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Australia Facing May 18 Vote as Morrison Holds Off Election Call

Morrison has said to be opted against the earlier date due to a number of public holidays that could affect early voting.

Australia Facing May 18 Vote as Morrison Holds Off Election Call
Scott Morrison, Australia’s prime minister, smiles during a Bloomberg Television interview in Sydney, Australia. (Photographer: Brendon Thorne/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Australia will probably head to the polls on May 18 with Prime Minister Scott Morrison expected to wait another week to call a federal election, local media reported Sunday.

Morrison has chosen not to visit the governor-general in Canberra today, AAP reported, a move that effectively ruled out a May 11 election. Sky News reported the government had opted against the earlier date due to a number of public holidays that could affect early voting. The opposition Labor party called that explanation “just absurd.”

Australia Facing May 18 Vote as Morrison Holds Off Election Call

“The only reason why this is occurring is so that they continue their roll-out of taxpayer-funded advertising,” Labor member of parliament Anthony Albanese told Sky News this morning. Albanese said he estimated the ruling Liberal-National government was spending more than A$600,000 ($426,000) a day on political advertising.

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg declined to say how much money the government was spending on political ads.

“Money is being spent in accordance with approved processes,” Frydenberg told ABC’s Insiders program Sunday. “That’s all transparent.”

The delay in calling a vote would allow coalition lawmakers to gauge support in the electorate for the federal budget, AAP said. Morrison’s government delivered its budget last week, pledging sweeping tax cuts mostly aimed at the middle class and a spending spree on transport infrastructure.

Polls show the Labor party, led by former union boss Bill Shorten, is poised to win power. Shorten, 51, has promised to implement reforms that would help eliminate generational inequality, skewed by a tax system that Labor claims has unfairly favored baby boomers.

--With assistance from Jason Scott.

To contact the reporter on this story: Chelsea Mes in Sydney at cmes@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Stanley James at sjames8@bloomberg.net, ;Andrew Monahan at amonahan@bloomberg.net, Ken McCallum, Sungwoo Park

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