New Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison yesterday rewarded supporters and extended an olive branch to rebel right-wingers as he unveiled his “new generation” Cabinet after taking power in a party-room coup.
Morrison, the former Australian treasurer, was on Friday sworn in as prime minister after winning a Liberal Party leadership challenge against moderate former Australian prime minister Malcolm Turnbull.
The challenge had been instigated by Australian Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton, whom Morrison — also to the right of the party — defeated in a secret ballot.
He sought to heal the wounds exposed by the infighting.
“This new Liberal-National team is a next-generation team,” Morrison told reporters in Canberra of the governing coalition between the Liberals and the rural-based Nationals party.
“What we have done today in pulling this team together is provide for stability ... it does begin the process of healing,” he said.
Dutton kept Home Affairs, but his super-sized portfolio was split to separate immigration and national security, with migration issues to be handled by former assistant minister of finance David Coleman.
The environment and energy portfolio, which was held by Australian Treasurer Josh Frydenberg, was also broken up in an acknowledgement of the tensions the two issues caused within the party.
Environment and energy policies were key bones of contention between Turnbull and the right-wingers, who wanted him to prioritize older electricity generation sources, such as coal, over renewables and emissions mitigation.
Wind-farm critic and Dutton supporter Angus Taylor was chosen as energy minister, tasked with the job of lowering soaring electricity prices.
Australian MP Melissa Price, who represents major mining and agriculture centers in Western Australia state, picked up the ministry of the environment.
Former Australian minister of defense Marise Payne was given the foreign affairs portfolio after incumbent Julie Bishop resigned yesterday.
Bishop, a rare female voice in the Australian government, had put her hand up to be one of three candidates to replace Turnbull.
However, she received minimal support from colleagues, even as opinion polls pointed to her popularity among voters.
Her departure has raised questions about whether she fell victim to party politics and to a perceived glass ceiling for women in Canberra.
Renowned for her steely gaze dubbed the “death stare,” Bishop’s highlights as foreign minister include her strong condemnation of Russia’s role in the shooting down of Malaysia Airlines MH17 in 2014.
Moderate Christopher Pyne was promoted to minister of defense, while Dutton allies Australian Minister of Finance Matthias Cormann, Australian Federal Communications Minister Mitch Fifield and Australian Minister of Health Greg Hunt remained in their Cabinet roles.
Former deputy prime minister and Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce, who was forced to quit in February and move to the backbench over his affair with his younger former media adviser, returned in a drought advisory role.
However, there was no room for former Australian prime minister Tony Abbott — a vocal critic of Turnbull after Turnbull ousted him as leader in 2015.
Morrison said he was open to Abbott, who had supported Dutton, being involved in government decisions in an advisory capacity.
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