Peter Costello

Peter Costello has decided to leave his seat of Higgins in Melbourne before the next election meaning that the Liberals will face two by-elections in close succession or even on the same day.

I can't watch


The former Treasurer is yet to give a reason as to why he has left early but he has managed to turn Malcolm Turnbull’s current position from scary to downright horrific. This is like that scene from the latest Saw movie even the actors apparently had to walk out on.

One upside to the departure is that the distraction of Peter Costello will be over with once and for all for Malcolm Turnbull. The downside is this: two men who were the most senior remaining members of the Howard Government, Brendan Nelson and now Peter Costello, have decided to leave Parliament early causing by-elections in the middle of what is already a crisis for Malcolm Turnbull and his party over the ETS.

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  • Kezza says:

    03:50pm | 09/10/09

    EssJay, Give Australia another term of Kevin Rudd, and guess what Australia won’t want him as PM either. But Turnbull will still be leader of the opposition and he will be our next PM just as Howard did. Read more »

  • EssJay says:

    09:06am | 09/10/09

    To M Cooke 08:44pm | 07/10/09: If Turnbull was as smart as you say, he would not have shot his credibility to pieces in the OzCar fake email affair. Australia doesn’t want someone like him as PM as the polls very well show - only 18% think of him as… Read more »

 

As Federal Parliament starts to resemble an X-Files episode, the latest mad theory is that Peter Costello is being encouraged to rethink his eight-day-old decision to leave politics.

The greatest comeback since Essendon 27.9 (171) d. North Melbourne 25.9 (159) in July 2001

There are even byzantine claims that the sham email found by the AFP yesterday at treasury official Godwin Grech’s house - which has today been pelted with eggs - was the political equivalent of an exploding cigar aimed at destroying Malcolm Turnbull’s leadership.

The theory has been given extra legs with revelations on The Punch yesterday that the AFP want to have a quiet word to former Costello staffer Paul Lindwall, who until recently was working as Mr Turnbull’s economics advisor, to see what role if any he had in the email affair. There are no suggestions of any wrongdoing on his part but he is a confidante of Mr Grech and the coppers are keen to rule him in or out of the equation.

It’s anything goes stuff in Canberra right now. The wildly speculative Costello talk does indicate one thing - serious Liberal disquiet over Malcolm Turnbull’s judgment on Utegate, and his ability to bounce back from a shocking 24 hours.

Should Peter Costello make a comeback?

The Punch will again provide live coverage of the Question Time mayhem from 2pm.

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  • fehowarth says:

    02:59pm | 24/06/09

    Should Wayne get off?  Remember most of the so call emails and action that condemn him were created by Grech.  There does not appear to be any information to whom instructed Grech to act the way he did.  We cannot trust the email as it is a fake.  Can we… Read more »

  • D says:

    12:46pm | 24/06/09

    I am sick and tired of lies , innuendo and theatricals displayed by the pollies . Someone knows the truth although they wouldn’t know truth if it jumped up and bit them ! Bring in the ‘’ truth ‘’ drugs and masters of torture . I reckon that the art… Read more »

 

Editor’s note: David Gazard was Peter Costello’s political advisor from 2003 to 2007 and is one of his closest confidantes.

As Australian politics has become more professional, it has become more brutal.

I'll be off then: Costello bows out

Gone are the days, by and large, of a certain cross-party respect for each other and certain boundaries that are never crossed. They have been replaced by machine men, spin doctors and campaign managers more focussed on one thing: winning at all costs.

It’s a harder, unforgiving and relentless environment, where people who openly describe themselves as haters abound, and are lionised for describing themselves as thus.

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  • Steve of Cornubia says:

    12:13pm | 17/07/09

    The disclaimer above this story, outlining the author’s political persuasion (i.e. prejudice) is a damn fine idea. Could we have one for every contributor please? Read more »

  • Jane says:

    05:55pm | 23/06/09

    Being a anti Howard person always felt that Costello would have been a more balanced leader. However, him having to bow down to Howard’s Way we will never really be able to judge him in true light. I sense though he would have been one our history’s better Prime Ministers. Read more »

 

Party's over, time to go

As of this morning there was one other person in Australia who knew that Peter Costello was quitting politics today - his wife Tanya.

A few hours later he was on his feet in the nation’s Parliament, the subject of surprised, hastily-composed tributes from Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and Opposition Leader Malcolm Turnbull, on an amazing career spanning almost 20 years, 11 years of them as treasurer.

Those closest to him are today happy and relieved that this genuine family man can now spend some proper time out of the spotlight with those he loves most.

But there is also a sense of melancholy at what might have been.

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  • Charles says:

    12:27pm | 16/06/09

    Interesting wording ‘quitting politics today’ & also the views penned by Penberthy and commentators in reply.  It would appear that most fail to acknowledge or appreciate the word loyalty. Above everything else I applaud Costello for his immense loyalty to his leader, & the party.  True Leadership - in politics… Read more »

  • Chris says:

    10:18am | 16/06/09

    Peter - Great Job. Australia should be looking towards experienced leaders in unceratin times. I agree with Sandra and other comments here - State Governments -NSW and to an extent Vic for the disgraceful and cavalier way you “govern” - do you really think the people are that stupid? Take… Read more »

 

How about this? It’s from 1995:

The type of headline that would become all too familiar during the Howard years. From The Australian in 1995.

A lesser-known Guns ‘N’ Roses song called 14 Years is a particularly apt theme for Costello’s day. Below is some video to listen to while browsing the post:

Lyrics excerpt:


I try and feel the sunshine
You bring the rain
You try and hold me down
With your complaints…

... You know, I’ve been the beggar…
I’ve played the thief
I was the dog…they all tried to beat

But it’s been 14 years of silence
It’s been 14 years of pain
It’s been 14 years that are gone forever
And I’ll never have again
.

After Peter Costello resigned it’s worth re-living some of his highs and lows as featured on the front pages of newspapers. You can share your favourite memories of him here - and we’ll take requests on this post for any particular front pages you want reprinted.

This, from July 2006, also deserves a special place in the sun. The rest are below the fold.

The 'undertaking'.

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  • Islander 555 says:

    09:50pm | 15/06/09

    I agree whole heartedly Remote but would add at the end of your comment “and had had the ticker to take on Howard” Read more »

  • delperro says:

    09:34pm | 15/06/09

    John Hewson just put out a press release, not from his house, but from his personal email address, stating that “[sic] would like to announce that Peter Costello has proven once again, and beyond all reasonable doubt, that he has no balls”. Read more »

 

UPDATE: this is a refiled version of The Punch’s lead from this morning’s edition, which came on the same day Peter Costello confirmed in the nation’s Parliament at 2pm that he would not renominate for Higgins. We will be posting more analysis this afternoon.

PETER Costello has become a permanently destabilising influence within the Liberal Party and should get out of politics unless he’s prepared to run for the leadership or rule out mounting a challenge, a growing number of Liberal MPs believe.

With June 30 looming as the date by which Mr Costello must decide whether to re-nominate for his seat of Higgins, fed-up Liberals believe he should only do so again if he can give a clear indication either way as to his leadership intentions.

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What’s your verdict on Peter Costello? How should he be remembered?

Share your unabashed judgments, favourite quotes, tributes and gloating farewells here.

And we should remember this:

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  • JK says:

    07:51pm | 16/06/09

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rnwn4q_ZE9c Keating nailed him years ago. Read more »

  • tb says:

    04:44pm | 16/06/09

    The LUCKIEST treasurer in Australia’s History - go out and buy a lottery ticket Peter. Read more »

 

Peter Costello has become a permanently destabilising influence within the Liberal Party and should get out of politics unless he’s prepared to run for the leadership or rule out mounting a challenge, a growing number of Liberal MPs believe.

With June 30 looming as the date by which Mr Costello must decide whether to re-nominate for his seat of Higgins, fed-up Liberals believe he should only do so again if he can give a clear indication either way as to his leadership intentions.

In a special report on Mr Costello’s future, The Punch can reveal that the jockeying has begun in Melbourne for his blue-ribbon seat.

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  • Henry says:

    06:07pm | 15/06/09

    Oops….. Guess I was wrong about Costello taking the leadership. He’s resigning. But us Liberals will be in oposition untill atleast 2013, nonetheless, unfortunately. Read more »

  • Grover says:

    04:06pm | 15/06/09

    I understand Dollar Sweets will be putting out a new line - Costello Melts. Read more »

 

I have a friend in the Liberal Party. Not someone I agree with but a friend nonetheless. His name is Brian Loughnane and he is their Federal Director. Every so often I used to join him for coffee. In the beginning it was like a meeting in Panmunjeom (that hut in the Korean Demilitarised Zone) although the back verandah at the Kurrajong Hotel in Canberra was a bit less formal.

World's greatest backbencher: Costello's exile has done Libs no favours

The discussion was not as intense. Most of the discussions were pre-negotiations about the leaders’ debate in the federal election. Nothing was ever given away, no information traded and loyalty to your leader was always a given (whatever the circumstances). After a few of these meetings we’d chat about politics (usually in the US and the UK) and I grew to like the bloke.

