4.15pm UPDATE
CANBERRA - Australians will vote on October 9 in a cliff-hanger election pitting the conservative government against centre-left Labor, with national security and the economy as major issues, Prime Minister John Howard said on Sunday.
Howard ended months of phoney election campaigning by announcing the date when his Liberal/National coalition government would seek a fourth consecutive term.
"Who do you trust to keep the economy strong and protect family living standards? Who do you trust to lead the fight, on Australia's behalf, against international terrorism?" Howard told reporters at Parliament House in the nation's capital, Canberra.
An election could have been held as late as April 16 next year but Howard has long said he would go to the polls before the end of 2004.
His eight-year-old old government has trailed Labor and its new-generation leader, Mark Latham, in recent opinion polls. Howard was also behind in opinion polls before he was re-elected in November 2001.
Australian voters will now have six weeks of campaigning to decide whether to hand 65-year-old Howard another term or vote him out in favour of Labor and Latham, 22 years his junior.
"The election will be about the future of this nation over the next 10 years," Howard said.
Latham was due to hold a news conference later on Sunday.
Opinion polls have shown the government running neck-and-neck with Labor on primary votes.
But Labor leads substantially on a two-party preferred basis, where minority party votes are distributed to major parties and ultimately decide elections.
SUPPORT FOR US
Howard is banking on his government's impressive economic record and strong stand on national security, which included sending troops to Iraq and Afghanistan in enthusiastic support of the United States.
Howard's government won the November 2001 election on the back of a strong economy and hardline stand against illegal immigration, but his credibility has recently come under fire with claims he lied to voters on the eve of that poll.
Labor pounced on the issue of Howard's honesty this month when a former defence adviser said Howard lied in 2001 by sticking with claims boat people had thrown children overboard in a bid to win asylum, despite being told the story was false.
An attempt by Howard to prove he did not lie failed when two high-ranking military officers backed the position of the former defence adviser when interviewed by the Defence Department last week at the prime minister's request.
Latham has pledged to make truth in government, along with domestic issues such as health and education, a main election issue.
Howard began the formal process of calling the election when he visited Government House earlier on Sunday to seek approval from Governor-General Michael Jeffery, the representative of head of state Queen Elizabeth of Britain.
Under electoral rules, Australian governments are elected to three-year terms from the date of the first sitting of parliament but can call fresh elections at any time in that period.
- REUTERS
Herald Feature: Australian Election
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Australian PM announces October 9 election
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