September 2015 leadership election by
Governor-General Sir
Peter Cosgrove Despite the defeat of the February 2015 spill motion, questions over Abbott's leadership did not abate, with the government consistently performing poorly in opinion polls. On 14 September 2015, after 30 consecutive Newspolls had put the Liberals far behind Labor, Turnbull resigned from the Cabinet and announced he would challenge Abbott for the leadership of the Liberal Party. Turnbull stated that Abbott "was not capable of providing the economic leadership we need" and that the Liberal Party needs a "style of leadership that respects the people's intelligence." Turnbull defeated Abbott by 54 votes to 44 at the
subsequent leadership ballot. He was sworn in as the 29th
prime minister of Australia the following day. Turnbull announced an extensive reshuffle of the Cabinet on 20 September 2015 to form the
first Turnbull ministry. Notably, he increased the number of female Cabinet ministers from two to five and appointed
Marise Payne as Australia's first female
Minister for Defence. The number of Cabinet ministers rose from 19 to 21. On Turnbull's key policy differences with Abbott, particularly
climate change, republicanism and
same-sex marriage, he stated that there would be no immediate change before any election. The
Nationals successfully negotiated a total of $4 billion worth of deals from Turnbull, as well as control of the water portfolio, in exchange for a continued
Coalition agreement. Turnbull stated that he would not lead a government that did not take climate change seriously.
2016 federal election On 21 March 2016, Turnbull announced that Parliament would consider bills to reinstate the
Australian Building and Construction Commission (ABCC), with the bills having previously been rejected twice before. Turnbull stated if the Senate rejected the bills a third time, he would advise the governor-general,
Sir Peter Cosgrove, to call a
double dissolution of Parliament and a federal election for 2 July. Turnbull also brought forward the delivery of the
federal budget from 10 to 3 May to facilitate this. On 18 April, the Senate once again rejected the bills to reinstate the ABCC. On 8 May, Turnbull visited
Government House to advise Cosgrove to issue the writs for a double dissolution on 9 May; this confirmed the date of the election as 2 July 2016. During the
2016 federal election campaign, a ReachTEL opinion poll of 626
Wentworth voters conducted on 31 May predicted a
two-party swing against Turnbull for the first time since his election to Wentworth, revealing a reduced 58% two-party vote from a large 10.9% two-party swing. A controversy occurred during the election campaign, when the president of the
Australian National Imams Council, Sheikh
Shady Alsuleiman participated in an
Iftar dinner hosted by Turnbull at
Kirribilli House. Turnbull said he would not have invited Alsuleiman if he had known of his position regarding homosexuals. At the election, the Coalition lost 14 seats and retained majority government by a single seat. The result was the closest since the
1961 federal election. In the days following the election, when the result was still not certain, Turnbull had to negotiate with the
crossbench to secure
confidence and supply support from
Bob Katter,
Andrew Wilkie and
Cathy McGowan in the event of a
hung parliament and resulting
minority government. In February 2017, Turnbull confirmed he had donated $1.75 million to the Liberal Party's election campaign.
Asylum seeker policy in New York City, May 2017
Asylum seeker policy is a contentious
wedge issue in Australian politics, especially since the
Tampa affair. Continuing the bipartisan stance of
Operation Sovereign Borders has been at the forefront the Coalition's
asylum seeker policy. Around 1,250 asylum seekers remain in the offshore processing centres on
Manus Island and
Nauru. In August 2016, protestors called for the closure of camps on Manus and Nauru after
The Guardian released leaked incident reports alleging "routine dysfunction and cruelty" on Nauru. In July 2016, the
Obama administration set up a refugee centre in
Costa Rica in response to a Central American
migration crisis. In November, Turnbull and
Peter Dutton announced that Australia would accept 1,250 refugees from Central America, in exchange for the U.S. accepting refugees on Nauru and Manus. Turnbull and President
Donald Trump held a phone conversation on 28 January 2017, the transcript of which was later leaked to
The Washington Post. On 2 February 2017, Trump tweeted that Obama's deal was "dumb". US Vice President
Mike Pence later confirmed that the United States would honour the deal, subject to "extreme vetting" of asylum seekers. Australia began receiving Central American asylum seekers in July 2017.
Energy policy Since the 2016 election, the Turnbull government had followed prior Coalition government energy policies. This involved the wholesale dismissal of
renewable energy targets and
emissions intensity schemes. This had only hardened when
South Australia faced large blackouts, which Turnbull had blamed on the state's "ambitious" renewable energy target. In response to the gas and energy crisis that occurred in March 2017, Malcolm Turnbull announced a 50% increase in the capacity of
Snowy Hydro through "pumped hydro" technology. In April 2017, Turnbull announced that he would use the Commonwealth government's powers to place export restrictions on the nation's
liquified natural gas ("LNG") industry. He announced that these changes were in response to the high wholesale gas prices that were a result of a shortage of gas in the domestic gas market, and that it was "unacceptable" that domestic prices were so high, indicating that a consequence of these restrictions would be a decrease in the wholesale gas price. The
multinational gas companies and the gas industry association heavily criticised the policy, saying that it would neither increase supply nor reduce the wholesale price of gas. ,
Donald Trump, and
Xi Jinping, November 2017
Same-sex marriage plebiscite Prior to Turnbull becoming prime minister, the parliamentary Liberal Party voted to resolve the issue of same-sex marriage by putting the question to Australian voters via a
plebiscite. Enabling legislation was rejected twice by the Senate, and so the government decided to adopt a
postal plebiscite option, which involved the
Australian Bureau of Statistics conducting a nationwide survey asking voters whether they would like to see a change in the definition of marriage. Sending out of ballots began on 12 September 2017, as attempts to prevent the survey through a High Court challenge failed. The survey ended 7 November 2017 and results released 15 November the same year. It returned with a total of 7,817,247 (61.6%) "Yes" responses and 4,873,987 (38.4%) "No" responses. Following the vote, after four days of debates regarding amendments which included proposals to increase religious protections to refuse services to same-sex couples, on 7 December 2017 same-sex marriage was legalised through a parliamentary vote by the House of Representatives; Turnbull himself voted "Yes". The first same-sex marriages in Australia occurred as a result of the law change from 9 January 2018.
Parliamentary eligibility crisis Members of Turnbull's government were among those embroiled in the parliamentary eligibility crisis that arose in 2017, which disqualified several parliamentarians who held dual citizenship in accordance with
subsection 44(i) of the Australian Constitution. Three Cabinet members were among the "Citizenship Seven" whose cases were heard in the
High Court of Australia: the leader and deputy leader of the
co-governing National Party, Deputy Prime Minister
Barnaby Joyce, Senator
Fiona Nash, and Resources Minister
Matt Canavan, who resigned from Cabinet after discovering his potential dual citizenship. The High Court
ruled that Canavan was eligible, but disqualified dual citizens Joyce and Nash from Parliament. The Turnbull government temporarily lost its one-seat majority in the House of Representatives after Joyce's disqualification and the resignation of Liberal Party MP
John Alexander, who also held dual citizenship. However, in December 2017 both Joyce and Alexander, having renounced their foreign citizenships, contested and won
by-elections in their former seats of
New England and
Bennelong respectively, thereby retaining Turnbull's governing majority in the House of Representatives. During this time Turnbull served as
Minister for Agriculture and
Water Resources, the portfolio which Joyce held prior to his disqualification. Joyce returned to this role following his by-election victory.
August 2018 leadership spills , Ballarat On 21 August 2018, Turnbull survived a challenge to his leadership of the Liberal Party by Home Affairs Minister
Peter Dutton, winning by 48 votes to 35. The
spill highlighted ideological tensions within the Liberal Party, between the
moderate wing led by Turnbull and the conservative wing represented by Dutton and Tony Abbott. From 21 to 23 August, tensions mounted and Dutton announced that he would seek a second spill. Turnbull responded that, pending a report from the
Solicitor-General of Australia on the eligibility of Dutton to serve in Parliament and the receipt of a petition calling for a party room meeting that bore the signatures of at least half (43) of the parliamentary party, he would call such a meeting, vacate the leadership (regarding the petition as a vote of no confidence) and not stand in the subsequent leadership election. On the morning of 24 August, the Solicitor-General advised that Peter Dutton was "not ineligible" to serve. Later that morning, Dutton presented to Turnbull a document calling for a party room meeting that contained the minimum 43 signatures. A party meeting was then called and the leadership was spilled, with
Scott Morrison elected as Turnbull's successor by 45 votes over Dutton with 40. In his final press conference as prime minister, Turnbull denounced Dutton and Abbott as "wreckers". On 27 August Turnbull announced that he would resign from Parliament over the coming days. On 31 August 2018 he tendered a formal notice of resignation to the
Speaker of the House of Representatives. ==Political ideology==