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Friday, 22 March 2013

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Gillard retains Labor leadership

AUSTRALIA: Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard faced down a leadership challenge Thursday, emerging victorious from a party vote after former leader Kevin Rudd made a last-minute decision not to run.

In a tense day of political manoeuvring, Gillard called the shock ballot as internal unrest reached fever pitch in a party which is floundering ahead of general elections in September.

Her decision followed senior Cabinet minister Simon Crean openly urging a vote, with Gillard lagging badly in opinion polls and leadership speculation rampant.

But Rudd, who was ruthlessly ousted by Gillard in mid-2010, indicated he did not have the numbers to topple the premier, after being roundly beaten when he resigned as foreign minister and launched a previous challenge in February 2012.

Since losing that battle, he has repeatedly pledged his support for the prime minister and despite his backers campaigning behind the scenes, maintained Thursday he was a man of honour.

“I’m not prepared to dishonour my word... others take such commitments lightly, I do not,” he said just minutes before Labor parliamentarians were due to vote.

“I have also said that the only circumstances under which I would consider a return to leadership would be if there was an overwhelming majority of the parliamentary party requesting such a return, drafting me to return and the position was vacant,” said Rudd.

“I am here to inform you that those circumstances do not exist.” With Rudd out of the running, the ballot went ahead with Gillard retaining the leadership unopposed.

The latest polls showed Gillard’s personal ratings have risen against conservative opposition leader Tony Abbott but that the Labor Party stood a much better chance of victory under Rudd.

The March 12 Newspoll found that that if Rudd were leader, Labor would win 56 percent of the vote, with minor parties stripped out, compared to 44 percent for the opposition. With Gillard at the helm, they would lose to Abbott’s coalition.

Crean, another former Labor leader and party elder, sparked the ballot earlier in the day, warning that leadership speculation was “killing” the party and that the “stalemate has to end” to prevent it from imploding. “Something needs to be done to break this deadlock, to resolve the issue once and for all,” he told reporters, handing his support to Rudd.

AFP

 

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