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Monday, May 12, 2025
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Australian prime minister names new Cabinet

publish time

12/05/2025

publish time

12/05/2025

SYD801
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announces his new Cabinet in Canberra on May 12, after his center-left Labor Party won a landslide victory at elections on May 3. (AP)

MELBOURNE, Australia, May 12, (AP): Australia Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced his new Cabinet on Monday after former minister Ed Husic blamed his demotion on his own criticism of Israel’s war in Gaza. Albanese named the 30 lawmakers who will fill Cabinet and outer-ministry positions after his center-left Labor Party won a landslide victory in the May 3 elections.

Labor has claimed 92 seats in the 150-seat House of Representatives, the lower chamber where parties need a majority to form government. As vote counting continues, Albanese said his government could hold as many as 95 seats. Labor had never held more seats since the first Parliament sat in 1901, he said. "I’m deeply humbled by the trust that was put into my government with the election and we certainly won’t take it for granted,” Albanese told reporters at Parliament House.

While Labor prime ministers allocate the ministerial portfolios, the party’s factional leaders pick the 30 lawmakers who will get them based on the proportion of seats each faction won. The factional leaders dropped former Industry and Science Minister Husic, who was born in Sydney to Bosnian Muslim immigrants, and former Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus. Husic, who after the 2022 election became Australia’s first federal minister to be sworn into office on a Quran, told Australian Broadcasting Corp. on Sunday that Albanese should have intervened to keep him and Dreyfus in Cabinet.

Husic said his demotion was in part punishment for his views on how Israel has waged war in Gaza. "I think it’s been a factor in there. Would I do things differently? I don’t think so,” Husic told ABC. "You can’t celebrate diversity and then expect it to sit in a corner and be silent. You need to speak up … for the communities that you care about,” Husic added.

Albanese did not directly answer when asked whether he had fought for either Husic or Dreyfus to remain in Cabinet. "We have a process in the Labor Party caucus. You’ve been watching it for some time,” Albanese told reporters. Albanese said he had a ”constructive discussion” with Husic on Monday morning. "What I’ve done is to allocate portfolios. That’s the system that’s there. It’s one that Ed and others have supported for a long period of time,” Albanese said.