Out with Tony Dumb Dumb. in with another
bankster
Turnbull
is rich, famous and ambitious
Malcolm
Turnbull has successfully challenged Tony Abbott for the Liberal
leadership, but who is Australia's 29th prime minister?
15
September, 2015
Rich
and famous, combative and ambitious, Malcolm Turnbull has lived a
life full of glittering success and his political career is now at
its peak after he deposed Tony Abbott as the Liberal party leader
last night.
A
successful former lawyer and businessman, Mr Turnbull is now one of
the richest politicians in Australia, having made the Business
Review Weekly Rich 200 List several times.
Malcolm
Bligh Turnbull was born in Sydney on 24 October, 1954. His mother was
Coral Lansbury, author and English literature academic who, after
separating from her husband Bruce, worked in the US.
He
attended a state school as a child and later received a scholarship
to attend a private high school. After studying law at the University
of Sydney, he won a Rhodes Scholarship to further his studies at
Oxford University.
Mr
Turnbull briefly worked as a journalist for several outlets,
including The Sunday Times in the UK, before
embarking on his law career.
Malcolm
Turnbull in 2007 Photo: AAP
One
of his biggest achievements was defending former British spy Peter
Wright in the "Spycatcher" case in the 1980s. Mr Wright
wrote a memoir about his time in MI5, and the British government
banned its publication in the UK. Mr Turnbull successfully overturned
the ban.
His
cross-examination of Margaret Thatcher's cabinet secretary Sir Robert
Armstrong forced a pivotal admission that the British government
would lie to protect national security.
The
following year, in partnership with Neville Wran and Nicholas
Whitlam, he set up a merchant bank which quickly attracted
establishment clients.
He
went into the technology business in the 1990s, and co-founded one of
the biggest Australian internet service providers at that time,
OzEmail.
Mr
Turnbull chaired the Australian Republican Movement from 1993 to 2000
and was its high-profile public face in the 1999 referendum.
When
it failed, he savaged John Howard as "the prime minister who
broke this nation's heart".
Malcolm
Turnbull makes his maiden speech in Australia's parliament in 2004. Photo: AAP
In
2003, as the Liberal Party's federal treasurer, Mr Turnbull ran for
preselection against sitting MP Peter King in the inner-Sydney seat
of Wentworth. After furious branch-stacking on both sides, Mr
Turnbull won the electoral seat where he grew up and where he
continues to live with his wife Lucy Hughes, who was the first female
Lord Mayor of Sydney.
He
quickly rose through the parliamentary and party ranks, serving on
various committees. He was briefly the environment and water
resources minister in Mr Howard's government before his party's
coalition lost to Labor in the 2007 federal election.
He
was elected as leader of the opposition in 2008, but a year later
faced two leadership challenges, losing the second one narrowly to Mr
Abbott by a single vote.
Mr
Turnbull's downfall was attributed to his views on climate change and
support for an emissions trading scheme.
However,
his credibility was also severely damaged when he attacked then-PM
Kevin Rudd over an email purportedly showing corruption, but which
was later found to have been faked by a top civil servant. The "OzCar
affair" damaged his standing with his colleagues and the public.
Malcolm
Turnbull in 2010 Photo: AAP
Throughout
his career in public life, Turnbull has championed a succession of
progressive causes. As well as pushing for Australia to become a
republic, he has supported gay marriage and the apology to the stolen
generation and climate change - none of which has endeared him to
Liberal conservatives.
With
the government trailing Labor in 30 successive polls and Abbott's
personal popularity as prime minister languishing recently, Turnbull
made his move.
The
2016 election is less than a year away and with the government's
prospects looking increasingly grim, enough of the party's
conservatives decided that winning was more likely with Turnbull in
charge
One of the best tributes to Tony Abbott was from former PM Paul Keeting
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