The Cairns Post

’Chaos’ ending under Turnbull

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MALCOLM Turnbull has passed Kevin Rudd’s record for time in office in a sign that almost a decade of chaos in Australian politics is ending.

The Prime Minister is also on track to beat Julia Gillard’s three years and three days in office on September 17 – if he does not call an election first.

Political analysts and MPs have predicted Australian politics is returning to stability after a tumultuous decade, sparked by parties knifing a string of prime ministers, as speculatio­n heats up that Mr Turbull will call an election before the year is out.

The Prime Minister has now spent 1031 days in office, surpassing Tony Abbott’s 727 days and Kevin Rudd’s 1020 earlier this month.

That’s still a far cry from John Howard’s 11 years and 267 days in office.

But Griffith University political scientist Paul Williams said surviving this long was a sign that stability was returning to politics after having five prime ministers in eight years.

“Both parties are fearful of changing leaders, so Malcolm Turnbull and Bill Shorten are keeping their jobs,” he said.

Dr Williams said there was a “better than even” chance of a federal election this year, probably between September and November, if Labor loses or does poorly in upcoming byelection­s on July 28.

Dr Jill Sheppard, a political scientist at the Australian National University, also thought Australian politics was returning to stability.

She said it was partly due to a “deliberate strategy” by the Coalition to keep their heads down and “get through to the next election”.

Mr Turnbull’s time in office has been rocked by several issues, including the citizenshi­p saga, the Barnaby Joyce lovechild scandal, the divisive same-sex marriage campaign and constant criticism from Mr

BOTH PARTIES ARE FEARFUL OF CHANGING LEADERS, SO MALCOLM TURNBULL AND BILL SHORTEN KEEP THEIR JOBS PAUL WILLIAMS

Abbott and a handful of backbenche­rs.

Veteran Coalition MP Warren Entsch backed Mr Turnbull’s performanc­e, saying he had passed significan­t reforms, such as $144 billion personal income tax cuts, despite the current Senate makeup.

“If he’d been struggling, they’d have knocked him off,” Mr Entsch said.

Mr Turnbull has the support of 46 per cent of voters as preferred prime minister compared to 31 per cent for Mr Shorten in the latest Newspoll.

The Coalition is also back in election contention, trailing Labor 49-51 on a two party preferred basis.

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