Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07CANBERRA1712
2007-12-03 07:23:00
CONFIDENTIAL//NOFORN
Embassy Canberra
Cable title:  

RUDD'S CABINET: WINNERS, LOSERS, AND SURPRISES

Tags:  PGOV AS 
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P 030723Z DEC 07
FM AMEMBASSY CANBERRA
TO SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 8658
INFO AMCONSUL MELBOURNE PRIORITY 
AMCONSUL PERTH PRIORITY 
AMCONSUL SYDNEY PRIORITY 
CDR USPACOM HONOLULU HI PRIORITY
SECDEF WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
NSC WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY
C O N F I D E N T I A L CANBERRA 001712 

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NOFORN
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E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/02/2017
TAGS: PGOV AS
SUBJECT: RUDD'S CABINET: WINNERS, LOSERS, AND SURPRISES

Classified By: Political Counselor James F. Cole for reasons 1.4 (b) an
d (d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L CANBERRA 001712

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NOFORN
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E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/02/2017
TAGS: PGOV AS
SUBJECT: RUDD'S CABINET: WINNERS, LOSERS, AND SURPRISES

Classified By: Political Counselor James F. Cole for reasons 1.4 (b) an
d (d).


1. (C/NF) SUMMARY: Prime Minister-elect Kevin Rudd announced
a 42-member Australian Labor Party (ALP) Ministry November

29. Twenty of the positions are in the Cabinet. Ten are in
what is known as the "outer ministry," and 12 are
parliamentary secretaries, who assist the minister in the
portfolios to which they are assigned. Rudd and his
ministers were sworn in on Monday, December 3. While Rudd
had said he would choose the Ministry - rather than have it
chosen for him by the powerful blocs within the ALP - the
ministry broadly reflects the balance between the Left and
Right in the ALP. The members of the 20-member Cabinet were
not a surprise, but some of their portfolios were modified in
unexpected ways. Several incoming Ministers have been given
positions in which they have no background. In addition,
there are question marks over whether Deputy Leader Julia
Gillard will be able to meet the challenges of an expaned
portfolio that included Education, as well as Employment and
Workplace Relations. High-profile union newcomers Greg
Combet and Bill Shorten were appointed Parliamentary
Secretaries, although neither job was in an area related to

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their background as union officials. Maxine McKew, who
defeated John Howard for his parliamentary seat in Sydney,
was rewarded with a parliamentary secretary position in the
Prime Minister's office. END SUMMARY

CABINET


2. (U) In a departure from his predecessor, PM Rudd expanded
the Cabinet, the principal decision-making forum of the
Australian Government, from 18 to 20. In order to keep
within the Constitutionally-mandated 42-seat limit, Rudd
reduced his outer ministry to 22. By modern convention, only
the more senior ministers are members of Cabinet. Most
Cabinet ministers have one or two junior ministers or
parliamentary secretaries who assist them in their portfolio
and who are joint administrators of the government department
with the senior Cabinet minister. The Rudd Cabinet is:

-- Kevin Rudd, Prime Minister,
-- Julia Gillard, Deputy Prime Minister, Minister for
Education, Employment and Workplace Relations,

-- Wayne Swan, Treasurer,
-- Chris Evans, Government Leader in the Senate and Minister
for Immigration and Citizenship,
-- John Faulkner, Special Minister for State and Cabinet
Secretary,

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-- Simon Crean, Minister for Trade,
-- Stephen Smith, Minister for Foreign Affairs,
-- Joel Fitzgibbon, Minister for Defense,
-- Nicola Roxon, Minister for Health and Aging,
-- Jenny Macklin, Minister for Families, Housing, Community
Services and Indigenous Affairs,
-- Lindsay Tanner, Minister for Finance,
-- Anthony Albanese, Minister for Infrastructure, Transport,
Regional Development and Local Government,
-- Stephen Conroy, Minister for Broadband, Communications and
the Digital Economy,
-- Kim Carr, Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and
Research,
-- Penny Wong, Minister for Climate Change and Water,
-- Peter Garrett, Minister for the Environment, Heritage and
the Arts,
-- Robert McClelland, Attorney-General,
-- Joseph Ludwig, Minister for Human Services and Manager for
Government Business in the Senate,
-- Tony Burke, Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and
Forestry, and
-- Martin Ferguson, Minister for Resources, Energy and
Tourism.
QTourism.

OUTER MINISTRY


3. (U) The l0-member Outer Ministry, who are ministers that
are not part of the Cabinet:

-- Nick Sherry, Minster for Superannuation and Corporate Law,
-- Craig Emerson, Minister for Small Business, Independent
Contractors and the Service, and Minister Assisting the
Finance Minister on business deregulation,
-- Brendan O'Connor, Minister for Workforce Participation,
-- Tanya Plibersek, Minister for Housing and the Status of
Women,
-- Bob Debus, Minister for Home Affairs,

-- Alan Griffin, Minister for Veterans Affairs,
-- Warren Snowden, Minister for Defense and Science Personnel,
-- Justine Elliott, Minister for Aging,
-- Kate Ellis, Minister for Youth and Sport, and
-- Chris Bowen, Assistant Treasurer and Minister for
Competition Policy and Consumer Affairs.

