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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Michael Safi and Gay Alcorn

Victorian election: Labor poised to hand Coalition historic first-term defeat

Victorian Labor Party leader Daniel Andrews and his wife, Catherine, cast their votes on Saturday.
Victorian Labor Party leader Daniel Andrews and his wife, Catherine, cast their votes on Saturday. Photograph: Joe Castro/AAP

Labor appears poised to win today’s Victorian election, with the Coalition government hoping a last-minute swing and a strong marginal-seat campaign will avert a historic first-term election defeat.

An election-eve Newspoll saw no change in Labor’s consistent 52% to 48% lead, but showed the satisfaction of the premier, Denis Napthine, had fallen five points in the final days to 41%. He remains four points ahead of his Labor challenger, who surged 3% despite attacks by the government on his union ties.

A Galaxy poll on Friday showed a similar margin, as did a last-minute Fairfax-Ipsos survey. But the latter gave the Coalition a glimmer of hope, suggesting preference flows in line with the 2010 election would erode Labor’s lead completely and balance the race at 50% each.

The premier used last-minute TV appearances in his electorate in Portland, on the state’s south-west coast, to raise doubts over whether Labor leader Daniel Andrews could be trusted to manage the state’s triple-A rated economy and deliver infrastructure projects for a population set to boom in the next decades.

“I have faith in the voters that they know who they can trust to deliver a strong economy, they know who they can trust to deliver the major projects Melbourne and Victoria needs, like East West link, like Melbourne rail link, like the airport rail link,” Napthine said.

He dismissed the polls suggesting the government would be the state’s first single-term administration since 1955. “The poll can be wrong, the polls are often wrong,” Napthine said.

He is expected to vote in Port Fairy, in his seat of South-West Coast, around noon.

Andrews voted an hour earlier at a primary school in Mulgrave, his marginal electorate in Melbourne’s outer east. He told media on Saturday that Labor would put the government’s focus back on people, fix Tafe and solve a long-running pay dispute with the state’s paramedics.

“We’re going to give Victorians a clear choice, a choice between tired old negatives ... that are worth really not very much at all to Victorian families ... and an optimistic and positive plan,” he said.

The final days have seen a focus on a handful of marginal seats that will likely decide today’s result, including Bentleigh, in Melbourne’s south-east. The Liberals hold the seat on a knife-edge 0.8% margin and on Friday deployed the most popular federal face in the party, Julie Bishop, in a final push to hold the “sandbelt” electorate.

The seat also played host on Friday to the state’s former Labor state premier, Steve Bracks, and the federal opposition leader, Bill Shorten, who suggested the prime minister, Tony Abbott, was being hidden from the trail in “witness protection”.

The Abbott government’s unpopularity has haunted Napthine throughout the campaign trail and Labor has sought to press federal issues, such as the GP co-payment and this week’s cuts to the ABC.

Along with Bentleigh, the Coalition is trying to hold three other marginals electorates along the Frankston train line – Mordialloc, Carrum and Frankston – to stave off a Labor win. Also crucial are the regional cities of Ballarat and Geelong and the outer suburban seats of Yan Yean, Monbulk, Eltham and Cranbourne.

A hung parliament remains a possibility and the Greens are strongly contesting Melbourne, Richmond and two other tight inner-city seats in the hopes of securing the balance of power, which they would use to scrap the controversial East West link toll road and establish a new national park in the state’s central highlands.

The Greens were buoyed by a slight increase in their primary vote in the latest Newspoll, which suggested the party would win 12% and have a fighting chance of picking up at least one inner-city seat in the state’s lower house.

Greg Barber, the party’s Victorian leader, spent the morning at booths in Kensington and Richmond and was voting in Brunswick at midday.

Labor was angered on Saturday by the Greens’ decision to issue open how-to-vote cards in key electorates, which may benefit the Coalition.

The Greens issued open tickets – which means it did not indicate to voters where they should direct preferences – in the seats of Monbulk, Bentleigh, Mordialloc, Monbulk, Narre Warren North, Yan Yean, Carrum, Ringwood and Benambra.

But in most seats – including the marginal electorates of Frankston and Prahran – the Greens gave its preferences to Labor.

Earlier in the campaign, Labor rejected an offer from the Greens for the party to swap preferences.

The Herald Sun reported that exit polls of votes cast in the weeks before polling day indicted Labor had won 52.5% of the two-party vote.

There has been a record number of pre-poll votes, with almost 30% of people voting before Saturday.

The state’s upper house, too, could throw up resistance to the major parties, with some preference gurus suggesting candidates from the Sex party, the Shooters and the Liberal Democrats might get up.

Almost one-third of voters have already cast their ballots but their votes won’t be counted until Monday in a tight contest that could leave the result unknown until early next week. Polling booths around the state close at 6pm.

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