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As it happened: Scott Morrison, Anthony Albanese continue to clash over the economy as pre-polling opens across the country

Broede Carmody, Angus Thompson, Pallavi Singhal and Amelia McGuire
Updated ,first published

Today’s major headlines

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Thanks for joining us today. In case you missed them, here are the day’s major headlines:

  • Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese said he supports a 5.1 per cent wage hike to keep up with the current rate of inflation, and that increasing productivity would be the key to sustaining the wage increase.
Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese.Alex Ellinghausen
  • Prime Minister Scott Morrison says he continues to support Liberal candidate Katherine Deves after she appeared to walk back an earlier apology for describing gender reassignment surgery as mutilation.
Liberal candidate for Warringah Katherine Deves.James Brickwood

Lively Chisholm candidates’ forum has ended

By Clay Lucas

The candidates’ forum for the ultra-marginal seat of Chisholm has wrapped up.

More than 120 people attended the event at the Mount Waverley Community Centre where the two key candidates, Liberal MP for the seat Gladys Liu and Labor’s Carina Garland faced more than two hours of solid questioning by the three Chinese community associations who helped organise the event, by The Age, and by audience members.

Two men who disrupted the forum are escorted from the hall.Eddie Jim

It was a lively forum, beginning with a loud protest by Hong Kong independence activist Max Mok, who had planned to run for the seat.

Candidates then faced questioning about issues ranging from climate change to WeChat to Australia’s relationship with China.

All of it was translated into Mandarin, or at times from Mandarin into English, by master translator Professor Charles Qin.

Good night from the Mount Waverley Community Centre!

Audience anger at Liu over answers to WeChat questions

By Clay Lucas

Some audience members event became angry at a series of answers Liberal MP Gladys Liu gave, under questioning over her previous use of WeChat. Liu used WeChat to help win her seat in 2019.

In January this year, Liu said she would stop using the Chinese messaging app because of fears of political interference.

Her announcement followed Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s WeChat account being hijacked.

Gladys Liu at the Chisholm candidates forum.Eddie Jim

Asked whether she wanted the Chinese community to stop using WeChat, given she had abandoned it, Liu claimed she had never said that she had stopped using WeChat because of Chinese government interference.

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‘Dangerous’: Chisholm candidates respond to concerns about Australia-China relationship

By Clay Lucas

Candidates at the Chisholm forum tonight have now been asked about Australia’s deteriorating relationship with China.

Liberal MP Gladys Liu said that Anthony Albanese was always “flip-flop, flip-flop” on China, blaming Australia for ruining the relationship with the country at times and blaming China at others.

Chisholm candidates Wayne Tseng, Gladys Liu and Carina Garland.Eddie Jim

“I guarantee you that the next time when Albanese comes to the Chinese community, he will say it’s Morrison’s fault. Does he have a position on the Australia-China relationship or does he have a position that he doesn’t want you to know?”

Labor candidate Carina Garland, however, warned that it was “really dangerous to try and create a division between the two major parties on national security as Gladys has just done”.

Chisholm candidates asked about attack ads, election day signage

By Clay Lucas

The Age’s deputy editor, Michael Bachelard, who is moderating tonight’s forum in Chisholm, has asked Labor’s candidate, Carina Garland, if Labor’s attack ad against Liberal MP Gladys Liu’s integrity were racist.

Both Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said within moments of the ads’ release that it was racist. Labor has said privately that Liberals branded the ads as racist before they could have even seen them.

Chisholm candidates Wayne Tseng, Gladys Liu and Carina Garland.Eddie Jim

Garland said the ads were not racist and had simply pointed out facts about Liu.

“I think it’s perfectly reasonable in a democracy like ours to demand accountability from elected representatives.”

Chisholm candidates respond to questions about racist attacks

By Clay Lucas

Candidates at this evening’s Chisholm candidates’ forum have been asked about racist attacks on Chinese people.

Liberal MP Gladys Liu said she condemned racist attacks on Chinese people.

Chisholm candidates Carina Garland, Wayne Tseng and Gladys Liu.Eddie Jim

“We should be working with the whole country and condemn racism,” she said.

She said the day after the Labor Party had launched its attack ads on her, she had experienced racism.

“The day after the Labor Party launched the grubby attack on me, there was graffiti [saying] ‘CCP’ [the Chinese Communist Party] … on my billboards, and that is dangerous. We should not divide our community based on race. It is dangerous, it is offensive and divisive.”

Labor candidate Carina Garland said that Chinese people had told her that they had experienced racism because of “destructive and divisive” comments in recent years by Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Defence Minister Peter Dutton.

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Protesters interrupt Chisholm candidates’ forum

By Clay Lucas

The Chisholm candidates’ forum at the Mount Waverley Community Centre has gotten off to a dramatic start.

Incumbent MP for Chisholm Gladys Liu had her opening remarks briefly interrupted by activist Max Mok, a Hong Kong-born Australian who attempted to run as an independent in Chisholm but failed to correctly enroll with the Australian Electoral Commission.

The Hong Kong independence activist had planned to run as a candidate solely opposed to Liu.

Protesters at the Chisholm candidates’ forum.Eddie Jim

Mok and senate candidate Drew Pavlou, who is also running on a stridently anti-Chinese government platform, entered the hall screaming, “Gladys Liu is taking money from the Chinese government”.

Albanese says Labor will consult departments over anti-corruption body ‘with teeth’

By Pallavi Singhal

Labor’s model for a federal anti-corruption body is “one that has serious powers, one that is independent of government ... it will be one with teeth, one that is serious” and would receive the backing of key independents, Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese says.

Albanese said his government would seek the advice of departments, including the Attorney-General’s department, to “get it right” on a national anti-corruption commission.

Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese.Alex Ellinghausen

“What is very clear is that the only way that Australia will get a National Anti-Corruption Commission is with the election of a Labor Government,” Albanese told ABC’s 7.30 program.

Last week, Prime Minister Scott Morrison warned that Australia risked becoming a “public autocracy” if an independent integrity body had too much influence over the decisions of elected officials.

‘People wouldn’t fall further behind’: Albanese says wages should keep up with inflation

By Pallavi Singhal

Labor leader Anthony Albanese has backed his claim from earlier today that wages should increase in line with inflation, which is currently at 5.1 per cent.

“What you need to do to increase wages at the same time as you increase profits is to increase productivity,” Albanese told ABC’s 7.30.

Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese.Alex Ellinghausen

He said that if his party is elected, he will convene an employment summit to discuss the issue with business and union leaders.

“I believe very firmly that people who are on the minimum wage, which is just $20.33, shouldn’t fall further behind and I believe in particular in sectors like the aged care sector, where the royal commission said unless we increase wages, people will leave the sector,” Albanese said.

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Join us for live coverage of a candidates’ forum in ultra-marginal Chisholm

By Clay Lucas

From 7.30pm, we will be blogging a candidates’ forum happening in the ultra-marginal seat of Chisholm.

The Age has partnered with three Chinese associations, and three of the candidates on the Chisholm ballot will be here, at the Mount Waverley Community Centre opposite the suburb’s railway station.

Labor’s candidate for Chisholm, Carina Garland, and the incumbent, Gladys Liu.Paul Jeffers, Eddie Jim

Sitting MP Gladys Liu, Labor candidate Carina Garland and independent Wayne Tseng, a former Liberal Party member who is giving his preferences to Liu, are attending the forum, which will be chaired by The Age’s deputy editor, Michael Bachelard.

The Greens’ Sarah Newman was also invited, but the candidate, a university student who works at JB Hi-Fi, was unable to attend.

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