Extract from The Guardian
New prime minister says ‘policies will change in
the light of changed conditions’ as Labor presses him on his
support for unpopular measures
Malcolm Turnbull takes his first question time as
the prime minister on Tuesday. Photograph: Mike Bowers for the
Guardian
Daniel
Hurst Political correspondent
Tuesday 15 September 2015 18.23 AEST
Malcolm
Turnbull has defended the Coalition’s Direct Action climate
policy and having a public vote on marriage equality after the next
election, as he came under pressure to explain his U-turns on his
first day as prime minister.
Turnbull, who was sworn in as Australia’s 29th
prime minister shortly before parliamentary question time on Tuesday,
thanked the person he
had ousted, Tony Abbott, for “his leadership and his service
over many, many years” and indicated he would announce a new
ministry later this week or early next week.
Abbott, who said earlier that he
would not seek to undermine the new leader upon his return to the
backbench, was not in the chamber to hear the tributes at the
beginning of question time.
Turnbull told his colleagues, at a Coalition joint
party room meeting, that he would seek to restore an open,
consultative model for the prime minister’s office of the type that
existed under the long-serving leader John
Howard.
Malcolm Turnbull sworn in as 29th Australian prime
minister. Link
to video
The new prime minister appointed the former Howard
operative Tony Nutt as his director of transition and named the head
of the communications department, Drew Clarke, as his acting chief of
staff. There were no immediate ministerial resignations, even though
there has been intense speculation about the future of Joe Hockey as
treasurer. The social services minister, Scott Morrison, has been
widely tipped as being in line for the role after Turnbull criticised
the government’s performance in selling its economic messages.
The defence minister, Kevin Andrews, who was a key
supporter of Abbott and is from the party’s conservative wing,
signalled he would like to remain in the role given the need for
stability at this “very significant time for defence”.
The education minister, Christopher Pyne, who was
reportedly a contender for the defence portfolio, said he had “always
had a keen interest in history and military matters”. Pyne is from
the manufacturing state of South Australia, where the government’s
popularity has collapsed amid suggestions work on the next fleet of
submarines could be done overseas.
There is also speculation that women will be
promoted in the reshuffle. The attorney general, George Brandis, said
his colleagues accepted there would be a reshuffle and he would be
happy to continue in his present role “but of course that’s
entirely a matter for the prime minister”.
Brandis told the ABC’s 7.30 program he had
supported Turnbull because the Coalition
had been at real risk of losing next year’s election to the Labor
leader, Bill Shorten, who could “trash the China free trade
agreement”.
But Shorten sought to reach out to Turnbull to
resolve the free trade issue on Tuesday, writing to the new prime
minister seeking a meeting to discuss Labor’s proposals for jobs
safeguards. Shorten said he believed “complementary safeguards”
could be formulated without delaying the agreement’s timely
implementation, and it would be best to find a bipartisan
approach.Turnbull faced an early embarrassment on Tuesday after three
Nationals senators crossed the floor to support a symbolic Greens
motion advocating changes to competition laws, and two others
abstained from the vote.
Labor and the Liberals did not support the motion,
which was about the introduction of a so-called “effects test”
backed by small business but opposed by big business. The issue had
previously
divided Abbott’s cabinet, which deferred consideration of the
issue two weeks ago.
In question time, Labor targeted Turnbull for his
previously expressed support for “every single” measure in the
poorly received 2014 budget. Turnbull fired back by telling Shorten
that the cabinet system of government required ministers to support
the decisions.
Turnbull left the door open to considering policy
changes but said he would not unilaterally disavow measures because
he would “lead a traditional cabinet government”.
“Policies will change in the light of changed
conditions, of course they will,” Turnbull said.
“But we stand by every decision we make, the
cabinet stands by every decision we make, and as we revise them and
improve them in the light of experience we will stand by those, too.”
The prime minister made it clear that people
should not expect any immediate changes in two policy areas about
which he has previously been outspoken: climate policy and marriage
equality. This reflects the
Coalition agreement the Nationals leader, Warren Truss, negotiated
with him on Tuesday.
Turnbull, who previously supported emissions
trading and said in 2010 that “having the government pick projects
for subsidy is a recipe for fiscal recklessness on a grand scale”,
has now locked in behind the use of the government’s emissions
reduction fund.
