Ley breaks with Dutton on immigration, DOGE, but ignites feuding after cull
Ley also pushed out three-right wing women from the shadow cabinet, including Chandler (who rejected a more junior role), Price (moved into a more junior role in charge of defence industry), and former education spokeswoman Sarah Henderson.
In a statement which failed to reference Ley or her ongoing loyalty to the opposition, Henderson lamented her removal and that of other women: 'I regret that a number of high-performing Liberal women have been overlooked or demoted in the new ministry.'
They were replaced in the shadow cabinet by Angie Bell (youth and environment) and Kerrynne Liddell (social services and Indigenous Australians). Overall, Ley picked two fewer women than Dutton's last shadow cabinet.
Right-wing MPs knew Ley would back her allies, but they did not anticipate the extent of the right-wing cull, which included demoting Price, Henderson, Chandler, and Tony Pasin. In their places, former minister Alex Hawke – the head of the small centre-right NSW sub-faction that supports Ley – took over as industry spokesman and manager of opposition business, meaning he is in the leadership grouping within the shadow cabinet.
Promotions were given to MPs this masthead had previously reported were promised roles by Ley when she was jostling with Angus Taylor for the Liberal leadership. They included Andrew Wallace, Jason Wood and Scott Buchholz.
'Three right-wing women out at the same time as giving non-merit-based roles to blokes won't be forgotten,' one annoyed MP said.
In other notable appointments, Taylor became the defence spokesman, taking over from Andrew Hastie, who moved into home affairs. Hastie's friend and former home affairs lead, James Paterson, shifted to the key economic portfolio of finance. He will lead the economic team alongside deputy leader Ted O'Brien as shadow treasurer and Bragg as housing and deregulation chief, creating a free-market-minded trio after the party adopted an interventionist, anti-big-business style under Dutton.
Tim Wilson will go straight into the shadow cabinet, as long as he holds on to the seat of Goldstein after a partial recount, handling industrial relations, small business and employment.
Dan Tehan, the former immigration spokesman who fended off a Climate 200-backed independent challenge in the Victorian seat of Wannon, was handed the difficult task of landing the Coalition's position on energy and climate change.
Ley seemed open to a review of the Morrison-era pledge to reach net zero emissions by 2050. Tehan's portfolio of 'energy and emissions reduction' drops the term 'climate change', taking it back to its pre-2022 terminology.
Asked about her commitment to the net zero pledge, which has the potential to split the party over diverging attitudes to climate change, Ley said: 'We'll have those discussions inside the policy development process.'
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Rebel senator Matt Canavan rejected an offer from Littleproud to include him in his shadow cabinet, as reported by this masthead earlier on Wednesday. Canavan was in line for the assistant treasurer spot eventually given to Nationals MP Pat Conaghan, but decided to move to the backbench to continue to argue against net zero.
Former Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce was dumped from the frontbench by Littleproud along with Michael McCormack. Joyce and Canavan, who gave Littleproud a scare when he challenged for the Nationals leadership a few weeks ago, both said they would not let up in their advocacy against the plan they believe is driving up power prices.
Canavan told this masthead that a 'flashpoint' was looming on net zero, and added that he did not know whether Littleproud had asked Ley to allow shadow ministers to freewheel on policy as a way to get net zero sceptics on to the frontbench.
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10 minutes ago
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Labor supports the team and a stadium, a position they reiterated on Wednesday. The Devils fear an early election would delay the stadium project and put the club's licence at risk. Senior Liberal MP Roger Jaensch told parliament Labor leader Dean Winter was trying to steal power by moving the motion. "(He) has shown contempt for the Tasmanian people in favour of his own interest. Tasmanians voted for a Liberal government and Jeremy Rockliff," Mr Jaensch told parliament. If the motion passes, the Liberals could try to govern with another premier, with current deputy Guy Barnett or former senator Eric Abetz the most logical options. Greens leader Rosalie Woodruff has kept the door ajar for a minority government scenario with Labor, who only hold 10 lower-house seats. Dr Woodruff said her party was prepared to work with Labor, saying Mr Winter could prevent Tasmania from going to an election in the event no feasible governing arrangement was found. 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Perth Now
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- Perth Now
Candle-lit vigil for man who died in police custody
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