Australian PM Albanese boosted by historic by-election win

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Despite calling the election result “a historic win”, Mr Albanese said his government would remain grounded.

Mr Anthony Albanese, who is set to finish a year in power in May, has enjoyed high approval ratings since becoming prime minister.

PHOTO: REUTERS

- Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Monday that he would not “get carried away” after his Labor Party defied the odds to snatch a seat from the opposition at a by-election, a 100-year first, even as voters battled higher living costs.

Labor’s Mary Doyle won the weekend by-election for the Lower House federal seat of Aston in Melbourne’s eastern suburbs with a swing of more than 6 per cent, in a blow to the conservative Liberal-National opposition coalition in one of its traditional strongholds in Victoria state.

Mr Albanese said the government’s focus on making a practical difference in people’s lives resonated with voters, who understood the spike in living costs was due to global supply chain problems linked to Russia’s war in Ukraine.

But despite calling the election result “a historic win”, he said his government will remain grounded. “This was a significant victory... but we don’t get carried away with this,” he told ABC Radio in an interview.

The last time the opposition lost a by-election to a government candidate was in 1920, in the Western Australia state goldfields electorate of Kalgoorlie.

The by-election in Aston was triggered after former Liberal minister Alan Tudge, who won with a slim 2.8 per cent margin in the 2022 General Election, quit politics due to personal reasons.

Mr Albanese, who is set to finish a year in power in May, has enjoyed high approval ratings since becoming prime minister.

A news poll published by The Australian newspaper on Monday showed him stretching his lead to 58 per cent as the preferred leader, eclipsing opposition leader Peter Dutton’s 26 per cent support.

The survey of 1,500 voters also showed Labor extending its lead on a two-party preferred basis to 55 per cent, against the opposition’s 45 per cent.

The by-election win comes a week after Labor returned to power in New South Wales, Australia’s most populous state.

The win means the party now governs at state and federal levels across Australia’s mainland, leaving island state Tasmania as the conservative outlier. REUTERS

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