Cape Times

Bishop resigns as Australia’s foreign minister

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SYDNEY: Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said yesterday she has resigned from new Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s Cabinet, two days after a bruising leadership battle that toppled former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull.

Bishop announced she would move to the backbench and had not yet decided whether to contest the next election, which is due by May next year. That decision could have serious implicatio­ns for Morrison’s government, which has a parliament­ary majority of only one seat.

Morrison emerged as the surprise winner of Friday’s party-room vote to replace Turnbull after a week of political chaos in Canberra that marked the emergence of Australia’s sixth prime minister in less than 10 years.

He took over as leader of the Liberal Party, the senior partner in a Liberal-National coalition that has consistent­ly trailed the opposition Labour party in opinion polls in recent months.

Bishop contested Friday’s vote but was eliminated in the first round, with Morrison then emerging as a surprise compromise winner over Peter Dutton, Turnbull’s conservati­ve challenger who brought the leadership crisis to a head earlier in the week.

“I will remain on the backbench as a strong voice for Western Australia,” Bishop said.

The possibilit­y that Bishop could leave parliament before the next election will be a major concern for Morrison, Turnbull’s former treasurer, because it opens the possibilit­y of another by-election being held for her seat.

His party will already have to contest a by-election for Turnbull’s harbour-side electorate in Sydney, traditiona­lly a safe Liberal seat.

Morrison has spent his first two full days in power working on a new Cabinet, although the only confirmed change so far is that his Liberal deputy and former energy minister Josh Frydenburg will take over as treasurer. – Reuters/ African News Agency (ANA)

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JULIE BISHOP

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