Why now more than ever, Julie Bishop needs to slow down.
By Michelle Grattan, University of Canberra
Many Liberal eyes are already on Julie Bishop. And given she’s indicated that if there were to be a leadership contest she’d likely be in it, the Foreign Minister will come under increasing scrutiny in coming months.
As a contender she would have the advantage of not being Malcolm Turnbull, but the handicap of questions over her economic gravitas.
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These days Bishop seems in the public eye all the time, put there often by events – most recently the Vanuatu cyclone and the air crash in the French alps – but also by her desire for a high profile.
Polling indicates the public has become increasingly aware of and impressed by Bishop.
But colleagues, when thinking about whether, if Tony Abbott can’t hold things together, they should turn to Turnbull or Bishop, both electorally popular, will apply tougher standards.
A scrappy few days have highlighted the hazards for Bishop if she doesn’t both pace herself and display the needed depth when talking outside her portfolio.
She returned from a Sunday flying visit to Vanuatu, a bit off colour and looking tired, to read on Monday that her foreign aid budget was expected to suffer a small cut in the budget. Given the report was in The Australian she’d have assumed this had likely been briefed out by the Prime Minister’s Office or Treasurer Joe Hockey.
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She reacted tartly in her public comments, saying she’d be talking to Hockey about it.