2003 Australian Labor Party leadership spills

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Two leadership spills of the Australian Labor Party (ALP), the official opposition party in the Parliament of Australia, were held on 16 June 2003 and 2 December 2003, respectively. The Opposition Leader, Simon Crean, won the ballot in June against former opposition leader Kim Beazley, but resigned as leader in late November after losing support from his colleagues and did not contest the December ballot which Mark Latham won against Kim Beazley.

June 2003 spill[]

June 2003 Australian Labor Party
Leadership spill
Australian-Labor-Party-stub.svg
← 2001 16 June 2003 (2003-06-16) Dec. 2003 →
  Simon Crean 1990s.jpg Kim Beazley crop.jpg
Candidate Simon Crean Kim Beazley
Caucus vote 58 34
Percentage 63.0% 37.0%

Leader before election

Simon Crean

Elected Leader

Simon Crean

Background[]

Simon Crean had become leader of the Labor Party and opposition leader unopposed[1] at a leadership ballot on 11 November 2001 held to replace Kim Beazley, who fought two elections as Labor leader at the 1998 and 2001 elections. Crean had also been deputy leader between 1998 and 2001 and was succeeded as deputy leader by Jenny Macklin.

Despite a successful budget reply and the controversy surrounding Howard-appointed Governor-General Peter Hollingworth, Crean had a low popularity rating throughout 2003.[2] With constant rumours over a possible challenge plaguing his leadership, Crean called a leadership spill to be held on June 16, 2003.

Candidates[]

Potential candidates who declined to run[]

The following individuals ruled themselves out as candidates or were the subject of media speculation but did not stand:

Results[]

The ballot was held on 16 June 2003, in which Crean convincingly defeated Beazley 58-34, despite opinion polls showing more public support for Beazley.

Candidate Final ballot %
Simon Crean 58 63.0
Kim Beazley 34 37.0

December 2003 spill[]

December 2003 Australian Labor Party
Leadership spill
Australian-Labor-Party-stub.svg
← June 2003 2 December 2003 (2003-12-02) 2005 →
  Mark Latham 1.jpg Kim Beazley crop.jpg
Candidate Mark Latham Kim Beazley
Caucus vote 47 45
Percentage 51.1% 48.9%

Leader before election

Simon Crean

Elected Leader

Mark Latham

Background[]

However, by November, Crean had lost more ground to John Howard as preferred prime minister. On 27 November 2003, a section of Crean's senior colleagues informed him that he had lost support and should step down as leader. Crean said he would "sleep on it", and announced the following day that he would resign as leader. In doing so, Crean became the first Labor leader to have not contested an election since Billy Hughes was expelled from the Labor party in 1916.

Candidates[]

Potential candidates who declined to run[]

The following individuals ruled themselves out as candidates or were the subject of media speculation but did not stand:

Results[]

The ballot was held on Tuesday 2 December in which Latham defeated Beazley by a margin of two votes (47-45).[6]

Candidate Final ballot %
Mark Latham 47 51.1
Kim Beazley 45 48.9

Aftermath[]

Latham went on to lose the federal election in October 2004. Latham stayed on for a few months as leader until January 2005 when he stood down citing ill health. Beazley then returned to the leadership unopposed and remained leader until December 2006 when he was ousted by Kevin Rudd.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Lateline - 22/11/2001: Crean officially endorsed as Labor leader . Australian Broadcasting Corp". Archived from the original on 2008-10-04. Retrieved 2012-03-11.
  2. ^ "Labor leadership spill growing more likely". ABC. 3 June 2003. Retrieved 24 November 2021.
  3. ^ McGrath, Catherine (28 November 2003). "Beazley, Latham, Rudd in ALP leadership line-up". AM. Retrieved 9 December 2006.
  4. ^ "Beaten Beazley vows support - ABC News".
  5. ^ McGrath, Catherine (28 November 2003). "Beazley, Latham, Rudd in ALP leadership line-up". AM. Retrieved 9 December 2006.
  6. ^ http://australianpolitics.com/news/2003/12/03-12-02c.shtml
Retrieved from ""