The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Morrison to face parliament for first time as leader

-

How Morrison performs over the next fortnight will be critical.

John Hewson, former leader of Liberal Party

SYDNEY: Australia’s new Prime Minister Scott Morrison, elected to heal his fractured party, faces his biggest test on Monday, in steering the government through a hostile first session of parliament.

Picked last month by the ruling Liberal Party to become the sixth prime minister in the last decade, following a backbench revolt that ousted predecesso­r Malcolm Turnbull, Morrison has enjoyed a brief honeymooon period.

“How Morrison performs over the next fortnight will be critical,” John Hewson, former leader of the Liberal Party, told Reuters.

“Bill Shorten, leader of Australia’s Labor Party, will be sitting like a mosquito in a nudist colony, he has so much to bite into,” he added.

“The only trouble he will have is deciding where to begin.”

Labor is the largest opposition party.

But even before Morrison even faces opposition lawmakers as leader for the first time, he will have to contend with Australia’s most prominent political poll, due to be published late on Sunday.

The influentia­l Newspoll, which has been a key driver in the demise of several leaders, showed support for Morrison’s government at a decade low last month.

Keen to minimise the impact, cabinet ministers said the next Newspoll result would improve quickly. But another poor poll outcome would step up pressure on the government.

Morrison, a former treasurer, has spent his first two weeks as leader trying to heal factional divides and soften his public image, culminatin­g in a call for ‘Australian­s to love each other’.

A compromise candidate, he only won after moderates rallied behind him, enabling the defeat of right-wing rival and home affairs minister Peter Dutton.

But Morrison’s slim victory margin of just five votes shows how deep the party divide is.

One of those votes was cast by Turnbull, whose resignatio­n from parliament cost Morrison his parliament­ary majority. With 75 elected lawmakers, the government is one shy of an outright majority.

“There are some bruised people in the party,” said Grahame Morris, former chief of staff to exprime minister John Howard.

Desperate to heal the rift, Morrison has retained in their cabinet positions nearly all the conservati­ve activists behind Turnbull’s ouster.

Appointmen­ts of influentia­l conservati­ves were key to demonstrat­e the party’s centrerigh­t credential­s and heal the deep wounds, said former treasurer Peter Costello.

Yet Morrison’s soothing effort will be complicate­d by the task of having to defend Dutton against growing pressure over accusation­s of improperly handing out immigratio­n visas.

Dutton denies the accusation, although opposition lawmakers had called for Morrison to remove his home affairs minister.

Morrison can ill-afford to lose Dutton, a leading conservati­ve, as he chalks out a route to meeting Paris Accord commitment­s to cut carbon emissions.

Climate change is domestic political dynamite in Australia, one of the world’s largest exporters of coal.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Scott Morrison
Scott Morrison

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia