By MAX AITCHISON, POLITICAL REPORTER FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA and PETER VAN ONSELEN, POLITICAL EDITOR FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA and AAP
Published: | Updated:
Follow Daily Mail Australia’s live coverage of the aftermath of Labor’s landslide election win as Anthony Albanese swears in his new-look ministry.
Meanwhile, the decimated Liberal Party meets to elect a new leader.
It is a two-horse race between Deputy Leader Sussan Ley and Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor.
New Liberal leader ‘Malcolm Turnbull in a skirt’, commentator claims
Conservative political commentator Rita Panahi has slammed the Liberal Party as ‘slow learners’ for electing Sussan Ley as their new leader.
‘Malcolm Turnbull in a skirt,’ she said on Sky News, before repeating the claim on X.
It is a line first used by Sky News host and former Tony Abbott adviser Peta Credlin to describe Julie Bishop.
Breaking:New Liberal Party leader announced
Sussan Ley has been confirmed as the new leader of the Liberal party, making history as the party’s first female leader.
Daily Mail Australia understands she won the vote 29-25 against Angus Taylor.
Jacinta Price has announced she will no longer be running for deputy leader of the party.
Ley, 63, is one of the Liberal Party’s most experienced hands, having served as a Cabinet minister under the Coalition’s past three prime ministers – Tony Abbott, Turnbull and Morrison.
A former commercial pilot, farmer and public servant, she has held the blue ribbon seat of Farrer in NSW’s south-west following the retirement of her long-serving successor and former National Party leader and Deputy Prime Minister Tim Fischer.
Ley is a mother of three. Her surname is pronounced ‘Lee‘.
Ted O’Brien (pictured with Ley, below) has been elected Deputy Leader, defeating Phil Thompson by 38 to 16.
Winners are grinners: New cabinet ministers pose up after swearing-in ceremony
Australia’s re-elected PM Anthony Albanese (front row, fifth from left) and the Governor-General Sam Mostyn (front row, fourth from left) pose for a group picture with his cabinet members after a oath-taking ceremony at Government House in Canberra
Sussan Ley’s cool $140k pay rise
Sussan Ley’s election to leader of the Liberal Party will boost her pay by around $140,000.
As a shadow minister, she was on $233,660 plus 25 per cent loading, so around $290,000.
Now she is the Opposition Leader she will be on 233,660 plus 85 per cent loading, so around $430,000.
PVO: Liberal Party civil war has only just begun
Angus Taylor and his supporters won’t sit back, accept this defeat and end his bid to take over.
Who is Sussan Ley?
And why does she spell her name that way?
All is revealed in PVO’s pre-ballot readthrough of the rivals for the Liberal Party leadership.
Two Liberal party contenders walk in solo
Sussan Ley strode into the Liberal Party room on her own , looking like she means business.
Meanwhile, Angus Taylor followed a few moments afterwards.
But his purposeful stride was undone by his attempts to open the wrong door.
He will be hoping it’s not a sign of things to come…
In pictures: PM, MPs and their families arrive for swearing-in ceremony
The PM and his fiancee Jodie Haydon arrive at Government House
Albanese resigns before he is then sworn in again as PM
Australian Aged Care Minister Sam Rae arrives with members of his family. Rae’s elevation to the cabinet came at the expense of Mark Dreyfus and Ed Husic
Foreign Minister Penny Wong arrives with her daughter Alexandra
Governor-General explains what happens duringswearing in ceremony
Governor-General Sam Mostyn has shared a video explainer about what happens during the swearing-in ceremony for the new government frontbench.
‘It starts with the Prime Minister coming in fairly early in the morning,’ she said.
Mostyn explains that Albanese needs to first resign before being sworn in again as PM.
This is then followed by swearing in the new ministry.
Former ABC breakfast host Michael Rowland said the video was ‘awesome’.
‘What a great explanation of the swearing-in process,’ he added.
