New beginnings in nation’s capital as parliament opens

48. Politicians marked the beginning of a new era, to begin the federal parliament.
Experienced MPs and fresh -faced senators marked the opening of the Year of Parliament in Canberra on Tuesday, and sat down to shoulder marked in the Wesley Uniting Church.
Prime Minister Anthony Albania hoped for the health and prosperity of all Australians during the church service, and as a “great way to start the tradition.
“Every day we will have the opportunity to deliver for the Australians every day and we will have a legislation to do this this week,” he told journalists outside the church.
“We will continue to work hard every day for the benefit of the Australians.”
As the Prime Minister of Albania, the second period will see that it has a majority of parliament and will hold 94 of the 150 seats in the House of Representatives of the Labor Party.
Throughout the room, the opposition leader Sussan Ley will chair only 43 sub -House MPs after an election deletion for the coalition.

After the service, he told reporters, “We were torn apart in the last election and shows that we are at a low number of seats at a low point,” he said.
“But we are here to work hard, we are here to put the interests of the people of Australia, where we came here to represent the front and center.
“And we know that Arzu We know that the Australian society connects every threat of the Australian society.”
Welcome to politicians Capital Hill, and as they arrived for the cigarette ceremony, ceremonial trials continued.
Politicians would swear in the middle of the morning before delivering the first speeches of Labour’s first -year students to the House of Representatives later on the day.

The legislation, which is determined for the first week of parliament, includes a 20 percent decrease in hecS debt for university students, punishment rate protection and increasing security measures in child care centers.
The coalition is still reviewing most of the policies it has been elected, but the opposition marked that the student debt is likely to support reduction measures with child care protection laws.
Meanwhile, the greens holding the balance of power in the upper house will bring a special senator bill to reform Australia’s main environmental laws.
Considering the majority of the Labor Party, the Labor Party will have an easier time to implement its agenda, but Jill Sheppard, a political lecturer at the Australian National University, said that expanded government benches will bring difficulties.
“The government’s trap is less arrogance because they still have to negotiate with a very noisy Senate,” AAP said.

“The greater issue for the worker breaks 94 members of their meetings and this will be a real challenge.
“It may be a blessing to have a relatively clean page after the election, but at the same time, it is a curse that everyone wants to have a say in which direction they go.”

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