Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted June 3, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted June 3, 2024 ‘Not rushing’: Former Treasurer Josh Frydenberg rules out return to politics at next election Former federal treasurer Josh Frydenberg has ruled out his rumoured return to politics at the next election after speculation he would try to run again in his old seat of Kooyong. Mr Frydenberg was one of the biggest losers of the 2022 federal election, losing his blue ribbon ******** seat in the heart of Melbourne to teal independent Monique Ryan. Rumours of his political comeback began to emerge at the weekend as cabinet colleagues advocated for his return. This is despite the party preselecting 31-year-old Amelia Hamer for Kooyong. But on Monday, the former treasurer for the Morrison government put the rumours to rest. “I am not rushing back to politics, my position on contesting the next election ******** unchanged,” he said in a post on X (formerly This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up ) to his 117,027 followers that afternoon. Camera IconFormer federal treasurer Josh Frydenberg has ruled out a return to federal politics, putting rumours that he would run again in his old seat of Kooyong to rest. NewsWire / David Crosling Credit: News Corp Australia “I will continue to support the ******** Party and our local candidate Amelia Hamer.” Mr Frydenberg held the seat for 12 years until it was claimed by Ms Ryan with a 52.9 per cent margin in 2022. His was one of several seats lost by the party to teal independents who ran in ********-held electorates in metropolitan areas during the federal election that year. Mr Frydenberg is now chair of the *********** division of global investment bank Goldman Sachs and recently produced a documentary on the rise in anti-Semitism for Sky Australia. In September last year he said the decision to not recontest Kooyong was “a difficult decision and one I have been weighing up for some time.” Camera IconMonique Ryan (right) won the seat of Kooyong from Mr Frydenberg during the 2022 Federal Election with a margin of 52.9 per cent: NewsWire / David Crosling Credit: News Corp Australia Camera IconMr Frydenberg (left, pictured with Coalition foreign affairs spokesman Simon Birmingham) has since taken up a new role as the *********** division of global investment bank Goldman Sachs since the election. NewsWire / Andrew Henshaw Credit: News Corp Australia “It was an enormous privilege to serve our local community for nearly 12 years and be the ******** Party’s candidate at the last five federal elections,” he said. Karen Andrews, the former industry minister in the Morrison government, said Mr Frydenberg was someone the party needed to bring back into federal politics. “I think that we now have the opportunity to revisit what has been happening in Victoria, to look at about where and how we could possibly get Josh Frydenberg back into federal parliament,” she told Nine newspapers on Sunday. The renewed speculation over Mr Frydenberg’s future follows the *********** Electoral Commission (AEC) recommending the neighbouring seat of Higgins be abolished. AEC Commissioner Tom Rogers said the changes in Victoria were required to enable a decrease from 39 to 38 electoral divisions because of a drop in the state’s population. Under the plan, voters in the seat of Higgins – which covers the suburbs of Armadale, Kooyong, Malvern, Prahran and Toorak – will be redistributed to the neighbouring electorates of Chisholm, Hotham, Kooyong, Macnamara and Melbourne. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Business,News,Australia,Business,Banking,Politics,Federal Politics,Business,Finance,Business,Leadership,News,Business,Personal Finance,Politics,State Politics,News,TAS News,News,VIC News #rushing #Treasurer #Josh #Frydenberg #rules #return #politics #election This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up 0 Quote Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/41878-%E2%80%98not-rushing%E2%80%99-former-treasurer-josh-frydenberg-rules-out-return-to-politics-at-next-election/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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