Anthony Albanese has ruled out taking over the Labor leadership before the next election, despite surging support for Tony Abbott in this weekโs Newspoll.
The well-received budget has lifted the Prime Ministerโs approval rating to an eight-month high and put him back in front as better prime minister for the first time in six months, according to the survey carried out exclusively for The Australian.
Mr Albanese, who narrowly lost the Labor leadership to Mr Shorten after the 2013 election, today insisted he would remain โa part of Bill Shortenโs teamโ and is โnot availableโ for the top job.
โWe went through a period of instability with Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard. I think the Australian people want stability; thatโs what youโve got under Labor,โ Mr Albanese, the opposition infrastructure spokesman, told the Nine Network today.
โHe has done a good job. Look at where we have been in the polls. Even the worst poll at the moment has us on 50-50. The other polls have us ahead still almost since the last election.
โIโm not available. We have a leader. The leader is Bill Shorten and he will lead us to the next election.โ
Education Minister Christopher Pyne claimed that, by denying the speculation, Mr Albanese was signalling his willingness to take up the leadership.
โThe code for everything Anthony has just said is โIโm availableโ. Thatโs the code and weโve just heard it โ โI want to be a team memberโ,โ he said.
โAnthony was the peopleโs choice, he was not the caucusโs choice, and I think the people want Anthony and they donโt want Bill Shorten.โ
In 2013, Mr Shorten won the right-dominated caucus vote convincingly 55-31, but the wider membership backed Mr Albanese 60-40 per cent.
When the two tallies were weighted against each other, Mr Shorten had 52 per cent of the vote and was therefore elected leader.
Mr Albanese insisted the only leadership instability existed in the Liberal partyroom, where 39 anxious MPs voted in February for โan empty chairโ over Mr Abbott.
A Labor leader can only be challenged if 60 per cent of caucus support a new election.
Additional reporting: AAP