Fiji Sun

Australian PM Loses 30th Straight Poll, Faces Leadership Pressure

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Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s coalition government on Monday lost a 30th straight major opinion poll, a symbolic defeat that intensifie­s pressure on him after he used the same milestone to oust his predecesso­r.

The latest widely watched Newspoll, published in The Australian newspaper, showed the Liberal-National coalition trailing the opposition Labor Party 5248 on a two-party preferred basis, a margin that would deliver Mr Turnbull an election defeat.

Although Australia is a year away from a general election, the Newspoll leaves Mr Turnbull facing questions about his future.

Three Australian prime ministers have been ousted by their own parties since 2010, dumped by colleagues after their popularity began to wane. Once widely popular, Mr Turnbull has fallen out of favour after a wave of scandals, including the resignatio­n of his former deputy after revelation­s he was expecting a child with his former press secretary, and an eligibilit­y crisis that saw the government temporaril­y lose its parliament­ary majority.

A surge by right-wing minor parties and factions of his own party has forced Mr Turnbull to embrace conservati­ve policies, damaging his reputation as a liberal.

There was some good news for the embattled leader with a Fairfax/Ipsos poll published by The Australian Financial Review over the weekend showing that many Australian­s have grown weary of a revolving-door leadership.

Some 62 per cent of those surveyed said they wanted Mr Turnbull to remain prime minister.

Senior government lawmakers have also backed Mr Turnbull. “Malcolm Turnbull retains the confidence of the vast majority of our party room,” Foreign Minister Julie Bishop, deputy leader of the Liberal Party, told Sky News.

Even former Prime Minister and party leader Tony Abbott, ousted by Mr Turnbull in September 2017, and who has led much of the criticism of him, set a conciliato­ry tone.

“The point I’d make is that we shouldn’t obsess over polls. I never did. I don’t think that others should,” Mr Abbott told reporters in Victoria state. However, Mr Abbott took the opportunit­y to sharpen his criticism of the government’s refusal to build a coal-fired power station.

Australia’s electricit­y supply business has becomes a hot political issue following a string of blackouts and price spikes.

“We should be the party of low power prices and that means more coal-fired power generation,” Mr Abbott said.

 ??  ?? Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull

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