The Albanese government’s embrace of the AUKUS security pact faces a second internal rejection in as many weeks, with the Victorian branch of the Labor Party poised to condemn it on multiple fronts.
Two weeks after the Queensland branch of the ALP, at its state conference, refused to support a motion congratulating the Albanese government “for investing in the AUKUS agreement”, two motions condemning the government’s actions will be moved at this week’s Victorian state conference.
Sources said that at this stage, the motions were “likely” to pass, which would be an embarrassment for Defence Minister and Victorian MP, Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles, in his home branch, and set the scene for a bigger clash when Labor’s triennial national conference convenes in Brisbane in August.
The motions, if they pass, do not bind the federal parliamentary Labor Party, but the discontent threatens to erode its national security credentials, which Albanese believes are as important as economic bona fides if Labor is to entrench itself in office.
The main motion, which will be moved by the Left-aligned Australian Manufacturing Workers Union, expresses “profound” disappointment over the government’s decision to embrace the security pact between Australia, the United States and the United Kingdom, and to spend up to $368 billion on nuclear-powered, conventionally armed submarines.
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