Australia: Tens of Thousands 'March in May' Against Abbott and Austerity

Tens of thousands marched in cities across Australia on Sunday to protest the policies of Prime Minister Tony Abbott following the recent release of his administration’s austerity budget.

The 2014 federal budget has been slammed for measures that critics charge will devastate Australia’s poor, including huge cuts to unemployment and welfare benefits, education, and health care. Abbott’s popularity ratings have tanked following the release, according to recent polls.

The distaste for Abbott by many Australians, however, goes beyond dissatisfaction with Abbott’s economic policies. As a demonstrator and organizer in Sydney told the Guardian: “This is not just a march about the budget. These marches signify major concern with current government policies, dissatisfaction with a stagnant two-party political system, and the disturbing motivations and influence of those with money and power.”

Under the banner ‘March in May,’ protesters marched in Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, Adelaide and Perth. Organizers sited huge crowds, including an estimated 50,000 in Sydney, according to the Sydney Morning Herald

According to multiple media reports, the crowds spanned generations and included many who carried homemade signs expressing a variety of concerns, from mistreatment of indigenous communities and asylum seekers to rising poverty among youth to the secretive Trans Pacific Partnership negotiations.

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