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Deposed Australia PM Turnbull set to quit parliament this week

News Desk (Agence France-Presse)
Sydney, Australia
Tue, August 28, 2018 Published on Aug. 28, 2018 Published on 2018-08-28T10:33:48+07:00

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Australia's Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull (left) and Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce (right) arrive for a press conference in Sydney on July 5 after Turnbull rejected calls for him to resign after the weekend's disastrous election. Three days after polls closed the result is still too close to call, with Turnbull's Liberal/National coalition and the opposition Labor party each short of the 76 seats needed to govern, raising the prospect of a hung parliament.
Australia's Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull (left) and Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce (right) arrive for a press conference in Sydney on July 5 after Turnbull rejected calls for him to resign after the weekend's disastrous election. Three days after polls closed the result is still too close to call, with Turnbull's Liberal/National coalition and the opposition Labor party each short of the 76 seats needed to govern, raising the prospect of a hung parliament. (AFP/William West)

D

umped prime minister Malcolm Turnbull will quit parliament this week, reports said Tuesday, in another headache for Australia's rattled government which will temporarily lose its tiny one-seat majority.

The moderate was deposed in a Liberal party coup last week driven by a hardline conservative faction.

After being knifed, he indicated would leave parliament rather than go to the backbench and told a party gathering on Monday evening he will officially resign on Friday, broadcaster ABC and Fairfax Media reported.

His departure will trigger a by-election for his Sydney seat, potentially on October 6, leaving new Prime Minister Scott Morrison in a precarious position with no parliamentary majority for two weeks.

Turnbull's seat in the wealthy Sydney enclave of Wentworth is traditionally a Liberal safe haven, although a backlash against the government's political infighting could make this less certain.

"As you know, my prime ministership has come to an end. The circumstances have appalled most Australians but again, I won't labour the point," he told the Monday meeting, Fairfax reported.

"I have a strong view which I've made very clear publicly so it comes as no surprise, that former prime ministers are best out of parliament not in it, and I think recent events best underline the value of that observation. 

"And so, accordingly, on Friday, I will resign from the House of Representatives."

Christine Forster -- the sister of arch-conservative Tony Abbott, who helped orchestrate Turnbull's demise -- has already put her hand up to replace Turnbull in the plum seat.

Forster, who is gay and was a high-profile proponent of same-sex marriage in a successful campaign last year, is a well-known Liberal councillor in Sydney.

Others reportedly in the running include businessman and former ambassador to Israel Dave Sharma, while the Greens and Labor will almost certainly field candidates.

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