Tony Abbott is still the Prime Minister but his job is far from secure. Many are asking today, how can he possibly continue to lead the Government in the long term?
Victory has never tasted so uncomfortably sour…
Tony Abbott has successfully defeated a motion from his colleagues to spill the federal Liberal Party’s leadership positions. But far from looking celebratory, the Abbott who emerged from his party room this morning appeared chastened and visibly shaken.
And no wonder. The reality that two in five of your fellow party members would vote against you – in the face of no declared challenger – is a sobering one. Today’s result revealed that in the contest of Tony Abbott versus nobody, nobody managed to garner a whopping 39 votes out of a possible 101.
It’s hardly the overwhelming show of support Abbott and his supporters would have been hoping for. Which begs the question: Can the Prime Minister turn his politician fortunes around or is he, as veteran columnist Michelle Grattan predicted earlier today, a ‘dead man walking’?
What happened in the party room today?
This morning the Prime Minister awoke to a Newspoll showing that the Australian public prefer Labor to the Coalition by 57-42 two party preferred. Labor’s Bill Shorten is their preferred candidate for Prime Minister over Tony Abbott by 48-30.
Read more: EXCLUSIVE POLL: 86% of Australian women want Tony Abbott to step down as PM
Top Comments
As a bit of a political tragic (I know, I know) I love political discussion off a good synopsis like this article.
To me the salient points are:
1) this is completely self-inflicted
2) almost no leadership spill is decided in the first instance - ie this is just phase 1
3) where's the vision? The first 17 months have been all about tearing down important social structures like university education and medicare, getting rid of a carbon tax that cost me nothing (my recent elec bill delivered a $7.98 credit !!) yet was driving down emissions. TA/Lib had 6 years in opposition to brainstorm a series of captivating visions for the country and he had political capital in the form of a big majority to act upon it. Where is it?
4) we unarguably need to reduce spending and increase revenue. I agree with those who suggest we must have policy that's affordable. Google paid less than $500,000 tax on profit of $454m last year. Apple paid $139m tax on profit of $8.9B. This cannot continue. Superannuation concessions cost some $24B per annum (2008-9 figure). The top 20% of taxpayers take some 38% of the concessions. This cannot continue.
Wouldn't leadership, from any party, be nice for a change.
Remember this:
“If Tony Abbot ends up the prime minister of Australia... I mean you have got to say ‘God Help Us...GOD HELP US’...truly an intellectual nobody. No policy ambition... I mean is that all there is?”
Paul Keating, 2010.
I think that this was an opening move in a long chess game.The results of the upcoming NSW elections plus how the PM and the party performs in subsequent opinion polls could be telling factors coming into the next elections. In the last elections,because the voters were heartily sick of the goings on within the labor party and just wanted them gone,I feel that the policies on offer from the then opposition were not properly scrutinized and not enough hard questions asked.Also the media let us down badly in their largely partisan support for the coalition. I don't want that to happen this time.I want the oppositions policies questioned thoroughly and I would be disappointed if the ALP were elected for no other reason than the public dislike of the sitting Prime Minister