Kevin Rudd. AP photo
Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard put her job on
the line today, announcing a leadership ballot in hopes of
quashing a comeback by Kevin Rudd, the colleague she ousted in
a Labor Party coup nearly two years ago.
The vote by party lawmakers, scheduled for Monday, is an
effort by Gillard to knock down a power struggle that has
been percolating for weeks, and that spilled over on to the
world stage yesterday when Rudd resigned as foreign minister
during an official trip to the US. The fight could lead to
the collapse of the government and early elections.
In Washington, Rudd would not say whether he will challenge
Gillard in the leadership ballot, telling reporters he would
announce that decision when he returns to Australia on
Friday. But he said he believes the Labor Party will lose
national elections scheduled for next year if Gillard remains
its leader.
Gillard said she will abandon her leadership ambitions if
Labor lawmakers choose Rudd over her on Monday, and she
called on Rudd to do the same if he loses.
"We need a leadership ballot to settle this question once and
for all," she told reporters in Canberra, the capital.
Analysts expect that Gillard has enough support in the House
of Representatives to remain in power for now, but she and
her government are unpopular among voters. And Rudd
supporters said that even if he lost Monday, he would simply
build support and try again later.
A Rudd supporter, Sen. Doug Cameron, said a Monday poll would
be unfair because Rudd would not have time to canvass
support.
"It's clear that some senior ministers are intent on putting
a stake through Kevin Rudd's heart and I don't think that's
justified," Cameron told Australian Broadcasting Corp.
television.
For weeks, Rudd denied widespread rumors that he was planning
a run for Gillard's job. Before Rudd announced his
resignation, Gillard had refused to comment on media reports
that she intended to fire him as foreign minister for
disloyalty.
Rudd accused Gillard of showing disloyalty to him by failing
to silence senior ministers who accused him of being
dysfunctional and of secretly undermining the Australian
government while he served as its top international envoy.
As Rudd turned from Cabinet member to rival, Gillard
criticized his performance as prime minister, and her
supporters have been warning about his notorious temper.
Gillard supporters have been accused of leaking a video to
media over the weekend in which Rudd, then prime minister,
became enraged as he struggled with the words in a
Chinese-language speech.
Nick Economou, a political scientist at Monarch University,
said Rudd's resignation caught Gillard wrong-footed.
"Everyone can figure out the thing to do is to jump before
you're pushed. That way you've got the high moral ground
instead of being sent to the back bench as the product of the
prime minister's authority," Economou said.
He called Rudd's resignation "an absolute strategic disaster"
for Gillard that made the Australian government appear
dysfunctional in the capital city of the United States,
Australia's most important security partner.
The political crisis may already have had broader effects:
Some economists blame it for a slump in the Australian
dollar, which fell to its lowest level in a month Thursday.
"I think markets are worried about a potential leadership
change, what it means for any policy measures they have for
Australia and the uncertainty it provides," Kathy Lien,
director of currency research at brokerage GFT Forex, said
from New York.
The government could fall if Rudd wins because Labor's
single-seat majority in the House depends on a coalition with
two independent lawmakers and one from the Greens Party.
Early elections would be held if neither Labor nor the
conservative opposition coalition can muster a majority.
One of the independents in the Labor coalition, Tony Windsor,
warned that he could bolt if Rudd returns to power. "If that
was the scenario, maybe it's time the people had their say in
terms of who can govern," Windsor told ABC.
Rudd said his supporters regard him as the best prospect to
lead the ruling party to victory in the next elections and
"to save the country from the ravages of an Abbott
government," referring to the current opposition leader, Tony
Abbott.
Gillard ousted Rudd as prime minister in June 2010 in an
internal coup, and their centre-left Labor Party scraped
through elections later that year to lead a minority
government.
Rudd suggested that whatever Gillard's fate is, it will be
fairer than his own in 2010. "I can promise you this: There
is no way - no way - that I will ever be party to a stealth
attack on a sitting prime minister elected by the people," he
said. "We all know that what happened then was wrong and it
must never happen again."
Gillard on Thursday gave her most scathing explanation yet of
why she had challenged Rudd after four years as his deputy.
She said while Rudd was an "excellent campaigner," he
"struggled" to lead.
"I determined to contest the prime ministership in
circumstances where the government that Kevin Rudd had led
had entered a period of paralysis," she told reporters.
"Kevin Rudd as prime minister always had very difficult and
very chaotic work patterns," she added.
Many Australians were angry when the government dumped Rudd,
who was swept into office as prime minister by general
elections in 2007. In Australia's system, the prime minister
is chosen by a majority of lawmakers in the House of
Representatives, not by voters.
Opposition leader Abbott said Rudd's resignation confirmed
that the government is unworthy to continue in office, and
that Gillard had no authority to govern because she lost
Labor's majority in the House of Representatives in the 2010
election.
"I don't always agree with Kevin Rudd. I thought Kevin Rudd
was a poor prime minister. But at least he had this virtue:
He was the last Australian prime minister to have a mandate
from the people," Abbott said.
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