Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard today retained the Labour Party’s top job after political wrangling that ended with a leadership contest where no one stood against her.
Gillard was elected unopposed at a meeting of the Labour Caucus following her dramatic announcement to call a leadership ballot as internal unrest mounted in the party ahead of a general election in September.
Gillard threw her job open for contest after senior Cabinet Minister Simon Crean was asked to step aside and clear the way for former leader Kevin Rudd to head the minority Government.
She said her position as Labour leader has been emphatically confirmed after Rudd failed to nominate against her in a leadership spill.
Gillard said she was grateful to her colleagues for their continuing support of her as Labour leader, and accepted it with humility and resolve.
Her deputy Wayne Swan has also retained his position.
Rudd refused to run for the leadership of the party at the meeting.
Labour spokesman Chris Hayes said Gillard was the only candidate for the leadership and Swan was the only candidate for the deputy leadership when the positions were declared vacant.
Rudd said he would honour his previous commitment not to challenge for the Labour leadership unless he was drafted to the role.