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Kevin Rudd, Australia's Foreign Minister, Resigns Amid Political Dispute

By ROD McGUIRK and MATTHEW PENNINGTON 02/22/12 09:35 PM ET AP

Kevin Rudd
Australian foreign minister Kevin Rudd participates in a session of the G20 Foreign Ministers Informal Meeting in Los Cabos, Baja California Sur state, Mexico on February 20, 2012. (Photo by Ronaldo Schemidt/AFP/Getty Images)

CANBERRA, Australia — Prime Minister Julia Gillard put her job on the line Thursday, announcing a leadership ballot in hopes of quashing a comeback by the premier she ousted in a Labor Party coup. But Kevin Rudd's supporters said that even if Gillard survives Monday's vote, the turmoil surrounding her unpopular government will continue until she is out.

Rudd, who resigned as foreign minister Wednesday during an official visit to the U.S., told reporters in Washington that night that he thinks Labor will lose next year's elections if Gillard remains leader, and that government colleagues are encouraging him to run. But he would not say whether he would challenge Gillard in the leadership ballot of Labor lawmakers until he returns to Australia on Friday.

Gillard said she will abandon her leadership ambitions if Labor lawmakers choose Rudd over her 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.

But Rudd supporters said he would continue to destabilize the government if he lost the ballot and would try to win another ballot at a later date.

The last prime minister to lose power in such a ballot, Bob Hawke, was deposed in a second challenge by his deputy Paul Keating in 1991.

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.

Tony Windsor, an independent lawmaker whose support allows Labor to control a single-seat majority in the House of Representatives, warned that he could bring down the government if Rudd returned to power.

That would result in an early election if neither Labor nor the conservative opposition coalition could muster a majority.

"If that was the scenario, maybe it's time the people had their say in terms of who can govern," Windsor told ABC.

Gillard ousted Rudd as prime minister in June 2010 in an internal coup, and their center-left Labor Party scraped through elections later that year to lead a minority government. Polls now suggest Labor would suffer a devastating defeat, but Gillard maintains she has her colleagues' support.

Rudd was critical of sniping against him within the party, was plainspoken about what he saw as Gillard's dim prospects to win in a national election, and touted his own stewardship while premier of Australia's economy during the global crisis.

"I've had many conversations with caucus colleagues and with ministerial colleagues. I'm very pleased and encouraged by the amount of positive support that encourages me to contest the leadership of the Australian Labor Party," Rudd said Wednesday night.

He said his supporters regarded 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.

Earlier Wednesday, Rudd had 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," Rudd said. "We all know that what happened then was wrong and it must never happen again."

Gillard, meanwhile, on Thursday gave her most scathing explanation yet of why she had challenged him in 2010 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.

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 then criticized Gillard for failing to defend him from colleagues' criticisms that he was undermining the government through his own leadership ambitions.

Gillard said in a statement that she was taken by surprise by the resignation, and that Rudd had never raised his complaints with her personally.

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.

___

Matthew Pennington reported from Washington. Associated Press writer Kristen Gelineau in Sydney contributed to this report.

