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Labour Leader Vows to Oust Queen as Australia Votes in General Election

© AP Photo / Kirsty WigglesworthQueen Elizabeth II. File photo
Queen Elizabeth II. File photo - Sputnik International
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The counting of votes has started in Australia, with the first exit polls showing PM hopeful Bill Shorten’s Labour Party to be ahead of the governing Liberal-National coalition in the country’s general election.

Bill Shorten, the leader of Australia’s opposition Labour Party, has called for the British Monarchy to be abolished in his country, announcing plans to install an Australian head of state to replace Queen Elizabeth.

In a speech ahead of the country’s general election on Friday, Shorten claimed that the vote to topple Her Majesty could take place as early as 2021.

READ MORE: Top 10 Things You Probably Didn't Know About Queen Elizabeth II

“After 250 years of borrowing a monarch from the other side of the world, it is time for an Australian head of state”, Shorten told his supporters during a rally in Sydney.

Earlier, he said in an interview with Australia’s Channel Nine news network he “already feels a responsibility to millions of people to win” in the 18 May elections.

“But sure, I want to do it for Bob as well. I don't want to let his memory down”, he added referring to former Australian Prime Minister and Labour Party member Bob Hawke, who died two days before a federal election.

READ MORE: Heavy’s the Head That Wears the Crown: Queen Elizabeth Talks Royal Headgear

In this photo released on Monday, Dec. 24, 2018, Queen Elizabeth II poses after she recorded her annual Christmas Day message, in the White Drawing Room of Buckingham Palace in central London - Sputnik International
Queen Elizabeth's Christmas Speech Draws Brits' Ire, Stirs Monarchy Debate
Meanwhile, the first exit polls have indicated that Labour is beating the governing Liberal-National coalition by winning as many as 82 seats in the 151-member House of Representatives.

A poll by the Australian Financial Review and the independent research company Ipsos, in turn, showed Labour coming ahead of the ruling coalition by 51 per cent to 49 per cent.

While the opinion polls in the late 1990s indicated many Australians’ desire to keep Her Majesty, more recent surveys, including an Essential poll, revealed that at least 52.4 per cent of respondents are ready and willing to replace the Queen with a president.

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