Watch the explainer below:
David Littleproud ‘deeply disappointed’ by Jacinta Price’s defection
Nationals Leader David Littleproud was asked if he still trusts Jacinta Nampijinpa Price after she defected to the Liberal Party.
Senator Price defected from the Nationals party room to sit with the Liberal Party room.
As a member of the Country Liberal Party, she can choose between the two. But it was widely seen as a betrayal.
However, Littleproud claims he still trusts her.
‘Yes, I do. The reality is … we gave Jacinta every support we possibly could. We were the first ones to support her in the “No” case,’ he told the ABC.
‘The reality is that her ambitions exceed what the National Party can provide. You can’t be the Prime Minister (in) the national party, I accept that.
‘We’re deeply disappointed. We’ll work through that process. This is more than about my ego (or) anyone else’s ego. This is about the Australian people.’
Senator Price is running for Deputy Leader of the party on Angus Taylor’s ticket against Sussan Ley.
Next Liberal Leader inheriting a ‘poisoned chalice’
The winner of the Liberal leadership could be handed a poisoned chalice as they are tasked with resurrecting the party from its post-election ashes.
Liberal politicians will choose their next leader on Tuesday after Australians handed them a bruising election defeat that decimated their ranks and took out Opposition Leader Peter Dutton.
Deputy Leader Sussan Ley will face off against Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor, while Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price has teamed up with Mr Taylor in a bid to become his second-in-command.
There is no reason to assume whoever takes the job won’t last until the next election, and the absence of a deep bench could bode well for them, Australian National University politics lecturer Jill Sheppard said.
But leading the coalition when it holds less than half as many seats as Labor is a tough ask, and there is a reason other contenders such as Dan Tehan and Andrew Hastie were quick to rule themselves out.
‘It does feel like a bit of a poisoned chalice,’ Dr Sheppard told AAP.
‘Usually, they at least pretend to want to run for a few days.
‘The most important day-one job is to keep the party united, and that’s not going to be easy when there’s a lot of recriminations to be had.’
About 50 Liberal politicians are expected to vote on the party’s future, including recently returned MP Tim Wilson, who also considered throwing his hat in the ring.
Moderates have urged the Liberals to abandon culture wars and return to the centre but Dr Sheppard warned that might not solve the party’s problems.
Coming up with policies that stuck closer to the centre could make it harder for the Liberals to differentiate themselves from Labor, she said.
Some of the coalition’s lost votes likely bled to hard-right parties such as One Nation, which could spark internal debates about the importance of ‘culture wars’ to some constituents.
However, it is unclear whether the next leader will be able to change the Liberal Party’s ideological direction.
‘You’re still dealing with the same party room,’ Dr Sheppard said.
‘What we’ve seen with both Dutton and (Prime Minister Anthony) Albanese is that you can come from quite extreme parts of your party, but in order to maintain the leadership, you have to sit somewhere around the centre.
‘To an extent, it doesn’t matter who is leader – the parties are pretty strong and they will constrain their leader.’
The vote will be the first time Senator Price has stepped into the Liberal party room after she defected from the Nationals to join Mr Taylor’s ticket.
The Nationals re-elected David Littleproud as their leader on Monday following a challenge from conservative senator Matt Canavan.
PVO: Why Albo’s new job for frenemy Tanya Plibersek is a VERY clever insult to her
Giving Tanya Plibersek social security without responsibility for the NDIS is similar to having given her environment without climate change in the last parliament. It’s a snub, effectively limiting her responsibilities to pensioners and the unemployed.
It’s clever though, because it’s very hard to suggest the role of minister for social services is a nothing portfolio. It still includes a large chunk of recurrent government spending, just not spending the minister can do much to shape.
Read Poltiical Editor PVO’s full analysis of the PM’s new-look frontbench below:
Share or comment on this article:
Liberal party leadership race LIVE: And the NEW Liberal leader is… Party room makes stunning call on who will replace Peter Dutton