Advertisement
Home Latest News

Julie Bishop Confirms Intention To Run For Curtin

The Former Foreign Minister has announced

Julie Bishop has confirmed she intends to run at the upcoming federal election and will back Prime Minister Scott Morrison. 

Advertisement

โ€œI am the preselected Liberal candidate for the seat of Curtin. I intend to run,โ€ the former Foreign Minister told reporters. Bishop added she doesnโ€™t accept polls that say the Coalition is going to lose, adding that Morrison is the best person to lead the party. 

RELATED: Julie Bishop Slams The Liberal Partyโ€™s Treatment Of Women

Last month, the PM said Bishop had not updated him since she quit her Cabinet post following last yearโ€™s leadership spill which installed him as Prime Minister.

โ€œShe said she was going to contest the next election and hasnโ€™t told me anything different since then,โ€ Morrison told Sevenโ€™s Sunrise last month

Advertisement
julie bishop

Bishop resigned from the government frontbench after Malcolm Turnbull was toppled as prime minister and her bid to replace him as Liberal leader fell short. Following the leadership spill and her resignation from her role long-serving role as Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister, Bishop broke her silence by slamming the lack of female representation in Australian politics and condemning the actions that led to Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbullโ€™s oust. 

Bishop, who was the first Australian woman in the portfolio, opened up at the Australian Womenโ€™s Weekly Women of the Future awards last night, saying, โ€œIt is not acceptable for us to have in 2018 to have less than 25 per cent of our parliamentarians as female.โ€

RELATED: Upset After Julie Bishop Resigns Following Liberal Leadership Spill

Advertisement

โ€œIt is not acceptable for our party to contribute to a fall in Australiaโ€™s ratings from 15th in the world in terms of female parliamentary representatives in 1999, to 50th today,โ€ Bishop continues, per the Australian Financial Reviewโ€œI have seen and witnessed some appalling behaviour, that in a law firm I would never have accepted but in Parliament, itโ€™s the norm,โ€ Bishop says, calling for a โ€œmuch broader debate about workplace cultureโ€ including โ€œallegations of bullying, harassment and coercion and the unequal treatment of women.โ€

โ€œWe must defend and strengthen our institutions, and we must treat our Parliament with more respect. Unacceptable workplace practices are the responsibility of us all to identify, to stop it, to fix it.โ€

WATCH: Malcolm Turnbull Denies ABC Involvement. 

Advertisement

Related stories


Advertisement