Tony Abbott's fate will be decided this morning after he brought forward a backbencher motion for a leadership ballot, prompting his main rival, Malcolm Turnbull, to all but declare his intention to stand if the motion is carried.
As the Australian Prime Minister's critics warned the move could backfire, Abbott's authority was further dented yesterday when Arthur Sinodinos, a respected Liberal Senator, declared he would back a leadership contest. "I believe we have to have this discussion," he said. And in an extraordinary intervention, Liberal MP Teresa Gambaro accused the Coalition Government of "belligerence and hubris", and said backbenchers had endured "an internal climate of fear and intimidation ... for the past five years". Abbott took over the party leadership from Turnbull in 2009.
The motion, announced by two backbenchers on Friday, was due to be voted on at a party room meeting tomorrow. Abbott's decision to move the vote to 11am NZ time today was interpreted as a sign he believes his support is eroding. One Liberal MP, speaking to News Corp, called it "desperate". In a telling choice of words, Turnbull described it as a "captain's call" - linking it to other unpopular decisions taken by Abbott without consulting his colleagues.
Asked whether he would stand for the leadership if the motion was carried, Turnbull said that was "a hypothetical question for the time being". But he added: "If for whatever reason the leadership of a political party is vacant, then any member of the party can stand ... without any disloyalty to the person whose leadership has been declared vacant." In an apparent rebuke to Abbott, he warned: "It's very important to remember that the leadership [is] the unique gift of the party room. What that means is, members of the party room have got to have time to talk to each other."