Federal Election results: Tony Abbott slams ‘nastiness’ in politics as his salary set to grow
New details have emerged of just how much money Tony Abbott will get after he lashed out at the highly organised grassroots effort to dump him.
Federal Election
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New details have emerged of just how much money Tony Abbott will get after he lashed out at the highly organised grassroots effort to dump him.
The former prime minister will get a pension of $307,542 every year.
It is a vast improvement on his former backbencher wage, where he was being paid $207,100.
When he was Australia’s prime minister, he was earning a salary of $539,338.
It comes as Mr Abbott has lashed out at the “new nastiness in Australian politics” as ABC’s Four Corners revealed more about the highly organised grassroots effort to dump him from his seat of Warringah.
In an interview recorded prior to Saturday’s night’s election loss and aired on the program, Mr Abbott told how “nasty people” in his electorate wanted change.
“I think this is a new nastiness in Australian politics,” he said.
“Now, I’m not for a second suggesting that any of the candidates in Warringah are somehow doing this but it is a fact that there are some pretty nasty people who want change here.
“I say to all the decent people in Australia if you want to try to lift the tone of our public life and to lift the quality of our national conversation, don’t in any way give aid and comfort to these nasty elements.”
Election fallout: Where Warringah was won
The former prime minister lost the seat after a swing of more than 13 per cent against him, having represented the blue-ribbon seat since 1994.
Mr Abbott said the campaign launched against him by activist group GetUp, especially a television advert that mocked lifesavers, was “tacky beyond belief”, Four Corners reported.
“It was really demeaning to everyone who is a surf lifesaver and there’s something like 150,000 volunteer surf lifesavers around the country,” he said.
“All of them had their work mocked by that ad. I frankly can’t believe that GetUp ever thought it was a good idea. It just shows the appalling judgment that the people behind GetUp have.”
The behind-the-scenes look during the election campaign shows how the political movement that took down Mr Abbott was well on track before independent Zali Steggall joined up.
Mr Abbott’s position on climate change sowed the seeds of the grassroots movement to unseat him.
The insurgency took hold among disillusioned Liberal voters, who described themselves as “the Coalition of the Willing” to remove Mr Abbott from Warringah, which represents some of Sydney’s most affluent northern beaches areas.
The group established “fairly quickly” that in order to remove Mr Abbott, they would need to find an independent candidate and decided to “push the button” on Ms Steggall when she put her hand up after buying anti-Abbott T-shirts.
Ms Steggall told the program: “When I decided to do that post, I was actually pretty much already thinking, ‘I’m putting my hand up’ because that was actually my first step in saying, ‘It’s time to offer change’.”
Originally published as Federal Election results: Tony Abbott slams ‘nastiness’ in politics as his salary set to grow