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Tony Abbott ‘embarrassing’ in Davos, says Bill Shorten | Tony Abbott ‘embarrassing’ in Davos, says Bill Shorten |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Labor has criticised the prime minister Tony Abbott’s decision to use the international platform of the World Economic Forum to broadcast domestic political squabbles. | |
The federal opposition leader Bill Shorten on Friday branded Abbott’s outing in Davos, his first major economic speech as prime minister, an “embarrassing performance”. | |
The prime minister, Shorten said, had taken the “low road of playing domestic politics on the international stage”. | |
Abbott on Thursday night used a keynote address to the World Economic Forum to outline his objectives for a G20 meeting in Brisbane, lay down some broad philosophical markers for his new government on the subject of economic policy, and deliver a clip around the ears for Labor. | |
The domestic partisanship was only a brief foray in the speech, but the prime minister in essence blamed Labor for undoing the good work of the Howard government in returning the commonwealth budget to surplus. | |
Abbott used his remarks in Davos as a point of contrast. | |
Labor had delivered a stimulus package during the global financial crisis, and kept spending, because the then government had a philosophy of “spending its way to prosperity”, the prime minister argued. The new Coalition government in Canberra was pro-market and small government. | |
There is a convention in Australian politics that domestic issues stay at home when leaders embark on overseas visits, and Labor on Friday argued Abbott would be better placed to respect it. | |
Shadow treasurer Chris Bowen objected to Abbott’s effort to “rewrite Australia’s economic history” – and he said the prime minister had chosen the wrong audience to prosecute his case. | |
Bowen said Australia had attracted positive international attention for coming through the global financial crisis without a major economic contraction – one of the few developed economies in the world to have that record. | |
“Global political and business leaders at the World Economic Forum know and respect the record of the Australian economy coming through the global financial crisis,” Bowen said on Friday. |
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