Sydney - The Australian Labor Party on Sunday looked certain
to lose office in Western Australia after a state election upset that
has rattled Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's federal government.
Labor had a monopoly on power at both the state and federal level
before a big swing against it in Saturday's poll, the most likely
outcome of which is for the Liberal and National parties to cobble
together a unity state government that would see Labor's Alan
Carpenter replaced by Liberal leader Colin Barnett.
'It was a clear expression through the ballot box that people
wanted a change of government,' Barnett said. 'I believe that both
National and Liberal Party voters want to see a new government and
they want to see a Liberal-National arrangement of some sort.'
A coalition would mean Labor's ban on uranium mining at the
state's eight major deposits would end and a scramble for an
essential ingredient in nuclear energy would begin.
Rudd, who established coast-to-coast Labor dominance with a win
against John Howard's conservatives in the November federal election,
tried to paint Labor's loss as reflective of local rather than
national sentiment.
'We've got a hung parliament in Western Australia and I look
forward to working with either Mr Carpenter or Mr Barnett, whoever
ends up being premier, to reform the federation,' Rudd said.
Rudd supports uranium mining - there are three mines in operation
- but licensing is a state prerogative and Carpenter had declared his
state off limits.
A sharp economic downturn has wiped the sheen off the popular Rudd
government. But dissension in the conservative coalition means the
opposition has failed to capitalize on the money worries of voters.
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