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UPDATE 1-Australia's deputy PM loses support of state branch over affair

Published 20/02/2018, 04:51 pm
Updated 20/02/2018, 05:00 pm
UPDATE 1-Australia's deputy PM loses support of state branch over affair

(Updates with analyst comment, context)

By Byron Kaye

SYDNEY, Feb 20 (Reuters) - A state branch of the Australian National Party has pulled its support for Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce because of reports about an extramarital affair with his former press secretary, the party's Western Australia leader said on Tuesday.

Joyce, the National Party's federal leader, has refused to resign since media said this month that he was expecting a child with his former staff member. He has maintained he has the support of his party. have today contacted Barnaby Joyce to inform him he no longer has the support of the Parliamentary National Party of Western Australia as the Leader of the Federal National Party," Western Australia state leader Mia Davies said in a statement.

"Mr Joyce's actions have caused pain for his family but it is the ongoing damage Mr Joyce is causing the Nationals' organisation that is of greatest concern to me," Davies added.

As the National Party leader, Joyce is automatically deputy prime minister under the conventions of a century-old coalition between his rural party and the conservative Liberals.

A spokeswoman for Joyce was not immediately available for comment.

None of the 16 National Party members of Australia's 150-seat federal parliament is from Western Australia so a loss of support from a state branch with no federal parliamentary presence is not expected to destabilise a government with a majority of only one seat.

The New South Wales and Victoria state branches of the National Party issued statements saying they would not get involved in the federal leadership. Nine National Party members come from those states.

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Two-thirds of Australian voters want Joyce to resign over the affair, according to The Australian newspaper's Newspoll, and there is concern that the disapproval of him could lead to fewer votes in state-based elections. took a highly unusual week-long leave of absence this week at the urging of Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who is due to travel to Washington.

Joyce would typically be acting prime minister but Finance Minister Mathias Cormann will be acting leader instead.

Joyce last week publicly criticised Turnbull for "causing further harm" by commenting on his affair. Turnbull has banned sexual relationships between ministers and their staff.

The two leaders held talks on Saturday.

Veteran West Australian political analyst David Black said it was unusual for the state branch to withdraw support for a federal leader.

"It's not easy to find a precedent for this sort of thing, but then again it's not easy to find a precedent for what Barnaby did, in taking on the prime minister," said Black who has analysed politics since the 1970s.

"He didn't just refuse to resign but came out swinging."

The National Party's Western Australian branch is under pressure following a poor performance in the 2017 state election. The mineral-rich state is scheduled to go to the polls again in 2021.

"The Nationals brand across regional Western Australia has suffered as a result of Mr Joyce's actions and he has become a distraction at both federal and state level," the state leader, Davies, said.

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