And yet she managed to hang on as Labor leader for almost another year, right up until Wednesday. With Gillard having surrendered the leadership to Rudd in decisive but not overwhelming fashion, it seems that 26 Labor MPs, who in February last year backed Gillard, found - to borrow the aforementioned Gillard supporter's eloquent term - a way to "unf****" the Government. They did so by switching back to the man Gillard thought she'd vanquished.
In doing so, they have at least created the possibility that the ALP can moderate, or perhaps even avoid, the electoral nightmare that was likely to consume the nation's oldest political party. Or maybe not. Rudd's return affords an opportunity for Labor, but that is all.
The caucus' decision also implies, heavily and unavoidably, that it made a mistake by elevating Gillard to the leadership on June 24, 2010.
The truth is that the Australian Labor Party nationally has in the past three years experienced its most rancorous divisions since the split of the 1950s. Unlike the period of the split, which occurred in opposition and guaranteed many more years of it, the party has endured these divisions while holding office, and the enmities have, for the most part, grown from ego rather than ideology.
If the events of the past few days are to have any meaning, they need to be seen in the context of what has happened to the Government since early 2010. First things first: Gillard's downfall as Prime Minister is one of the greatest personal tragedies in Australian politics.
It is a tragedy because Gillard's ambition ultimately exceeded her political talent, and to the very end she would not see it. Her speech delivered after her caucus defeat on Wednesday night attributed her removal as leader to only two causes: a loss of fortitude among past supporters who buckled under external pressure and sexism directed at her as the nation's first female Prime Minister. There was no acknowledgement she had lost the confidence of most of her colleagues because of her own performance.
The pattern of failing to fully own her errors was set early during the 2010 election campaign when she said that she would no longer conform to her handlers' directives and from that point voters would see "the real Julia". Notably, it was the advisers who made the big mistakes. Her mistake had been to follow their advice.
Gillard had been a brilliant deputy to Rudd, an earthy foil to his high-flown nerdishness. But as leader, she rarely looked comfortable and did not seem at ease with the natural authority that comes with the nation's highest political office.
Nor did she have the benefit of a deputy who could perform as well as she had. Indeed, in Wayne Swan she had one of the least effective communicators modern politics has seen. It has become a mantra for Labor and its supporters to bemoan the fact it does not get the credit it deserves for its handling of the economy.
The media gets the blame which, to a degree, it should. But Swan was charged with selling Labor's economic policy from December 2004 until last Wednesday. Should he not shoulder most of the responsibility?
Gillard's defenders in the party room and in the electorate produce a list of reasons for her removal: Rudd's refusal to accept his loss of the leadership and leaks aimed at harming her; sexism; a ferocious, sometimes unhinged approach from some people in the Opposition; harsh treatment by the media.
There is something to all of them. She definitely was the target of vicious, sexist attacks. The media was quick to turn on her and some elements were relentless in their dismissive attitude. The Opposition treated her time as prime minister as one unbroken crisis.
And Rudd did undermine Gillard. The leaks against her during her first weeks as leader either came from Rudd or people sympathetic to him and they hurt her. One revealed that she had opposed a rise in welfare payments chiefly on the basis of Labor's political interests.
Another far more damaging leak, put directly to Gillard during an appearance at the National Press Club, suggested that during a long meeting with Rudd on June 23, 2010, she had undertaken to give him several months to repair his faltering leadership. During a break in the meeting, she was told by her supporters that she already had the caucus numbers stitched up, whereupon she returned to Rudd and withdrew her undertaking: she was challenging him.
To this day, this leak is regarded by many on the Labor side as appalling treachery, which it was. But one thing needs to be said: it has not been challenged successfully on the grounds of veracity. The real damage was not in the act of leaking but in its substance, which presented Gillard as someone who would put her ambition ahead of her word.
From that moment, her troubles never left her. Her trustworthiness was in question but voters were still willing to give her the benefit of the doubt - until she committed after the 2010 election to a carbon tax.
During the 2010 election campaign, Gillard promised to refer the issue to a hazily-designed "people's assembly" and vowed there would be no carbon tax. After the election, under pressure from the Greens, she dropped the idea of the assembly and adopted a temporary carbon tax as Labor policy. But, incredibly, rather than emphasising its temporary nature and perhaps calling it a levy, which has a different meaning for many voters, she declared that she was happy to call it a tax. That sealed the trustworthiness question and it's why there was no recovery in Labor's polling numbers after July 1 last year. Too many voters resented the way she had pursued the policy - more than resented the policy itself.
The argument in defence of Gillard is that her Government managed to get hundreds of pieces of legislation through a parliament in which Labor did not have majorities in its right in either house. This included the signature reforms of new education funding arrangements and the National Disability Insurance Scheme. Again, the argument has merit.
But the story must also include the failed idea of a processing centre in East Timor, the enlisting of Peter Slipper as Speaker of the House, the setting of a September election date in January and the departure of two Cabinet members two days later, the costly architecture of the minerals resource rent tax, and the threat in late 2011 to force a vote on the Malaysia solution as a wedge tactic against the Coalition (withdrawn when she realised she would lose).
Worst of all, it must also include the oft-repeated pledge by Gillard and Swan to return the budget to surplus this year. The signs were there in mid-2012 that they could not deliver, but they kept promising it until the end of the year. Neither Rudd, the media, pollsters, nor the nation's sexists forced these errors. They were entirely the work of a politician who, like all leaders, was fuelled by immense personal ambition but who could not learn from her mistakes. Sadly, the journey Gillard took to the summit deprived her of some of the skills and the sense of legitimacy she needed to fully inhabit the role she had sought so desperately.
Shaun Carney is Adjunct Associate Professor, School of Political and Social Inquiry at Monash University in Melbourne.
This article was originally published at
The Conversation.