been little change in opinion polls during the eight-week election campaign, and some observers say uninterested voters have switched off.

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Deakin University political expert Geoff Robinson said both sides have been campaigning on their traditional strengths – the conservatives regarded as better economic managers and Labor more generous on health and schools.

Robinson said although Turnbull had disappointed many who had hoped for more progressive leadership since he replaced the socially conservative and polarising Tony Abbott as prime minister in September, the public mood was to give Turnbull more time.

“Although the initial burst of enthusiasm for him wore off fairly quickly, people don’t actively dislike him,” Robinson said. “He’s got that amenable, middle-of-the-road style. I think that appeals to a lot of voters.”

A television ad by the ruling Liberal Party reflected the possible mood of an electorate that did not love the government in its first term but was not yet ready to toss it out.

Opposition leader Bill Shorten. Photo: EPA

“I reckon we should just see it through and stick with the current mob for a while,” a welder on a construction site says in urging the government’s re-election.

While commentators accused the government of damning itself with faint praise, Turnbull described the ad as “a call for continued stability”.

Turnbull told a campaign rally this week that his government provides the “calm heads, steady hands and a strong economic plan” that Australia needs following the shocks to global markers caused by Britain voting to leave the European Union.

Although the initial burst of enthusiasm for him wore off fairly quickly, people don’t actively dislike [Turnbull]
Geoff Robinson, Deakin University

Labor accuses Turnbull, a 61-year-old self-made multimillionaire worth an estimated A$150 million (US$110 million), of being “seriously out of touch” with ordinary Australians.

The government accuses Shorten, a 49-year-old former union boss, of inciting divisive and outdated class warfare.

Those battle lines include Labor’s plan to reduce tax breaks on real estate to make it a less attractive investment for landlords, which the government warns would cause property prices to tumble, damaging the economy.

As in many countries, same-sex marriage has become a campaign issue, with the opposition saying that under a Shorten government legislation allowing same-sex marriage would quickly be put to the Parliament. If re-elected, Turnbull’s government would ask the Australian public to vote on the issue in a plebiscite.

Both the government and opposition have promised to maintain Australia’s tough stance against asylum seekers, which has prevented any refugees from reaching the Australian mainland by boat for two years.

‘Calm heads, steady hands’: Australia Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull promises stability if re-elected

Ostensibly, Turnbull called the election because a hostile senate refused to pass legislation allowing the government to create a building industry watchdog called the Australian Building and Construction Commission. The commission was disbanded in 2012 by a former Labor government linked to the trade union movement.

While the plight of the commission may be an obscure issue to most voters, the debate focuses attention on Shorten’s history as a union official, which exposed him to allegations of corruption. He has denied any wronging.

Turnbull has assured voters that the revolving door to the prime minister’s office was now shut, and says if he wins he will stand again for re-election as prime minister when the next election is due in 2019.

“I’m making that commitment and that prediction and only time will tell,” he told The National Press Club this week.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Will voters re-elect Turnbull or choose yet another leader?
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