In regards to the party room meeting being moved forward, I can see both sides to it. Abbott's explanation seems legitimate, but at the same time I can understand why critics are saying he's desperate.
I think it's a cheap shot as the Liberal party room get less time to decide their vote. But wouldn't you think that they would have considered their options since the intention was made by the WA MP?
It's more about preventing them from talking to each other. Many MPs will only fly into Canberra tonight, Abbott may want to prevent face-to-face canvassing or meetings.
The issues are that it came out in the media before he sent out an email to backbenchers, and it was a decision only he made - another 'captain's pick,' at the worst time for Abbott.
If Malcolm Turnbull puts himself forward and wins (provided the spill motion goes ahead), there will also be issues. In my opinion it doesn't matter who leads, it's the policies that are the issues for the Coalition. In regards to Turnbull, if he gets elected again, one needs to question why he lost the leadership in the first place. I know it was only by one vote, but it makes the LNP look bad.
I can't remember the source, but it's been alleged that the levels of support for Abbott and Turnbull were much different in the party room. Many people voted for Turnbull to prevent a big defeat for the moderates in the party, even though they supported Abbott.
Turnbull was ditched the first time on the back of support for aETS (which was widely unpopular among the right of the party,) and on the back of the 'Utegate' scandal.
It's otherwise unimportant. Australians are happy for oppositions to change leader, they don't like it when governments change leader. People have been opposition leader multiple times - John Howard went to one election as opposition leader (in 1987,) was kicked out after the election for Andrew Peacock, then finally kicked out Alexander Downer and won the 1996 election, becoming PM for 12 years. Likewise for Kim Beazely, Laurence Springborg, etc (although neither of them have won an election ... yet.)
It's like a repeating cycle. Kevin Rudd gets ousted for Julia Gillard. They then realise Julia Gillard is dragging down the polls and popularity is low, so they resort back to the man who they booted. Similar situation here right now with the Libs.
The difference was that Abbott was never popular with the public. Rudd was always fairly popular with the public (even if the Labor party wasn't all that popular.) Abbott and the Coalition won in 2013 in spite of themselves - they just got lucky that Labor was so dysfunctional.
Additionally, when Rudd was kicked out the first time, it took many people by surprise (it literally happened at 9pm, iirc.) I think the reason that there's been this weird half-week leadership spill leadup is to prepare people for an eventual change. So people don't wake up on Monday afternoon, surprised that there's a new PM.
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It's quite evident Abbott won't change. In 2009 Tony Abbott said he'd be a consultative and open leader. It's 2015 now and look how far he's come... Literally no change whatsoever. I really wish I could remember specifically where I saw that speech but my mind's gone blank at the moment.
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Yeah, many of the articles are saying that Abbott is communicating poorly with the backbench, and he's poor at managing his frontbench. It's largely (but not solely) to do with his office - Credlin's micromanager tendencies are well-known, and she's well overstepped the bounds of a prime ministerial chief of staff, if the newspapers are to be believed.
As for the topic at hand - I think at the moment it can go either way. If Malcolm Turnbull declares he'll seek the leadership in the event of a successful spill tonight, all bets are off - again, if the newspapers are to be believed, Turnbull could well be PM this time tomorrow. If Turnbull doesn't declare publicly before the spill, the spill motion will be narrowly defeated. But not enough to put this issue to bed for now, it'll come back if Abbott makes any more major blunders, particularly around the Budget.