Budget first, then election: Turnbull

The prime minister expects the election to be on July 2 and will ask the governor general to dissolve both houses of parliament after the budget.

PM Malcolm Turnbull and Labor Opposition leader Bill Shorten

PM Malcolm Turnbull and Labor Opposition leader Bill Shorten Source: AAP

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull will wait until after the May 3 budget to ask the governor-general to dissolve both houses of parliament and call a July 2 election.

Mr Turnbull declined to be more specific about when he would make an election announcement, preferring to say it would be at an "appropriate time" after the budget.

The prime minister has until May 11 to make the call.
"But I just want to be very clear that we are governing, we have a lot of decisions to make, not least of which is the budget, the most important economic policy statement of the year," he told reporters at a construction site in Canberra on Tuesday.

Mr Turnbull has the triggers he wants for a double-dissolution election after the Senate rejected for a second time government legislation restoring the building industry watchdog.

Ultimately voters would decide the fate of the Australian Building and Construction Commission, he said.

Mr Turnbull vowed to use an election mandate to present the legislation to a joint sitting of the new parliament.

"I think Australians understand that it's important that the rule of law prevails in every part of Australian industry," he said.

They also understood they were paying too much for schools and hospitals and roads because of lawlessness in the construction sector.

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Published 19 April 2016 12:42pm
Updated 19 April 2016 4:41pm
Source: AAP


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