Bangkok Post

Abbott weaker after party challenge

PM keeps job but ‘can’t bear another blunder’

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CANBERRA: Australia’s beleaguere­d Prime Minister Tony Abbott emerged politicall­y wounded after withstandi­ng a leadership challenge from within his own party yesterday, with many analysts doubting he can survive to lead his conservati­ve government to next year’s elections.

The polarising leader’s grip on power has slipped since last month when he drew widespread criticism for making Queen Elizabeth II’s 93-year-old husband, Prince Philip, an Australian knight on Australia’s National Day. Many saw it as an insult to worthy Australian­s.

Mr Abbott, i n office less than a year-and-a-half, survived a move by disgruntle­d Liberal Party members calling for a secret ballot to decide who would be prime minister. They voted 61-39 to reject the motion.

Experts say Mr Abbott needed a stronger show of support from his colleagues to ward off potential future challenges if the government continues to endure sagging approval ratings. He would not survive another blunder, said Chris Kenny, a political commentato­r and former conservati­ve government staffer.

“He’s one dumb knighthood away from oblivion,” Mr Kenny t old Sky News television.

Mr Abbott described the vote as a political near-death experience, and promised government colleagues he would lead a more consultati­ve and collegiate administra­tion.

“This has been a very chastening experience, a very chastening experience,” Mr Abbott told reporters. “It’s not often that something like this happens 16 or 17 months into t he life of a government.”

He would not confirm or deny reports that he had asked his colleagues for six more months to lift his coalition’s opinion polling.

The vote occurred before parliament convened yesterday for the first time this year. The opposition centre-left Labor Party used it to attack Mr Abbott’s leadership, reminding him of his words in 2012 when the former Prime Minister Julia Gillard fended off her rival Kevin Rudd in a similar ballot of lawmakers 71-31.

At that time, Mr Abbott questioned whether she had a mandate to continue ruling when a third of her parliament­ary colleagues “expressed their lack of confidence in her today”.

Mr Abbott’s government has seen its approval ratings slide since last May, when the government’s first annual budget was widely criticised as being toughest on the poor and most vulnerable.

Norman Abjorensen, an Australian National University political scientist, described the likelihood of Mr Abbott surviving as prime minister until the next election as “fairly slim”.

The revolt by more than a third of the 102 Liberal lawmakers would ensure that the public focused on his leadership rather than his government’s policy messages, Mr Abjorensen said.

“He’s been badly wounded, probably mortally wounded,” he said. “Today has made him really a political corpse waiting to be cut down.”

But Nick Economou, a Monash University political science professor, believed Mr Abbott could potentiall­y turn his government’s fortunes around in six months, saying people tend to underestim­ate him.

Communicat­ions Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who led the party in opposition until he lost by one vote to Mr Abbott in a 2009 leadership ballot, has been touted as the favourite to replace the premier if there is another challenge.

After yesterday’s party vote, online betting agency sportsbet.com.au continued to rate Mr Turnbull as the favourite to lead the government to the 2016 election.

 ??  ?? Turnbull: Seen as next in line to Abbott
Turnbull: Seen as next in line to Abbott

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