Shannon Fentiman announces her Labor leadership bid on Monday afternoon.Credit:Matt Dennien
The move shadowed similar reforms introduced at the federal level by Kevin Rudd earlier in 2013. His changes democratised the elections of parliamentary leaders. More importantly in the toxic coup-and-revenge-coup context of the era,they made it harder for future colleagues to roll their future bosses.
On the other side of the democratised coin,however,are the protracted,chaotic optics of a leadership contest potentially spanning weeks rather than the duration of a single caucus vote.
When Bill Shorten beat Anthony Albanese at the federal level in 2013,the process took about a month.
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No one in Queensland Labor wants this. Such wrangling might pass in opposition,but governments are held to higher standards. The Labor cabinet has a state to lead during a potentially difficult fire and cyclone season. The Christmas holidays could delay an outcome even longer.
Queensland’s three-ballot rules have never been tested in the wild. Annastacia Palaszczuk’s ascension to the opposition leadership in 2012 came before the changes. This time around,the party could be in for a bruising,weeks-long battle.
Getting in first,Steven Miles declared his intentions to lead the party almost immediately after Palaszczuk’s exit announcement on Sunday. Shannon Fentiman entered the contest on Monday,declaring she was confident she had her colleagues’ support. Cameron Dick,another frontrunner,was yet to raise his head at the time of writing.