Tag Archives: Kevin Rudd

Australian PM names Cabinet emphasizing loyalty

Prime Minister Julia Gillard emphasized loyalty over experience in new Cabinet selections named Monday after a bungled leadership challenge laid bare intra-government turmoil further damaging her party’s image months before an election.

Five ministers resigned or were sacked from their executive jobs for promoting a challenge by Gillard’s predecessor Kevin Rudd that failed when he decided against running on the ballot within the ruling Labor Party.

Gillard called the leadership mess “appalling” in remarks Monday to reporters.

“It was an unseemly display,” she said. “Today as a government we can be united and with a sense of purpose,” she added.

Most of the lawmakers whom Gillard promoted were known loyalists in the longstanding rivalry between Gillard and Rudd.

The Resources and Energy Ministry, crucial to Australia‘s mining-oriented economy, was given to Special Minister of State Gary Gray, a former gas company executive from resource-rich Western Australia state. The position had been filled to acclaim by Rudd supporter Martin Ferguson since the Labor government was first elected under Rudd’s leadership in 2007.

Transport Minister Anthony Albanese stayed, even though he had been tipped to be deputy prime minister if Rudd regained the leadership. Reports have said ministers urged Albanese not to resign because he was too important to the government.

Gillard promoted Albanese by giving him the portfolios Regional Development and Local Government. Those ministries had been held by Simon Crean, whom Gillard dumped for publicly calling for a leadership ballot.

Gillard said she was confident of Albanese’s loyalty.

“I have always been able to work with Minister Albanese well,” she said. “He’s been very central to the life of this government and I believe he will serve very well and with a very strong sense of loyalty into the future.”

Australian National University political scientist Michael McKinley said the promotions were clearly not made on merit.

“If they were any good, they would have been in the Cabinet already,” he said.

Foreign Minister Bob Carr, who has denied media reports that he had been prepared to back a Rudd challenge, remained in his post.

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Challenge to Australian prime minister evaporates

Julia Gillard remains Australia‘s prime minister after she threw her job open to a leadership ballot but no one from the government was willing to run against her.

Her predecessor Kevin Rudd, whom Gillard ousted in an internal party coup in 2010, had been expected to attempt to replace her. But at the last moment announced he would not contest the ballot on Thursday.

Senior minister Simon Crean brought leadership unrest to a head earlier Thursday by calling on his government colleagues to sign a petition to force a ballot if Gillard refused to call one.

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Australia's Gillard calls for leadership ballot

Prime Minister Julia Gillard has called for a leadership ballot Thursday as her party faces the growing prospect of a sound election defeat later this year.

She said the ballot of a leader and deputy leader of the Labor Party would be held in the afternoon, hours after a senior minister called on her to hold a vote.

Minister Simon Crean said he would nominate as the deputy and wanted former prime minister Kevin Rudd to stand as the candidate for the top post.

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Speculation mounts of Aussie leadership challenge

Speculation is intensifying that Prime Minister Julia Gillard will be challenged soon for her party’s leadership as opinion polls increasingly suggest her government would be crushed at Australia‘s upcoming elections.

Center-left Labor Party government lawmakers publically stood by their beleaguered leader Wednesday. But The Australian Financial Review newspaper reported three unnamed senior Gillard backers saying support among government ranks for her predecessor Kevin Rudd was growing.

Part of Rudd’s appeal is opinion polling that shows Rudd would be a far more popular choice as prime minister than Gillard.

Rudd led Labor to victory at elections in 2007, then was deposed by his then-deputy Gillard in an internal party coup in 2010. He challenged her last year but was roundly defeated in a ballot of Labor lawmakers by 71 votes to 31.

Members of her inner circle told the newspaper Rudd might now have the support of most of the party or could be as close as five votes away from a majority.

Nine Network television news reported Tuesday that Rudd backers had raised with colleagues the prospect of a leadership challenge which could happen this week before Parliament is adjourned for seven weeks.

Rudd has ruled out mounting a second challenge himself but has left open the possibility his colleagues could nominate him.

Gillard told Parliament on Tuesday that she would lead her government to victory over the conservative opposition coalition led by Tony Abbott at elections Sept. 14.

“It will be a contest counter-intuitive to those believing in gender stereotypes, but a contest between a strong feisty woman and a policy-weak man, and I’ll win it,” she said.

A party leadership change could trigger earlier elections. Gillard rules a minority government with the support of two independent lawmakers and a legislator from the Greens party.

But one of those independents, Tony Windsor, warned on Wednesday that he would not necessarily support a government led by Rudd.

“Essentially the deal would be off if there’s a leadership change,” Windsor said. “I haven’t signed up to be a camp follower of the Labor Party and all its machinations.”

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News