Gillard keeps Conroy in comms role, snubbs Lundy

Renai LeMay
28 June 2010, 7:16 PM


Julia Gillard has rewarded pro-censorship minister Stephen Conroy with a continued post as Minister for Communications.


New Prime Minister Julia Gillard has confirmed that only minimal changes will be made to her cabinet team, with Communications Minister Stephen Conroy to retain his position.

Gillard this afternoon held a press conference in Canberra to detail the new cabinet. However, she did not make any new significant appointments to its ranks, simply handing her own portfolios of education, employment and workplace relations to Simon Crean, with Foreign Minister Stephen Smith to add trade to his responsibilities.

Retiring Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner will retain his position until the election — which he is not planning to contest. The new Prime Minister emphasised the need for her Government to remain stable and focus on governing before the election.

Gillard did not mention Conroy directly, but she made it clear that no other appointments would be made for the time being — no new cabinet ministers or parliamentary secretaries. A wider reshuffle may follow if Labor wins the election — “we will shape the team at that point”, said Gillard.

Gillard’s minor cabinet reshuffle will put paid to the speculation in Australia’s technology sector over the past few days that Gillard may replace Conroy with fellow Labor Senator Kate Lundy due to her long-standing commitment to the portfolio — or hand off some of his responsibilities.

Delimiter


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Tin (Regular user):

Oh well... Julia gets no kind words from me for the time being then.

28 June 2010, 9:27 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Aubrey (User):

I've said it elsewhere, but the "speculation in Australia's technology sector" about Conroy being replaced was never anything more than wishful thinking by nongs with an internet connection. Not one real political commentator raised it as a real possibility.

I do, however, have moderate hopes that the filter may not make it to the election in its current form.

28 June 2010, 11:11 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Raindog (User):

Quoting Aubrey:
I've said it elsewhere, but the "speculation in Australia's technology sector" about Conroy being replaced was never anything more than wishful thinking

It was never going to happen, Conroy is glued in tighter than herpes to the ALP machine.


Quoting Aubrey:
I do, however, have moderate hopes that the filter may not make it to the election in its current form.

The way to do that is to not vote Labor, and to make sure both Labor and the opposition know what issues are deciding your vote.


30 June 2010, 12:30 AM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

anonymous user Anonymous user