Geelong Advertiser

Turnbull defiant to the end

- ANGUS LIVINGSTON­E

A DEFIANT Malcolm Turnbull is clinging on to the prime ministersh­ip but challenger­s are close to securing the 43 signatures needed to force a leadership spill.

Mr Turnbull threw down his own challenge after Peter Dutton demanded another vote yesterday morning, telling Liberals who want him gone to reveal themselves as he set a deadline of noon today for the second leadership challenge of the week.

He demanded Mr Dutton get at least 43 MPs to sign a petition to force the spill and promised to quit as Prime Minister if the ballot went ahead.

But Mr Dutton’s path to the top job won’t be smooth, with Treasurer Scott Morrison and Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop also standing up as candidates later in the day to make it a three-way contest.

By late yesterday, it appeared the petition numbers were building.

“I have just signed the petition, I have done that because this matter needs to be resolved as a matter of urgency,” Liberal MP Karen Andrews told Sky News. “I understand that only one more signature is required.”

The ABC reported that 40 MPs had signed the petition. Liberal MP Tim Wilson said he declined to sign the letter.

“I have not been bullied or intimidate­d into signing the suicide note to call a leadership spill,” he said on Twitter.

The decision yesterday afternoon by deputy leader Ms Bishop, who has bridged the moderate-conservati­ve divide in the party, to canvass support could split MPs who were considerin­g backing Mr Dutton.

“Australian­s will be rightly appalled by what they’re witnessing in their nation’s parliament today and in the course of this week,” Mr Turnbull said.

“A minority in the party room, supported by others outside the Parliament, have sought to bully, intimidate others into making this change of leadership that they’re seeking.”

The Prime Minister has lost 13 ministers, including loyalist Mathias Cormann, after they told him the numbers had moved behind Mr Dutton, who lost Tuesday’s leadership vote 48-35.

“I can’t ignore the fact that a majority of colleagues in the Liberal Party party room are of the view that there should be a change,” Senator Cormann said, adding it came with a “heavy heart”.

Mr Turnbull expects the solicitor-general to provide MPs with advice on whether Mr Dutton is eligible to sit in parliament before today’s meeting. The former Home Affairs Minister has his own legal advice that his interest in childcare centres, which receive funding from the Fed- eral Government, does not breach Section 44 of the Constituti­on.

The section bans from parliament anyone with “any direct or indirect pecuniary interest with the public service of the Commonweal­th”.

“I cannot underline too much how important it is that anyone who seeks to be prime minister of Australia is eligible to be a member of parliament,” Mr Turnbull said.

Mr Turnbull said the public would be “crying out for an election” once the dust settled, after a “form of madness” took over in the party room.

Polls predict a Dutton government would be heavily defeated in an election.

A Morgan poll found Mr Dutton was well behind Labor leader Bill Shorten as preferred prime minister 59-36, but Mr Turnbull remained ahead of Mr Shorten.

A ReachTel poll of more than 2400 voters found if Mr Dutton became prime minister 55 per cent of voters would be less likely to vote Liberal.

And a Galaxy poll showed Mr Dutton was behind Mr Turnbull, Ms Bishop and even former prime minister Tony Abbott as preferred prime minister.

Mr Dutton is also facing a Senate inquiry over his 2015 decision to give visas to two au pairs, with Labor referring allegation­s concerning the alleged inappropri­ate exercise of ministeria­l powers to a committee.

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