Federal election results 2025: A brutal phone call told Mark Dreyfus he was being dumped


The 2025 Australian federal election results triggered a brutal factional power struggle within the Labor Party, leading to the ousting of key ministers.
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Husic was a target as soon as Marles demanded one of the NSW positions. There was no phone call, however, to negotiate a peaceful transition, such as giving him time to step down sometime during this term. The faction worked slowly all week to drive him out.

The result was certain by Thursday afternoon, when smaller states – including South Australia, where the Right is led by Don Farrell – fell in behind Marles. This meant the NSW group were outnumbered and would have to give in.

The Victorian case was based on maths. The state’s Right faction had to accept an increase in NSW power in 2022 in the government’s first ministry, and they wanted to restore the equilibrium based on the election outcome. The key fact is that Marles and his group performed well at the election, and they wanted the ministry to reflect their “quota” within the caucus.

Other factors were also at work. The Left did very well at the election, especially in Queensland, and this meant the overall ratio in the ministry had to change from 16:14 in favour of the Right to 15:15 for each side. One of the Marles group says the complaints from the NSW Right are merely “performance theatre” because everyone knows how the numbers work.

As recently as January, for instance, Queensland Right member Anika Wells was promoted into cabinet in her portfolio of aged care. The Victorians accepted this outcome at the time, but they were determined to assert their rights after the election – and they are defending Marles for standing up for their state.

Mark Dreyfus in the first meeting of the new Labor caucus on Friday.Credit: James Brickwood

A delegation went to Anthony Albanese on Thursday afternoon to urge the prime minister to intervene to save Dreyfus and Husic, but he would not. Albanese has huge authority after the election victory, but he chose not to use it. He backed Marles over others.

A former prime minister, Paul Keating, is scathing about the “factional lightweights” who made this happen. In his statement on Thursday night, he pointed out that Albanese has made a series of “captain’s calls” on candidates and positions but, this time, chose not to intervene.

None of this has been about merit. None of it has been about ministerial performance. It has been wholly about factional power. That is the Labor way because the factions run things by the numbers, but MPs are worried that this week’s bloodshed was especially vicious.

The Left, for instance, were able to plan a smooth transition because senior members resigned last year, opening up positions for new ministers. The Right, by contrast, tore down two of their most senior people in a very public display of brutality.

Marles has flexed his factional muscle for everyone to see. Rae has confirmed his status as a factional head-kicker. He was the state secretary in Victoria when Labor won a landslide election in 2018, so he is respected for that success. But he is making enemies for the way he works.

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Power is shifting within the caucus and the government. The Victorian Right used to be dominated by former leader Bill Shorten, but he has departed. The vacuum left by Adem Somyurek, the former state politician removed in a scandal, has been filled by the Marles group. A key supporter is Stephen Conroy, a former cabinet minister who ran rings around his factional opponents for decades. He has left parliament, but he never leaves politics.

This group has a legitimate claim to more positions in the ministry, given it has more people in parliament and the old Shorten group has shrunk over time. So it is applying the Labor rules by the book – but without mercy.

Marles has exerted his power in a way that sends a signal to others in the Right, such as the NSW team of Burke and Bowen or the Queensland faction led by Treasurer Jim Chalmers. The usual practice over the past few years has been to regard Chalmers as heir apparent to Albanese, but this week’s events have changed the game.

Albanese will rule with immense authority from the endorsement of the people last Saturday. Just as Liberal prime minister John Howard made sure to have several potential successors to jostle for position, Albanese may not mind having more than one potential heir.

Marles has given his followers what they want, even at the cost of tearing down cabinet ministers. It is too early, however, to be sure he has gained more sway in cabinet. There are now only two members of the Victorian Right in this inner sanctum: Marles and Clare O’Neil, the housing minister. The NSW Right still have four.

And the NSW Right have long memories. Marles has managed to unite this powerful group against him in a fury, and this will bring a new dynamic to the government in its second term. It means he cannot count on their support on leadership positions in the future.

The wounds from this week will fester for years. That is what happens when Labor warlords get the knives out.

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