SYDNEY — Australia's former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd announced Friday that he will attempt to grab back leadership of the country, directly challenging the current prime minister amid a bitter power struggle that has been brewing for weeks.
Prime Minister Julia Gillard is planning a party leadership ballot for Monday in an effort to knock down Rudd's ambitions to return to power. Gillard ousted Rudd as prime minister in June 2010 in an internal party coup, and their center-left Labor Party scraped through elections later that year to lead a minority government.
"It's no secret that our government has a lot of work to do if it is to regain the confidence of the Australian people," Rudd said during a speech in the eastern city of Brisbane. "Starting on Monday, I'm going to start restoring that trust."
Rudd resigned as foreign minister during a trip to the U.S. earlier this week, saying he could not continue in his role without the support of the prime minister.
"I want to finish the job the Australian people elected me to do when I was elected by them to become prime minister," he said Friday.
The government could fall if Rudd wins because Labor's single-seat majority in the House of Representatives depends on a coalition with two independent lawmakers and one from the Greens Party. Early elections would be held if neither Labor nor the conservative opposition coalition can muster a majority.
Gillard has 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.
Analysts expect that Gillard has enough support to remain in power for now, but she and her government are unpopular among voters.
Rudd supporters have said that even if he lost Monday, he would simply build support and try again later. But in his speech Friday, Rudd dismissed the idea of mounting another challenge if this one fails.
"I would go to the backbench and I would not challenge Julia a second time," he said.
For weeks, Rudd denied widespread rumors that he was planning a run for Gillard's job. 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 accused Gillard of showing disloyalty to him by failing to silence senior ministers who accused him of being dysfunctional and of secretly undermining the Australian government while he served as its top international envoy.
In his speech Friday, Rudd said the Labor party under its current leader was headed for a devastating defeat at the next elections, and said Gillard had lost the trust of Australians.
"I believe that to do the best for Australia and Labor things have to change," he said.
Gillard was expected to address the media later Friday.
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Associated Press writer Rod McGuirk in Canberra, Australia, contributed to this report.

KRISTEN GELINEAU | February 23, 2012 11:36 PM EST | Associated Press
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