One of the reasons we got on was a mutual sense of how difficult our respective jobs could be. He had done tough stints as Downer’s Chief of Staff in Opposition and I was more than half way through a decade long stint at the ALP National Secretariat. Both of us had seen politics and politicians at their best and their worst.

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  • orange says:

    09:47am | 24/10/09

    Well if Costello was opposition leader now, the polls would be miniscule for the opposition at least turnbull has PR. Costello and Keating, Howard and Hawke. Keating would never had won an election as opposition leader Costello the same. Read more »

  • Mr Samuel Digiovanni says:

    06:12pm | 15/06/09

    Well Mr Costello finally tells us all he lacked the ticker to lead the liberal party in opposition and guess what peter the voting public wont mind it is another extreme right ideliogy driven man that the modern political should not have and i hope that Mr Turnbull shows the… Read more »

 

If Peter Costello does decide not to contest the next election, the party will not have to look too hard for candidates to fill the blue-ribbon seat.

The executive director of the Institute of Public Affairs, John Roskam, is the first to confirm publicly that he will nominate should Mr Costello not meet the June 30 deadline.

Change and renewal: John Roskam outside the IPA offices in Collins St

At a meeting with The Punch at the IPA offices in Melbourne’s Collins Street - which Roskam describes only half-jokingly as “Australia’s neo-con headquarters” - Roskam makes it clear that he isn’t calling on Costello to chuck it in.

But the 41-year-old married father of twins says that, with the constant speculation surrounding Mr Costello’s leadership plans, there is a chance for the Liberals to opt instead for change and renewal. 

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  • Henrietta says:

    12:22pm | 22/07/09

    Theres plenty of room for everyone Since when did only latte sipping lefties become the only ones that deserved representation in parliament? Read more »

  • Matt says:

    04:03pm | 18/07/09

    Oh goody - another living example of the truth that conservatives have no new ideas. Roskam’s social attitudes are suprisingly backward and insular. Bring on Howard’s ‘Mini-me’ - Abbot’s been at it for long enough. It’s nice to see that Roskam still doesn’t let fact get in the way of… Read more »

 

While Peter Costello often cites his love of serving the people of Higgins as the reason for staying on in Parliament it’s unclear whether the feeling is wholly mutual.

The Punch spent last Thursday in the electorate of Higgins talking to the people caught in the middle of the Liberal Party’s domestic dispute and - frankly - there’s not a lot of concern about what Peter Costello does with his life.

Exclusive grainy hand-held footage of Mr Costello's electoral office.

Standing outside his sunglasses shop on Toorak Road I asked 42-year old Emidio what he thought of Costello’s indecision:

“I think he’s been a positive contribution to the country but that doesn’t mean he can’t be destructive to the party. But I think long term it can only be helpful to have someone like him; I don’t know whether that’s helpful to the Liberal Party though. But I don’t think he’s a bad bloke.”

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  • alan says:

    12:46pm | 29/06/09

    I’d be interested to know what Peter Costello actually believes in, and stands for? I know he’s a commited ideologue/union basher, however I’ve never seen him commit to anything else.  People who say they’d prefer him as leader of the Liberal Party and even PM, must know something that I… Read more »

  • stephen says:

    05:27pm | 15/06/09

    Now known as vops pox. Read more »

 

The Punch has always been impressed by Bronwyn Bishop’s deep knowledge of the standing orders of the House of Representatives, and sympathises with her point of view. But no one should have to endure another Question Time like yesterday’s.

After last week’s fantastic debate about the role of sticky tape and whether it should be allowed as an adhesive in Joe Hockey’s dispatch box props, we had high hopes for some major Kevin Rudd lever-arch file action this week. Even the valiant efforts of Annabel Crabb, however, couldn’t rescue yesterday’s questions from dire tedium.

Wilson Tuckey reckons voters are upset with Rudd’s obsession with laminated photographs of primary school demountables and road works. But it’s sometimes the props that make QT bearable. Remember the cardboard cut-out Kevin Rudd? It was almost better than the real one.

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  • Nodanedouart says:

    06:10pm | 22/02/10

    Hi, I finally got a quick internet access, it’s nice to come with you regards, Nodan , <a >ingenieur</a> Read more »

  • ignotly says:

    12:54am | 25/09/09

    I have tried going into tools, internet options and adjusting every thing there that it tells you to..eg third party cookies etc. I have also read a dozen forums on how to enable cookies and i have done every thing that i can think of but it still wont let… Read more »

 

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