Vale Malcolm Turnbull. Hail Scott Morrison — Australia’s latest Prime Minister and their business sector’s clear choice to occupy The Lodge.

Morrison — known by the moniker “ScoMo” — is the Australian Treasurer.

He is a known figure on this side of the Tasman, where he led the New Zealand Office of Tourism and Sport in Wellington in the late 1990s.

He is at home with New Zealanders, as was obvious at the Australia New Zealand Leadership Forum in Sydney this year, where he mixed easily with politicians and businesspeople alike, knowing many of them by their first names.

He was also part of a circle of Australian Liberal Cabinet Ministers (which previously included the former Prime Minister Tony Abbott) who enjoyed a good working relationship with Sir John Key and Bill English, who discussed strategies for right of centre political parties to sell their policies and stay in power.

The new Prime Minister has a strong business background. Before entering politics he held positions at the Property Council of Australia, the Australian Tourism Task Force and Tourism Australia.

But New Zealand should not expect Morrison to do us any favours.

He will have to mollify the Liberal Party’s conservative wing, which is solidly behind policies such as deporting “Kiwis” who have served prison sentences and refusing New Zealanders adequate social benefits in Australia even when they have contributed to the tax base.

New Zealand has, however, escaped a hospital pass with the failure of Peter Dutton to win the prime ministership.

Dutton is a hardliner who has clashed with New Zealand Cabinet Ministers on immigration matters.

He has been castigated as Australia’s Donald Trump.

He is also a hardliner on the Paris climate change accord, and arguably it was his positioning on this issue that forced Turnbull to make the fatal error which led to his downfall.

The brute reality is that Turnbull sold his soul and his personal beliefs — not just once, but twice — to stay in power.

And yet again he has failed.

Just days ago he jettisoned Australia’s plan for targets to reduce carbon emissions, in order to appease Liberal Party conservatives.

That was something he had done earlier in his career, once the heat came on from the industrial sector in a nation whose wealth has been built on minerals and fossil fuels.

The campaign against him would never have succeeded if he had displayed the ability to stand his ground, and importantly, build a groundswell of support among the Australian public for his prime ministership.

Turnbull was never New Zealand’s strongest friend, but among the coterie of Australian politicians who have been part of Australia’s revolving door prime ministership, he was one with at least some touchpoints in this country.

He visited here as a lad when his mother, the late actress Coral Lansbury, left his father to take up with a New Zealander.

Later — as a journalist on the Bulletin, the barrister who mounted the Spycatcher defence, and then as an investment banker promoting Allied Domeq’s successful takeover of the Montana wine company — he was an intermittent visitor to New Zealand.

Turnbull is well plugged in to senior business and political circles on this side of the Tasman.

But the multimillionaire lacked the common touch that his friend Sir John Key was able to ply in New Zealand when he cashed up his commercial career to build his Rolodex as an aspirant Prime Minister.

It is important that New Zealand again rebuilds strong links with Australia, which is beginning to look like the weak link in the Pacific when it comes to political instability.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern must lead this.

It is an opportunity for her — not to indulge in virtue signalling about Manus Island, but to face the realities of leading democracies which are under pressure in a fast changing world, with big power conflict dominating our region.

Article: https://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=12113064

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has been one of the first world leaders to congratulate Australia’s incoming Prime Minister Scott Morrison and says he has been involved proactively in promoting New Zealand to the world in the past.

The Treasurer will be Australia’s 30th prime minister after defeating Peter Dutton in a ballot to replace Malcolm Turnbull, who called a spill of the Liberal Party’s leadership positions in a meeting in Canberra this afternoon.

Mr Morrison is being sworn in by Governor-General Sir Peter Cosgrove this afternoon, having first knocked out Foreign Minister Julie Bishop in a three-way contest and then defeated ex-Immigration minister Peter Dutton 45-40.

Before entering the House of Representatives in 2007, Mr Morrison spent the majority of his career in tourism, working as Director of the New Zealand Office of Tourism and Sport from 1998 to 2000. He later became Managing Director of Tourism Australia from 2004 to 2006.

Ms Ardern told reporters in Auckland this afternoon that she had just got off the phone to the new prime minister of Australia and had congratulated him on his new role.

She said Mr Morrison obviously doesn’t need help to familiarise himself with New Zealand.

“He’s been involved proactively in promoting New Zealand to the world. And he acknowledged his warmth for this country. I look forward to building a really strong relationship with him,” Ms Ardern said.

New Zealand has recently hit sticking points in the trans-Tasman relationship, including the impact on New Zealanders of Australia’s policy of deporting foreigners who’ve served 12 months or more in prison or are deemed a threat to Australia. Other issues are a lack of access to welfare benefits and citizenship for New Zealanders living in Australia.

Asked does she think dealing with sticking points might be easier with Mr Morrison in office, Ms Ardern said: “Oh look, you know regardless of who’s in charge we’ll keep advocating in the same way on behalf of New Zealand. Certainly, I’ll make an assumption here based on the role he’s had in the past that he’ll know New Zealand and its fine attributes really well.”

Asked is Mr Morrison better for New Zealand than Mr Dutton would be as PM, she said: “Oh, we constantly make sure that we are the best representatives and advocates that we can be regardless of who we’re advocating to.”

Ms Ardern said she had a conversation with Mr Morrison about the opportunities they might have to meet in the future.

“There’s several important fixtures coming up – the UN General Assembly, the East Asia Summit, APEC. And I look forward to potentially meeting him at any one of those,” she said.

She said she imagines Mr Morrison will be going to the upcoming Pacific Island Forum in Nauru as well.

Article: https://www.tvnz.co.nz/one-news/new-zealand/jacinda-ardern-congratulates-australias-new-prime-minister-scott-morrison-whos-previously-promoted-nz-world