Peter Dutton, leader of the liberal party, says that the election promise was a “mistake”.
The Australian main opponent has scrapped the election supply obligations to terminate remote working agreements for public servants and sacks of thousands of government employees with a decline in surveys.
Peter Dutton, the leader of the liberal party in the middle law, said on Monday that he realized that the suggestions were a “mistake”.
“I think it is important that we say and recognize it, and our intention was to ensure that taxpayers are working hard and spent their money will be spent on wages efficiently,” said Dutton in an interview with Channel Nine.
Dutton, a former police detective from Queensland, had promised to force the government’s employees from the office five days a week and to search 41,000 positions of the public salary statement.
The Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who called a national election for May 3 in the past month, undoubtedly threw his opponent’s apron.
“Peter Dutton wants to undermine the labor rights and in particular do not understand modern families, does not understand the important role that women and men play in the organization of their families,” Albanese told reporters.
The Albre-Links Labor Party of Albanese has won the foundation stone for the coalition of Dutton led by Dutton in the latest surveys, although the race is still tight.
In the youngest time polled survey published on Sunday, Labor led the 52-48 coalition in a head-to-head matchup and won one percentage point from the previous survey.
The cost of living, including a serious crisis on the affordability of living space, has dominated the election campaign.
Although workers or the coalition will almost win the largest proportion of votes, opinion polls have pointed out the strong probability of a suspended parliament.
Australia recently produced a hung parliament in 2010 when former Prime Minister Julia Gillard applied for the support of the Australian Greens and three independent MPs for a minority government.