The Phnom Penh Post

Australia PM feels the heat after 30th straight poll loss

-

AUSTRALIA’S Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull marked an unwanted milestone on Monday by losing his 30th straight opinion poll – a benchmark he used to justify deposing former Liberal leader Tony Abbott.

Abbott was toppled in a September 2015 party room coup with Turnbull memorably citing his loss of 30 consecutiv­e Newspolls in the Australian newspaper as the key reason why he had to go. Turnbull has been reminded about it by commentato­rs ever since, with Abbott vocal from the backbench as the party struggles to stay ahead of the Labor opposition before elections scheduled for 2019.

“I regret making those remarks at the time, making the remarks about 30 Newspolls,” Turnbull said Monday on why the rationale he applied to Abbott should not also apply to him.

“But what I promised to do was to provide economic leadership and traditiona­l cabinet government and I have done both.”

Turnbull insisted he still had the support of the party and his focus was not on “personalit­ies or the politics”, but reinforcin­g his message that were Labor to take power they would be a “hightaxing, anti-business government”.

Turnbull, who is considered a moderate, has struggled to push his agenda amid backbiting from the more hardline factions in his party.

Australia’s politics has been turbulent in recent years, with a “revolving door” of prime ministers in charge. Four different leaders have served since 2013 as both Labor and the Liberals removed sitting prime ministers.

Asked whether he felt vindicated by Turnbull also losing 30 Newspolls, Abbott insisted to reporters: “It’s not about me, it’s got to be about our country,” while defending his right to “speak my mind”.

Rumblings in the media about a challenge to Turnbull refuse to go away with Abbott, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop and Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton in the frame, although a move is not seen as a serious option yet with the public having little appetite for more change.

Bishop said “I don’t envisage those circumstan­ces at all” when quizzed on whether she would consider a challenge if she was asked to do so by colleagues.

The latest Newspoll showed Turnbull’s Liberal/National coalition trailing Labor 48 to 52 on a two-party preferred basis. But Turnbull has a narrow lead as preferred prime minister compared to Labor’s Bill Shorten.

“It’s Mr Turnbull who said that 30 Newspolls is a definition of success. That’s his problem,” Shorten said Monday. “I’m not like Mr Turnbull. I don’t define my success or, indeed, my job by what Newspoll does.”

 ?? MARK METCALFE/AFP ?? Australia’s Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull attends the Leaders Plenary Session of the Asean-Australia Special Summit in Sydney on March 18.
MARK METCALFE/AFP Australia’s Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull attends the Leaders Plenary Session of the Asean-Australia Special Summit in Sydney on March 18.
 ?? CHRISTOPHE GATEAU/AFP ?? A German police officer patrols during the half-marathon in Berlin on Sunday.
CHRISTOPHE GATEAU/AFP A German police officer patrols during the half-marathon in Berlin on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia