PM Turnbull faces another challenge
canberra — Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull clung to power on Wednesday as rebel Liberal party lawmakers pressed for a second leadership contest just a day after he narrowly survived a challenge from former home minister Peter Dutton.
Turnbull, whose Liberal Party is the senior partner in the coalition government, had won a party-room vote by 48 to 35 on Tuesday, but the unconvincing victory had left him vulnerable to another challenge.
Australian lawmakers told reporters that party rebels were petitioning for another vote as early as Wednesday, though it appeared unlikely that the move would get enough support before Thursday. The move needs a majority of 43 signatories to force a fresh contest.
If Dutton’s supporters succeed, Turnbull is likely to be ousted without completing three years in power, and whoever replaces him will become Australia’s seventh prime minister in a decade.
Dutton said he was canvassing for support to take another tilt at Turnbull, possibly as early as this week.
“I’m speaking to colleagues,” Dutton told 3AW Radio.
“If I believe the majority of colleagues support me then I will consider
my position,” he said.
Jane Prentice, a Liberal lawmaker, said she saw a copy of the letter calling for a second vote late on Wednesday and it so far had nine signatories. Should Dutton’s supporters manage to muster enough signatures by Thursday, the vote could be held before parliament breaks for a two week holiday.
Amid mounting uncertainty over Turnbull’s premiership, Governor General Peter Cosgrove cancelled travel plans and will remain in Canberra this week.
Cosgrove is British Queen Elizabeth’s representative in Australia and would need to be on hand to swear in a new prime minister if Turnbull was ousted, or to accept Turnbull’s request to dissolve parliament
if he decides to call an early election.
The next election is due by May. Australian newspapers echoed the frustration many voters feel over the constant leadership changes.
“It would be kinder to voters and more in the national interest if Mr Turnbull drove to Yarralumla (Cosgrove’s official residence) and called an election a year early,” The Sydney
Morning Herald wrote in an editorial. “The big risk is that he might be shafted even before he got to the end of the driveway,” it said.
The opposition Labor Party has gleefully watched the Liberals internal conflict deepen, with the growing prospect of an early election.
Labor used Question Time in parliament on Wednesday to ask seven of the nine cabinet ministers who voted for Dutton whether they still supported Turnbull.
All seven had tendered their resignations to Turnbull, who refused them in an attempt to show unity and later said he had been given “unequivocal assurances of continuing loyalty”. Dutton and one other opponent were allowed to leave the ministry.
Keen to bring rebel politicians back into the fold, Turnbull on Wednesday also dumped his unpopular plan to cut corporate tax rates to 25 percent from 30 per cent.
His plan echoed that of US President Donald Trump but, with record corporate profits and stagnant wage growth, the policy has proved widely unpopular with voters. —
The Sydney Morning Herald
It would be kinder to voters and more in the national interest if Mr Turnbull drove to Yarralumla (Cosgrove’s official residence) and called an election a year early
Fine and 5-year jail could be imposed on Homnath Sigdel if found guilty