Malta Independent

Julie Bishop resigns as foreign minister

-

Australia's Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has announced her resignatio­n from the cabinet. Her move came as new Prime Minister Scott Morrison named his cabinet after winning a bruising leadership contest on Friday. Ms Bishop said she had not yet decided whether to stand at the next general election, due in 2019. She had sought the prime minister's job after Malcolm Turnbull stood aside, but was eliminated in the first round. WhatsApp group chat messages leaked to Australian television network ABC show Liberal Party colleagues tactically voted against her to stop a victory for Peter Dutton, a conservati­ve and former home affairs minister. The leadership fight also ended her 11-year tenure as deputy leader of the party. The 62-year-old from Western Australia has been a federal politician for two decades. "I will remain on the backbench as a strong voice for Western Australia," she said. Mr Morrison announced on Sunday that Marise Payne would replace Ms Bishop as foreign minister, while Mr Dutton gets his old job back at home affairs. Last week's leadership crisis arose after Mr Turnbull came under pressure from poor polling and what he described as an "insurgency" by conservati­ve MPs. The Liberal-National coalition government has only a one-seat majority in parliament, and Labor is ahead in opinion polls, with an election to be held at some point before May 2019. Mr Dutton had unsuccessf­ully challenged Mr Turnbull on Tuesday, but his narrow defeat only stoked further discord. Mr Morrison, the treasurer, entered the race later in the week after Mr Turnbull lost key backers. He won the second round of Friday's internal Liberal Party ballot by 45-40 over Mr Dutton - who had been Mr Turnbull's most vocal threat. Ms Bishop had been eliminated in a first round of voting. Mr Turnbull has signalled he will resign from parliament, which would force a by-election and potentiall­y put the government's one-seat majority at risk and force the new premier to call early elections. A former Tourism Australia official, Scott Morrison entered parliament in 2007 and has since held three key ministeria­l portfolios. As immigratio­n minister, he drew criticism over the controvers­ial asylum seeker policies and offshore detention centres.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta