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Australian PM Faces Voter Backlash

Tony Abbott

Published Feb 1, 2015 9:09 PM by The Maritime Executive

Australia's conservative Prime Minister Tony Abbott came under renewed leadership pressure on Sunday, a little over a year into office following a voter backlash in a state poll and a slump in his personal approval rating.

Abbott said he was determined to stay on as leader, adding government was "not a popularity contest", but conceded Saturday's rout of the Liberal-National party (LNP) in the Queensland election had delivered a jolt.

"The people of Australia elected me as prime minister and they elected my government to get on with the job of governing our country," he told reporters in Sydney.

"I accept that we've had some difficulties," Abbott said. "I accept that we need to learn from the difficulties that we've had, but in the end, government is not a popularity contest, it is a competence contest."

In an embarrassing result for the Queensland LNP, closely aligned to Abbott’s Liberal-National coalition, the party surrendered the largest political majority in Australia's history after just one term in office.

Members of the government called the result "catastrophic", sparking speculation of a possible party revolt against Abbott's leadership.

Local media reported that Abbott has called a two-day meeting of his cabinet from Tuesday to thrash out a policy agenda for 2015 and confront the political issues dogging his government.

Fairfax media reported backbenchers and ministers have been expressing growing doubts over Abbott's leadership in recent weeks, however the majority of the dissatisfaction has been kept behind closed doors or through background briefings to the media.

Attorney-General George Brandis told Sky News the cabinet "was determinedly, unitedly and strongly behind the prime minister".

Abbott has been criticized for broken electoral promises and a series of policy backflips.

That pressure intensified last week when even his biggest supporters, including Australian-born media baron Rupert Murdoch, publicly criticized his contentious and unpopular decision to award Britain’s Prince Philip a knighthood.

Abbott's surprise reintroduction of knights and dames in the honors system last year drew criticism that he was out of touch with national sentiment.

A Labor government in Queensland is expected to be a blow to Australia's A$130 billion ($101 billion) plan to privatize state-owned assets, which the Labor party campaigned strongly against.

The LNP had promised a raft of infrastructure upgrades funded by the A$35 billion sell-off involving ports, electricity generators, an electricity distribution network and a water distribution company.

The Queensland result also threatens Indian conglomerate Adani Enterprises' $7 billion Carmichael coal mine project in the state's Galilee Basin.

The LNP put development of the basin at the heart of its bid for re-election and had promised to take a minority stake in the railway line needed to bring the coal to port.

The Labor party said it would not subsidize the rail line and has challenged assertions about the amount of revenue the mine would generate.

A voter poll published in News Ltd. newspapers on Sunday showed voter approval for Abbott at 27 percent, trailing Labor opposition leader Bill Shorten's approval rating of 44 percent.

Abbott will deliver a key speech to the National Press Club in Canberra on Monday in what is now being seen as the most important of his career.

"Tony has said he has listened and learned," Jane Prentice, a Queensland-based federal Liberal National backbencher, said on ABC television.

"He is making a keynote speech on Monday at the Press Club, but we can't continue as we are," she said. "I think that's the lesson from today."

Copyright Reuters 2015.