New
Australian Prime Minister Malcom Turnbull has appointed several women to his
cabinet in a reshuffle aimed at healing party divisions after the ouster of
Tony Abbott. But a number of portfolios remained unchanged.
Deutsche Welle, 20 Sep 2015
Liberal
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull on Sunday announced a new cabinet
following the ouster of Tony Abbott almost a week ago in an internal party vote.
The
reshuffle sees five women taking or retaining key portfolios. Among other
things, Maris Payne has been appointed as the country's first-ever female
defense minister, taking over from Kevin Andrews, and Michaelia Cash has
received the job of Employment Minister, replacing Eric Abetz.
Abbott had
just two women in his Cabinet, and had faced much criticism for policies seen
as disadvantaging women, including cutting funds to shelters and domestic
violence programs.
In a major
change, Treasurer Joe Hockey was relegated to the back bench, with former
Social Services Minister Scott Morrison moving into the breach.
Turnbull
said the widely unpopular Hockey would leave politics.
Loyalty
rewarded
Turnbull
also gave important roles to some of his main supporters, with Arthur Sinodinos
receiving the job of cabinet secretary, a post that gives considerable
influence within the government, and Scott Ryan becoming his assistant.
However, a
key Abbott faithful, Peter Dutton, will retain his job as immigration minister.
Other
senior posts also remained unchanged, including the foreign ministry, which
stays in the hands of Julie Bishop, and the environment ministry, with Greg
Hunt still in command.
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| Julie Bishop remains Australia's top diplomat |
The new
cabinet is expected to be sworn in on Monday.
Winds of
change?
Turnbull
after Abbott was dumped last Monday following a term in office characterized by
a series of gaffes and perceived policy missteps.
Unlike
Abbott, he supports same-sex marriage and action on climate change.
A
millionaire former investment banker, Turnbull also enjoys considerable
popularity in the business community and wider electorate, but is regarded with
considerable misgivings by some right-wing members of his ruling coalition.
The Liberal
Party and its junior coalition partner the National Party won a landslide
victory in 2013 elections under Abbott on pledges to restore stability after
the previous Labor government showed a marked propensity for infighting and
internal division.
The next
elections are expected next year.



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