Labor leader Anthony Albanese came under scrutiny over his understanding of this timeframe after he said Australia shouldn’t reopen globally until four criteria were met including domestic mRNA vaccine manufacturing.
“When you achieve those things you’ll be able to participate in global activity,” he said,also pointing to an effective vaccine rollout,a national system of purpose-built quarantine and better information campaigns.
But pushed on whether that meant Australia should stay closed to the rest of the world for another 18 months,Mr Albanese said the question had verballed him.
“What you need to do is to have more progress than is there now,” he said. “The manufacture of mRNA vaccines,obviously,takes time. There’s been no advancement,there’s no deal to advance that whatsoever.”
He later clarified to this masthead that reopening should not be conditional on local mRNA manufacturing.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison said he didn’t think Australians would welcome any plan that involved keeping the country closed until 2023.