Taking up the
gauntlet, former Australian Foreign Min Kevin Rudd on Friday said he
will contest against PM Julia Gillard in Monday's leadership vote, as
the two bitter rivals sparred publicly escalating the row within the
ruling Labor party.
"Rightly
or wrongly, Julia (Gillard) has lost the trust of the Australian
people. And starting on Monday I want to start restoring that trust,"
54-year-old Rudd told a press conference, ending days of speculation
about his intention to challenge the Prime Minister following his
dramatic resignation on Wednesday in the US during an official trip.
Soon after Rudd's surprise resignation Wednesday, Gillard called a
ballot on Monday to end the leadership speculation "once and for all."
"And that is why I've decided to contest the leadership of the Labor Party," Rudd said.
"It's no secret that our government has a lot of work to do if it is
to regain the confidence of the Australian people," he said.
"Starting on Monday, I'm going to start restoring that trust," he said.
Within hours, Gillard, Australia's first woman Prime Minister,
responded to declare that she was the best person to lead the party to
victory in the next election.
"Talk is easy. Getting things done is harder and I am the person who get things done," 50-year-old Gillard said.
Asked to comment on Rudd's resignation and his
suggestion that she had lost the trust of Australian voters, Gillard
said, "Australians can have confidence in me that no matter how hard it
gets, I've got the determination and personal fortitude to see things
through."
She she was confident that she had the support of the 103-strong Labor caucus to continue as Prime Minister.
"I am confident I can lead Labor to a victory at the next election," Gillard said.
"This is not an episode of Celebrity Big Brother, this
is about who should be Prime Minister," she said, adding that her
colleagues needed to decide "who's got the strength, the temperament,
the character, the courage to lead this nation."
Gillard came to power in June 2010 after launching her own leadership challenge against Rudd, who was then Prime Minister.
At the time, she was his deputy and justified the move by claiming "the government was losing its way."
Rudd had become Prime Minister after defeating the
then Liberal Prime Minister John Howard in a general election in 2007.
It was Labor's first win since 1996.
Earlier, Rudd, while announcing his resignation,
attacked Gillard-led government for its poor relations with business and
criticised a number of policy decisions made since he lost the Prime
Ministership. |
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