PARLIAMENTARY SECRETARIES


4. (U) There are 12 Parliamentary Secretaries:

-- Maxine McKew, Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime
Minister,
--Greg Combet, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for
Defense,
-- Bill Shorten, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for
Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs,
-- Mike Kelly, Parliamentary Secretary for Defense,
-- Gary Gray, Parliament Secretary to the Minister for
Infrastructure, with responsibility for northern and regional
Australia,
-- Bob McMullan, Parliamentary Secretary for International
Development Assistance,
-- Duncan Kerr, Parliamentary Secretary for the Pacific,
-- Laurie Ferguson, Parliamentary Secretary for Multicultural
Affairs and Settlement Programs,
-- Ursula Stephens, Parliamentary Secretary for Social
Inclusion,
-- Anthony Byrne, Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime
Minister, and
-- John Murphy, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for
Trade.

A BIG BUREAUCRATIC SHAKEUP


5. (SBU) Before the election, Rudd promised that there would
be minimal disruption for public service departments under a
change of government. However, his announcement of the
Ministry indicates otherwise: half the cabinet departments
will experience major changes in their portfolios. For
example, Education and Employment and Workplace Relations
will merge into a "super-department" and the Department of
Environment would be presumably split to accommodate the new
portfolio of Climate Change and Water. Rudd also said he had
not given up on creating a Department of Homeland Security,
which would take in several departments.

GILLARD GETS BOTH KEY PORTFOLIOS


6. (SBU) In September Rudd broke with ALP tradition by
declaring that he would choose the Ministry and that it would
be chosen on merit, rather than by ALP Caucus election after
consultation among the factions. As far as Cabinet is
concerned, he has stuck with the senior members of his front
bench that served him so well in opposition. Generally, they
have retained their portfolios although there are a few
stand-out exceptions such as Stephen Smith in Foreign
Affairs, Julia Gillard in Education and Tony Burke in
Agriculture. Gillard has responsibility for implementing the
two policies which the ALP has defined itself on since Rudd
became leader - the "Education Revolution" and the abolition
of WorkChoices. These are monumental tasks. The university
sector has expressed concern that Gillard will be too
stretched to adequately handle the education part of her
brief. In workplace relations, she will have to deal with
elements of the union movement that are already calling on
the ALP to go further than the policies on which it
campaigned, and in education she will have to work with the
left-wing teachers' unions which opposed the ALP's campaign
pledge to fund non-government schools.

UNION HEAVYWEIGHTS GET HALF A LOAF


7. (SBU) Greg Combet, the past national secretary of the
Australian Council of Trade Unions, and Bill Shorten,
ex-national secretary of the Australian Workers Union both
Qex-national secretary of the Australian Workers Union both
were elected to Parliament from safe Labor seats. Both are
nationally-known charismatic union leaders who have been
anointed by the media as future ALP leaders. Before the
election, there was speculation they would both be appointed
ministers. However, it appears that Rudd has done only what
he had to do, giving them parliamentary secretary positions
in recognition of their former positions but not appointing
them to the ministry. Interestingly, neither man seems to
have been given a high-profile job. Shorten, who is from
Victorian Right Faction, will be parliamentary secretary to
E

the Minister for Families, Housing, Community Services, and
Indigenous Affairs with particular responsibility for
disabilities and children's' services. Combet, from the
Left, is parliamentary secretary to the Defense Minister,
with special responsibility for defense procurement.

FACTIONS STILL MATTER


8. (C/NF) When he announced the Ministry, Rudd reiterated
that factional considerations were not a factor in his
decision and he had just consulted "a few wise old owls" in
the ALP. However, although he did not take orders from the
caucus, it appears Rudd did take the factions into account.
It may be no coincidence that the 20 member Cabinet contains
the same number proportion of factional representation as the
ALP National Executive: 11 Right and 9 Left. Rudd has looked
after power brokers such as the "Roosters" which supported
Beazley (Conroy, Smith and Swan),Kim Carr from Victorian
Left (who supported Rudd against Beazley),and Joe Ludwig
(son of the influential Queensland union official Bill
Ludwig). Perhaps reflecting South Australia's increased
representation in Caucus, Rudd has promoted 30 year-old Kate
Ellis, a protege of incoming Senator Don Farrell, the most
powerful player in the South Australian ALP. As with the
National Executive Committee, the "Independents" - those not
aligned with Left or Right - have no representation in
Cabinet, reflecting a tendency of the Right and Left to form
an alliance to gain a greater share of the spoils. This may
partly explain why Bob McMullan, an experienced former
Keating Government minister who is close to Rudd, was only
appointed a parliamentary secretary.

COMMENT: SOCIAL PORTFOLIOS TO THE LEFT, ECONOMIC AND DEFENSE
PORTFOLIOS TO THE RIGHT


9. (C/NF) As with previous ALP governments, the Right
dominated the economic and defense-related portfolios, while
the Left received a large number of the "social portfolios"
such as Immigration, Family Services, Indigenous Affairs,
Education, Housing and the Status of Women. In the last ALP
government, there was an implicit trade off between Right and
Left - the Left would grudgingly accept the Right's economic
reforms while the Right would let the Left pursue its agenda
on Aboriginal affairs, multiculturalism and immigration.
However, the perceived hijack of the Keating government by
the Left's agenda is generally regarded as a key reason for
the ALP's defeat in 1996. Rudd, a social conservative who
holds unprecedented power in the ALP caucus, should be able
to resist the Left's agenda, which includes a rollback of the
Coalition's intervention in remote Aboriginal communities. A
noted centralizer and micro-manger, Rudd will likely keep his
Ministers on a tight leash.

MCCALLUM