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CANBERRA, Australia — Prime Minister Julia Gillard put her job on the line Thursday, announcing a leadership ballot in hopes of quashing a comeback by the premier she ousted in a Labor Party cou...
CANBERRA, Australia — Prime Minister Julia Gillard put her job on the line Thursday, announcing a leadership ballot in hopes of quashing a comeback by the premier she ousted in a Labor Party cou...
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02:02 AM on 02/28/2012
The Mongee, You would fight with that woman too if she hadn’t agreed with you. I can already see that you have disrespected one of the other commenters here for disagreeing with you too. You started the cynicism with me as no idea because I am younger than you in age. That does not make you more intelligent. If you are going to dish dirt to someone but can't take the heat when it's returned to you than don't do it, surely age has taught you this. By the way for the record sarcasm and cynicism has the same meaning. And your reference to all young music as rubbish is a comment I would expect from you. There is another generation after me tool and even though I don't necessarily like all their music I would not call it rubbish that is disrespectful to them. So if I am so disrespectful why are you rubbishing my music when you have no clue to what I listen to any way. I am not the only one that dislikes the Beetles I know lots of people who dislike them but I did not call them rubbish. And referring to me as a hypricate in another post to another member is poor form. Also it's a little obvious with the favourite comments, seems the relevant messages have been favourited twice, interesting no one else's is like that. Using an ip changer to agree with your own comments is not only sad but pathetic.
OBAMAMOI
Nature does nothing useless
07:10 AM on 02/23/2012
So the Labor caucus is telling the people that they can’t stand hardwork because Kevin made them work hard as they should.
Slandering an ex Pm like they’ve done is unbecoming and makes the whole bunch look like schoolgirls in a play yard .
04:17 AM on 02/24/2012
The way Rudd is being 'slandered' is nothing compared to the way Gillard has been endlessly pilloried by the shock-jocks and the tabloids and the Australian media in general, "worst PM ever..... blah blah blah...." Hmmm, lets see - she's been able to lead a government with a majority of 1 and pass some pivotal legislation. All this while Australia avoided a recession, unemployment DOWN etc... The longer this has gone on the more Rudd has acted like a total sook and the more Gillard has acted with dignity and conviction. Come Monday, Rudd's toast.
OBAMAMOI
Nature does nothing useless
03:59 AM on 02/27/2012
Blah Blah, the feminist excuse ..the V does nto give her a free pass, she is a disappointment for most Australians like me and certainly not you!
05:21 AM on 02/23/2012
Ozzie - I think gender biased was a matter of time & education although some countries are way behind. I don't think Australian's were ever really Xenophobic of course there is always the minority, however I do have a problem if you come here & not integrate that's not being racist. White, Black, Yellow, were all the same as it should be. Anti-gay heck I have no problems with two gays in love. But I am undecided about same sex marriage reason being gay couples can't have children naturally & I wonder about why, but other than that I believe God would rather a couple in love than not. Someone told me in the bible somewhere God actually does not discriminate against gays; man does so I am 50% for Gay marriage & 50% not on the basis I have given. There is a male gay couple in a close circle of mine who are great friends with a heterosexual couple these 4 are tremendous support to each other & nobody gives a rat's arse about their sexuality as they shouldn't. Yes your right people still have prejudice when not aligned in agreement.
04:33 AM on 02/23/2012
Quick correction to the article: the Labor party is actually Center-Right, while the Liberal-National Coalition are Hard-Right. Australia is much like the USA inasmuch as we have no major Left-wing party.
05:24 AM on 02/23/2012
Well the ex Liberal opposition leader was more to the left & he may get in again.
05:59 AM on 02/26/2012
Both parties have more social democratic policies than anything in the US. That goes for pensions, unions, health insurance, public schools, progressive fair tax, regulation of business in the interest of citizens, you name it. Australia is not much like the USA.
Peabodies
We are the Many. They are the Few.
08:57 PM on 02/22/2012
This is a case of in Australia Dillard = Rudd. Just as in France Sarkozy = Hollande, or, in the U.K. Cameron/Milliband = Blair. Just as here where Oba ma = Clinton/ Bush2. Our economies are being run by neo-cons whose economic philosophy is the same -- lower taxes on the rich and corporations, and raise commodity (food) prices on the poor, ad nauseam. That model is failing badly in Greece. Austerity of that kind doesn't work. It only brings recession. How loony is that.? Did they all learn that at "Davos"?

When did lying and cheating become the modus operandi? When the GATT and WTO took over our planet, changing the rules in the middle of the game for most countries.

We used to be a fair country, and so were most developed countries. Now the only societies that are "fair"" are Iceland and New Zealand. How depravedly corrupt have our "developed" nations become. We need to fight against the nefarious consequences of signing on to "free trade""(WTO/GATT), and returning to sovereign states with their own currencies and ways of dealing with commercial exchanges that do not harm sovereign nations, like once proud Greece that was led down the briar patch by financiers from Goldman SUX.

