Brendan Nelson elected Liberals leader
By staff writers and wires | November 29, 2007
BRENDAN Nelson has been elected as the new leader of the Liberal Party, beating favourite Malcolm Turnbull by 45 votes to 42 in a party room ballot.
Malcolm Turnbull and Brendan Nelson / Jeremy Piper
Loser, winner ... Malcolm Turnbull and Brendan Nelson / Jeremy Piper
Mr Turnbull was the firm frontrunner with punters - betting agency Lasseters had him at short odds of $1.10 yesterday against $5.00 for Dr Nelson.
Western Australian MP Julie Bishop was elected as his deputy, beating South Australian Christopher Pyne and Victorian Andrew Robb.
The results were announced publicly by outgoing deputy leader Peter Costello. He said Dr Nelson and Ms Bishop had made "warm statements" thanking he and Mr Howard for their contributions to the party.
Few Liberal MPs were prepared to publicly back their preferred candidate when they arrived for the party room meeting this morning. Mr Howard was not at the meeting.
Dr Nelson arrived first, walking through a group of reporters without answering questions.
"Good morning. (We have a) very important meeting and I'm certainly looking forward to it," Dr Nelson said.
Mr Turnbull, who has been conducting much of his campaign on the airwaves, also declined to comment.
"Good to see you," he said as reporters tried to persuade him to speak, when he arrived at 8.35am (AEDT).
Senior cabinet member Tony Abbott withdrew from the leadership race yesterday, but reserved the right to challenge for the leadership again in the future.
Outgoing arts and sports minister senator George Brandis was one of the few MPs to publicly declare his intentions.
"I'm going to vote for Mr Malcolm Turnbull," he said.
Beaten deputy leadership aspirant Mr Pyne said all members of the party would unite behind the winners.
"The party room will decide the leadership then we'll all get behind them 100 per cent," Mr Pyne told reporters as he entered Parliament House today.
Asked if his comment applied to Mr Abbott, Mr Pyne replied: "Even Tony Abbott."