11.27 am, Friday September 03 2010

SA Lib leader wants new vote despite win

16:21 AEST Sat Jul 4 2009
VIEWS: 0
| FLOCKS: 0
| comments0 comments so far
Martin Hamilton-Smith
The embattled Martin Hamilton-Smith is putting his leadership of the SA Liberals to the vote.

Martin Hamilton-Smith's future as leader of the South Australian opposition remains clouded.

After winning Saturday's Liberal Party leadership poll by just one vote, he says the signal such a narrow win sends to the public is not decisive enough.

So he has called for a second vote he hopes will provide a clearer outcome.

Any chance of an early end to internal party tensions and public speculation was lost when Mr Hamilton-Smith beat former deputy leader Vickie Chapman by 11 votes to 10.

One party member abstained from voting altogether.

"I am delighted to have won the vote today, but it is not good enough for me," Mr Hamilton-Smith told reporters on Saturday.

"I feel that the outcome is not clear enough."

While earlier reports suggested Mr Hamilton-Smith held 13 out of 22 votes in the days leading up to the ballot, Saturday's close call has turned whispers into cries of disunity.

"There are some people who need to make their minds up so we can move on, in the best interests of South Australia, with a clear direction for the future," Mr Hamilton-Smith said.

"What I want is a Liberal opposition which is strong, united and going forward."

Shadow attorney-general Isobel Redmond, who defeated opposition finance spokesman Steven Griffiths nine votes to five on Saturday in the race for deputy, said the party needed to come to a clear-cut decision to enable it to get back to the job it was hired to do.

"We have, indeed, a very real chance of coming through and stealing away the next election because this government has a lot to answer for ... we should be able to get ourselves focused enough for the next election," Ms Redmond told reporters.

Ongoing leadership debates and dissent are looking more likely of overshadowing the Liberals' March 2010 state election campaign, with senior party figures federal MP Christopher Pyne and former Howard government minister Alexander Downer having warned the state members to accept the outcome of Saturday's vote and move on.

Ms Chapman said she would again nominate as a candidate for the leadership.

"I take today's result as the party having spoken, but now that the leader has indicated that he is preparing to give notice of another meeting ... we do need to resolve this as quickly as possible," she said.

She said under party rules a second meeting must be held when the elected leader "feels unable to go on", but would not elaborate on her comment any further.

Mr Hamilton-Smith said he was yet to decide whether he would stand for the leader's position again.

"I would urge all Liberals over the coming week to speak to their MPs and make their view clear," he said.

The growing dissent over Mr Hamilton-Smith's performance as leader began several weeks ago when he presented to parliament documents accusing Mike Rann's Labor government of accepting illegal donations from a group with ties to the Church of Scientology.

The documents turned out to be forgeries and Mr Hamilton-Smith was forced to make a public apology.

Defamation action has since been lodged against him.

Falling popularity in the polls also prompted the resignation of the party's environment spokesman, Mitch Williams, from the frontbench last week.

The bickering has been a blessing for Mr Rann - just days before Mr Hamilton Smith went to parliament with his allegations, the premier was under considerable heat for appointing a road safety minister found to have a record of 60 driving offences.

The second leadership vote meeting is expected to be held on Wednesday.

 
SHARE:
MESSENGER
FACEBOOK
MORE
Blog on Spaces
Add to delicious
Add to Digg
Share on MySpace
?
Share, bookmark, and save your favourite ninemsn articles and features.  Learn more.

Most popular

 Smoking toddler kicks habitA two-year-old Indonesian boy who smoked about 40 cigarettes a day has kicked the habit after receiving intensive specialist care, a welfare official says.
 Mother 'had relationship with long-lost son'A US woman has been accused of having a secret two-year sexual relationship with her long-lost adult son.
 Trapped miner's wife, secret lover meet at vigilOne of the trapped Chilean miners is going to have some explaining to do after his wife ran into his mistress at the mine's entrance.
 Transformers extra critical after cable snapsAn extra from Transformers 3 is in a critical condition after a car accident during a stunt on the set of the upcoming action movie.
 Man bashed by six youths at stationA 38-year-old man was bashed by six youths on a train in Melbourne's east.
 Sydney man attacked by sharkA Sydney man has suffered severe cuts to his face and neck after being bitten by a shark while holidaying in the Solomon Islands.
 And then there were three: againThe nation will have to wait until Monday at the earliest before knowing whether it will have a Labor or coalition government.
 Coalition 'will honour $1b promise'Opposition finance spokesman Andrew Robb says the coalition stands by its $1 billion offer to build a new hospital in Hobart, despite independent Andrew Wilkie having sided with Labor.
 Stallone fan 'knocked out guard dog'A wanna-be action star claims he knocked out a guard dog while breaking into the property of the Sylvester Stallone.
 Woman breastfeeds orphaned calfAn Indian woman believes she is pleasing the gods by breastfeeding an orphaned calf.
Gabriela Cedillo is in a critical condition.Stunt accidentExtra critically injured on Transformers 3 movie shoot. Paris Hilton. (AAP)'Underpromoted'Paris Hilton accused of breaking contract over movie flop. Ardi Rizal has a cigarette. (Barcroft Pacific)Cold turkeySmoking Indonesian two-year-old Ardi Rizal kicks the habit. Yonni Barios.Miner's affairThe wife and girlfriend of a Chilean miner have met during a vigil. Animal rights groups are hunting this girl.Puppy hateBounty offered for Bosnian dog-throwing video girl. Kookaburra. (AAP)'Gay' awaySchool changes words to classic 'Kookaburra' song.
advertisement
Brown, Wilkie will see PM more than SwanBob Brown and Andrew Wilkie now have better access to the prime minister than Treasurer Wayne Swan, Liberal frontbencher Peter Dutton says.
You need the latest version of Flash Player.
Enjoy the most vivid content on the web
Watch video without extra features
Interact with applications on your favourite sites
Upgrade now

page complete
Other ninemsn businesses: iSelect RateCity
© 1997-2010 ninemsn Pty Ltd - All rights reserved