Reputation and honor used to be the gauge of a person's worth. Lying and cheating and bullying are now the currency. For shame.
12:15 AM on 02/23/2012
There would be no problem if Greece lived within it's means lets not blame the financier completely. It's like me suing a credit card company after I agreed they increase my credit limit and decided to blow it on male escorts or whatever the heck I can't afford.
Peabodies
We are the Many. They are the Few.
07:43 PM on 02/23/2012
You really missed my point, ntf.
Peabodies
We are the Many. They are the Few.
07:59 PM on 02/24/2012
I blame the corrupt Greek politicians who signed the "agrreements".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Itsbeenalongday
Eliminating poverty is smart business
08:18 AM on 02/22/2012
Care factor.....zero.

Off to the backbenches where you are most qualified to serve the government.
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OzzieTonto
“Hatred, the only thing that lasts.”
08:06 AM on 02/22/2012
The thing all these faceless Labor Party men had better consider is: who can lead them to a victory against the Mad monk? The polls are clear: the devious Gillard cannot.
And I hereby name and shame the bumptious Howes, Arbib, Shorten and Feeney as the agents-of-influence who put their ambition above the wishes of the Australian people, and stabbed Kevin Rudd in the back.
Bring back Kevin Rudd! And for that matter, bring back Malcolm Turnbull, and a decent right-wing opposition! We like many peoples, have had a bellyful of the political machines.
08:29 AM on 02/22/2012
I like Abbott & I am young & female but I feel that Turnbull warms to the people more. I don't like Rudd but I don't like Gillard even less. The back slap on Rudd was not right despite.
Who else can Labor gives us as the new opposition apart from the Red Ninja & Kevin O'Hate.
05:29 PM on 02/22/2012
Be careful of Turnbull. His history with Goldman Sachs is not to be revered. he is a dangerous wolf, in expensive lambs skin. He is not to be trusted.
Bring back Kevin. NO to ABBOTT.
OBAMAMOI
Nature does nothing useless
07:06 AM on 02/23/2012
Those robin-hoodmen determine who should be PM of Australia, not the people!
04:21 AM on 02/24/2012
No, correction, Rupert Murdoch determines the PM of Australia.
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Sol76
07:26 AM on 02/22/2012
Labour needs to stand united and this play will undermine everything that the Prime Minister is fighting for. I don't care if is lead by Kevin Rudd or Julia Gillard, as long as it is a Labour leader that is pro-environment, pro-union, pro-women, pro-multiculturalism, pro-Carbon tax, pro-gay marriage and pro-everything else that moves this great nation forward and not backwards.
08:01 AM on 02/22/2012
Labor is against gay marriage & didn't want a carbon tax orginally. They have made so many f@ck ups it's not funny. The recent state election which has been held by Labor for years & years had such a huge swing to Liberal it was a statement of the people talking enough is enough & I won't even bore you with the mess they left to clean up.
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Sol76
08:34 AM on 02/22/2012
Labour will be against gay marriage until they have enough political capital to support it. Right now they are dealing with an anti-Carbon Tax misinformation campaign from the mining industry and the small-mindedness of the Australian public who are only seeing the issue of climate change from a personal cost perspective.
04:24 AM on 02/24/2012
True, Labour states have been dropping like flies recently, but don't forget, Howard had to deal with all Labour states for a lot of his time as PM.
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OzzieTonto
“Hatred, the only thing that lasts.”
09:08 AM on 02/22/2012
It sounds as if you're talking about the Greens.
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Sol76
09:18 AM on 02/22/2012
Sure but those are not aims exclusive to the Greens as Labour has proved in the last few years.
07:20 AM on 02/22/2012
What a mess! If the mad monk Abbott (Ultra Conservative/Right wing), gain power the Australian people will be the losers. It will be back to the days of little Johnny Howard, GW's mate! And who has brought it to this? The 'faceless men' pulling the strings. It's appalling actually. Rudd should never have been rolled by Gillard and Co.
07:55 AM on 02/22/2012
Oh please I live here, I can tell you without a doubt if they call an early election bye bye labor.
Alhough I do agree it was wrong what Labor did to Rudd.
10:07 AM on 02/22/2012
You shouldn't jump to conclusions dear. I live here now too, and have done for 34 years. Where did you think I was living? Arrogance is hightened by ignorance.
07:16 AM on 02/22/2012
Julia Gillard should never have been PM in the first place, if ever there was a real live Dame Edna, she was her. I a glad I am not Australian, what an embarrassment she is, more so than Gordon Brown even for the UK.
08:04 AM on 02/22/2012
Well she got in by a minority government that's it.
07:10 AM on 02/22/2012
I guarantee you the country will fare far worse if the Liberals with Abbott get in.

