It is becoming increasingly clear that the Liberal Party has decided to drop Malcolm Turnbull and recall Peter Costello to lead them at the next federal election.
The advance of Costello has spooked Labor which is now quietly preparing for an early election later this year.
Forget the nonsense written in The Australian about an early election being impossible because of the proposed changes to electoral boundaries in NSW and Queensland. This won’t stop Kevin Rudd from seizing a favourable election opportunity.
Rob Chalmers, the veteran editor of Inside Canberra and one of the most astute observers of the political environment, tips an early election in today’s edition of his newsletter. Chalmers writes:
Ignore Lindsay Tanner’s comments that another election is not needed. He is avoiding fostering any early election public speculation. For Kevin Rudd, the case for going early outweigh delaying an election until late next year. Apart from Rudd, the last four Prime Ministers who came to the office after an election went to the people again before the three year limit in the life of each parliament — Whitlam after a year and a half; Fraser after two years; Hawke after one year and eight months; and Howard after two years and eight months.
All four PMs won, albeit with less of a majority, except Fraser who improved his position. Menzies held a double dissolution a year and four months after defeating the Chifley Government in the 1949 election. In his second period in office of 16 years (19.12.49 — 26.01. 66) Menzies called eight elections, one every two years. No first term government has been denied a second term since the Scullin Labor government elected in 1929. In short early elections are the norm and any newly elected government has to be either very unlucky or very incompetent not to get a second term.
After the fiasco of the first anniversary of his “Sorry” message to Aboriginal Australians, Rudd and his minders have become worried that the PM is beginning to look like a big talker who doesn’t deliver. His ideas summit shortly after coming to power is another example of his lofty intentions falling flat.
With a switch to Costello, the Opposition would take a lethal message to the electorate: “Remember how good it was when Costello was Treasurer — look at what Labor has done to the economy. Vote Costello.”
When he re-arranged the periphery of his ministerial line-up this week, Rudd was bringing forward the candidates for his next Cabinet, if re-elected.
The promotion of former NSW ALP general secretary Mark Arbib, former ACTU leader Greg Combet and Victorian union leader Bill Shorten to key areas of policy strategy shows it is “all hands on deck” as Labor girds itself for an election.
You have got to be kidding,Costello the gutless coward,the man who squandered the boom,to bribe people to vote for Howard and the Liberals
Why would anyone with half a brain want yesterdays man back,he has not got a clue about what to do with the coming recession,I don’t think he has or ever had a clue, he was propped up by Treasury.
What a crocload that was Alex. Labor scared of Costello!! They must be thanking their lucky stars. They must have files full of stuff to use against him.
No wonder Rudd talks directly to the people. As said by that very intelligent former Miss World on Q&A last night – the media tells fibs.
Labor scared of Costello will give us a laugh for yonks.
nice satirical piece alex
I want to see the smirk on the phantoms facepiece
To say “It is becoming increasingly clear that the Liberal Party has decided to drop Malcolm Turnbull and recall Peter Costello to lead them at the next federal election” is to make an assertion with no evidence. We need a change from the Howard era and as a Liberal supporter, I find Malcolm very inspiring, the right person to lead the party in the 21st century.
I like this piece because it floats like a parellel reality. I don’t buy it but, like a bubble with a prism of rainbow colours, it takes the eye over yonder! If it happens there will be no justice because hes from the gang that urged us into the $3 trillion Iraq war, which took us in effect into global recession (as surely as Obama is twice the man W Bush is). That’s not me, that’s Stiglitz talking, Nobel prize winner:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/07/AR2008030702846.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Stiglitz