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4 things about Australia's next prime minister Malcolm Turnbull

Australia's next prime minister Malcolm Turnbull has battled a public perception that his wealth puts him out of touch with ordinary Australians.

Updated on: Sep 15, 2015 01:06 AM IST
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Australia's next prime minister Malcolm Turnbull has battled a public perception that his wealth puts him out of touch with ordinary Australians. On Monday, Liberal Party members voted 54 to 44 to replace Tonay Abbott with former party leader and communications minister Turnbull, who had called for the leadership ballot just hours earlier amid flagging opinion polls for the two-year-old conservative coalition government. The change could signal a different Australian response to climate change and allow for a more moderate agenda that could include recognition of gay marriage. Here are a few details on Turnbull, who is scheduled to be sworn in Tuesday.

Malcolm Turnbull comments after an Australian Liberal Party meeting where he has been elected at the new party leader at Parliament House in Canberra. (AP Photo)
Malcolm Turnbull comments after an Australian Liberal Party meeting where he has been elected at the new party leader at Parliament House in Canberra. (AP Photo)

A QUICK RISE: He worked as a journalist, lawyer, investment banker and venture capitalist before he was elected to Parliament in 2004 to represent the Sydney electoral division of Wentworth, the wealthiest in Australia. He was always assumed to have his eye on the top political prize, which he has achieved in a relatively quick 11 years.

WEALTHY IMAGE: The 60-year-old is probably the second wealthiest member of Federal Parliament after mining magnate Clive Palmer. His nickname is "The Silvertail," a pejorative Australian term for the wealthy and privileged elite. Cartoonists tend to depict him wearing a top hat.

THE REPUBLICANS: As a lawyer in the 1980s, he became a household name in Australia when he blocked a British government attempt to prevent Australian publication of "Spycatcher," a memoir by former British intelligence officer Peter Wright. He later led the Australian Republican Movement, which argues for severing Australia's constitutional ties with Britain and appointing an Australian citizen as president. The status quo was maintained in a referendum in 1999, largely because Australians were divided over whether the president should be appointed by the government or popularly elected. His sometimes abrasive style was blamed by some as contributing to the referendum's failure.

Read: Tony Abbott ousted in party ballot, Australia to get new PM

 
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Get the latest headlines from US news and global updates from Pakistan, Nepal, UK, Bangladesh, Russia and US Iran war Live, get all the latest headlines in one place on Hindustan Times.
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