And yes while we don't technically vote for the leader but for the party I can tell you that nearly everyone that voted in 2007 for Labor did so for Rudd...
07:21 AM on 02/22/2012
Agree.
07:48 AM on 02/22/2012
Yes & they regret it big time hence why a lot have said they would consider a swing back to the Coalition. If Turnbull returns to lead the Liberal party guaranteed Labor is gone for good. Abbott would still probably get in anyway as people still prefer him to Gillard the polls confirm it.
07:54 AM on 02/22/2012
No one in their right mind in Australia prefers Abbott to Gillard. Give me a break!
Even Independent Tony Winsdor said this evening in an interview that Abbott is unstable. Who wants John Howard's lot back? Maybe the wealthy and the extreme right wing. They should have stayed with Rudd for sure, but there is no way that Abbott and the Coalition would get my vote - ever!
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OzzieTonto
“Hatred, the only thing that lasts.”
09:42 AM on 02/22/2012
ntf, Do you really think Malcolm Turncoat could get up? Doubt it: the dread Minchin is puppet-master, Malcolm's enemy. Most important, those faceless men I named above are gonna keep us dragged into wars: we need to get out of Afpak and Rudd will do it, that's why the Great Satan didn't like him. And Rudd may have learned not to be a Banana-bending Nazi, who knows?
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mokgee
06:33 AM on 02/22/2012
What a sad state of affairs, it always appeared that, Australia, was a sound political base, a united nation. Alas, it seems that the corrupt practices of politics has now infected Australia.. There is nowhere, where corruption has not poisoned the system, now the whole globe is infected......Where there in no agreement, there is disagreement which turns to chaos....Kevin Rudd, was a straight talking fellah, then they got to him to eject him from office...When we say they, who do we mean, we have no idea but they are everywhere....
07:24 AM on 02/22/2012
Corrupt practices in politics have always been in Australia - nothing new. Because of the usual - power, greed and behind the scenes shenannigans. Jobs for the boys, etc.etc. etc.
The image that Australia is all 'matey, matey' is a myth.
08:05 AM on 02/22/2012
We are still matey compared to some countries no one said we were perfect.
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mokgee
08:55 AM on 02/22/2012
Well thanks for putting us right, Fergie1..Like all things we only get one side of every story, never the whole truth. Having said that, thousands of Brits, have returned home. Not much to rave about there though..It seems that all countries around the globe are in decline......
08:06 AM on 02/22/2012
I did not buy Kevin Rudd's bull he wasn't my cup of tea.
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mokgee
08:59 AM on 02/22/2012
He sounded very positive and forthright from here,,ntf2010,,Now there is doubt, again the world is full of doubt nowadays. The people world is going pear shaped, aint that the truth...
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06:05 AM on 02/22/2012
Good luck Oz. Your country is heading the same way Britain did under Blair and Brown. Everything to the bludgers and the hardworking picking up the tab.
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Sol76
07:30 AM on 02/22/2012
As long as the hardworking have someone poorer to blame for their lot in life, the rich will be safe and happy.