Labor defends Medicare text message

Labor figures have leapt to the defence of a text message sent to Queensland voters on election day about the future of Medicare.

Labor's Queensland branch has defended an infamous election day text message about Medicare, insisting it wasn't trying to be deceptive.

The message, sent to Queensland voters on Saturday, declared time was running out to "save" the health insurer.

"Turnbull's plans to privatise Medicare will take us down the road of no return," it read.

The message sender showed up in phones as "Medicare".

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said it was "an extraordinary act of dishonesty" in a speech to party faithful and suggested police could investigate.

The Australian Federal Police received a referral on election day.

"This matter is now being evaluated and whilst this occurs it would not be appropriate to provide further comment," the AFP said in a statement.

Labor's Queensland branch disputed that voters may have been deceived by the text, given the prominent role Medicare had played in the party's campaign.

"The message was not intended to indicate that it was a message from Medicare, rather to identify the subject of the text," a spokesman said.

"There should be no surprise that this was not a government message."

Senior Liberal Arthur Sinodinos said the Labor campaign was emblematic of the public wanting to indicate how strongly they felt about health.

"Labor found a very clever way, if very cynical way, to do that," he said.

But deputy Labor leader Tanya Plibersek put the outrage down to "the most acute example of sour grapes" she had ever seen.

"Medicare was at risk at this election and I don't apologise for reminding people that there is a philosophical fundamental choice here," she told ABC radio on Monday.

Ms Plibersek dismissed the police investigation into how the text message to voters carried Medicare branding as an "absurd proposition from the Liberals".


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Source: AAP


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