Turnbull said the first fund auction in April was
“a resounding success” and insisted his remarks were “about
different proposals years ago”. He said the budget funding for the
policy pursued by the environment minister, Greg Hunt, was capped so
“it cannot result in an unlimited amount of fiscal commitment”.
“It doesn’t matter how you cut emissions as
long as they are cut,” Turnbull said.
Turnbull also backed the government’s “very
substantial” previously announced target to cut Australia’s
greenhouse gas emissions so they are 26% to 28% below 2005 levels by
2030. The Greens MP Adam Bandt accused Turnbull of being “beholden
to the hardliners in your ranks” on climate change.
Labor’s deputy leader, Tanya Plibersek, also
tried to pressure Turnbull to repeat his recently stated support for
Coalition MPs to be granted a free vote in the parliament on marriage
equality legislation .
But Turnbull locked in behind Abbott’s policy of
a “people’s vote” some time in the next parliamentary term,
fulfilling yet another element of his agreement with the Nationals,
despite his earlier suggestions such a vote should be held sooner
rather than later.
“Historically issues of this type have been
resolved in parliament by free vote and the honourable member is
correct in referring to that,” he said.
“Another way of dealing with this is by vote of
the people. And the Coalition, our government, has decided that the
resolution of this matter will be determined by a vote of the people,
all the people, via a plebiscite, to be held after the next
election.”
When the shadow attorney general, Mark Dreyfus,
accused him of selling out, Turnbull rallied the Coalition backbench
by denouncing the “utter failure of the opposition to approach
issues other than in a thoroughly ideological way”. Turnbull said:
“Why is the opposition afraid of the people having a vote? Why
don’t they want all Australians having a vote? There is no greater
virtue in a free vote here or a plebiscite. They are each means of
resolving the matter - one, I grant you is more expensive but,
nonetheless, it is a very legitimate and democratic way of dealing
with it.”
A snap SMS poll by Roy Morgan on Tuesday showed
strong
early support for Turnbull’s leadership. About 70% of the 1,200
respondents thought Turnbull would make a better prime minister than
Shorten, while just 24% backed Shorten.
Ministers who publicly supported Abbott before the
leadership vote sought to draw a line under the upheaval, insisting
the job of government continued.
Hockey put on a brave face in parliament amid
persistent speculation about Morrison being in line for his job. The
treasurer said he would introduce legislation to the parliament on
Wednesday “to go after multinationals not paying their fair share
of tax”.
Referring to Turnbull by his electorate title
rather than as the prime minister, Hockey said: “The honourable
member for Wentworth is perfectly entitled to make a statement, as he
did yesterday, about how we can do better and you know what, we can
always do better. We can always do better. But I tell you what, we’re
doing a hell of a lot better than the Labor party.”
Voters at Bondi Beach welcome Malcolm Turnbull to
the top job. Link
to video
In the Senate, the finance minister, Mathias
Cormann, said he was “looking forward to working with the prime
minister in building Australia’s stronger economic and fiscal
foundations for the future”.
Another Abbott backer and the leader of the
government in the Senate, Eric Abetz, said his hands were clean. “Can
I indicate that we serve at the pleasure of the leader and we do so
on a daily basis irrespective of who might be leader,” Abetz said.
“The king is dead, long live the king, and the
prime minister has our support.”
Labor sources said they would have preferred to
face Abbott at the next general election, due in 2016, but had been
prepared for the leadership change and that they would attack
Turnbull on the basis of arrogance, personal ambition and selling out
his principles.
The Labor party wasted no time rolling
out a television advertisement to air in Western Australia before
Saturday’s Canning byelection, highlighting his emphatic support
for Abbott’s “unfair” budget measures.
In a speech to Labor colleagues on Tuesday,
Shorten said the Liberals had “panicked” and elected a new leader
but “it’s the same old stuff rebadged as new”.
“Australians understand the thing about Malcolm
is it’s always about Malcolm,” he said.
“We have seen off one bad Liberal prime minister
and we will do this again...If you want a new direction in this
country you’ve got to vote for a new government: a Shorten Labor
government.”
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