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Abbott's coalition won 73 seats and with Katter's support commanded 74 seats. Abbott said Tuesday he was disappointed by the result, adding the government should be brought down if it proves incompetent. Aug. 21 elections were the first since 1940 to fail to deliver a clear winner. That parliament initially chose a conservative minority government, which was brought down when two independents switched allegiances to Labor. Windsor and Oakeshott, who have both championed better communications infrastructure for rural areas, said Labor's plan to introduce a AU$43 billion high-speed optical fiber national broadband network was a major factor in their decision. Abbott's Liberal Party had promised a smaller, slower AU$6 billion network with a range of technologies including optical fiber, wireless and DSL. "What this is, is a hard decision," Oakeshott told reporters. "There's no question about that ... This could not get any closer." Windsor said he believed Gillard was more likely than Abbott to work constructively with the independents and govern for a full three-year term rather than call an early election.
[Associated
Press;
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