Australian state Labor MPs Chris Minns and Michael Daley are the top contenders jostling for the leadership of the New South Wales (NSW) opposition after Jodi McKay quit last week.
This will be the second time Minns and Daley have faced off for the role and the third attempt for Minns overall. But Minns promised no recriminations against his opponent’s faction should he win the top job.
“Of course, I promise no recriminations,” Minns told Sky News on Tuesday.
With two contenders, Labor party rules require the caucus and rank-and-file members to vote, which could be a bruising and lengthy process unless one person drops out.
Minns said Daley has “every right to put up his hand, as do I.” But he said he could not tell his challenger to withdraw his nomination to avoid a potentially damaging contest.
The opposition leadership contest comes after the NSW Labor party’s policies—and McKay’s leadership—came under scrutiny following the Upper Hunter by-election, which saw Labor’s primary vote slip to 21 percent from 29 percent in the 2019 state election.
Following that result, and despite initially pledging to remain in the role, McKay, who had won majority support for the top job in 2019 after the party’s election defeat, said that although she was the elected leader, there were some within the party who never “accepted the outcome.” She resigned on May 27.
The loss of the Upper Hunter by-election, held in a predominantly blue-collar region, prompted some within Labor to call for some soul searching, saying the party which brands itself as being for “working families,” had instead focussed on policies that target inner-city progressives, to their detriment.
Labor “doesn’t have to oppose everything the government does,” he said.