Australia refuses to nominate former leader for top UN job


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SYDNEY (AP) — Australia's government rejected a request by former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd on Friday that it back his late bid for the top United Nations job, effectively crushing the former diplomat's hopes of nabbing the post after he spent months lobbying for government support.

Rudd, the New York-based president of the Asia Society Policy Institute and a polarizing figure in Australian politics, had hoped the conservative government would take the crucial step of formally nominating him to succeed U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon when Ban's second five-year term ends on Dec. 31.

But Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said he didn't feel Rudd was qualified for the job and would not support his bid.

"There is a fundamental threshold point and it is this: Does the government believe, do we believe, do I as prime minister believe that Mr. Rudd is well suited for that role? My considered judgment is that he is not," Turnbull told reporters.

Turnbull declined to explain why he felt the former leader of the opposition center-left Labor Party was an unsuitable candidate, but said his decision was not motivated by political partisanship.

In a statement, Rudd dubbed the government's lack of support "a pity."

"It would have reflected well on what our nation can offer to the world — as a middle power with relationships across the world, including the developing world, smaller states, the Commonwealth, our Pacific Island friends and of course our partners in Asia," Rudd said.

Rudd, a Chinese-speaking former diplomat who also served as Australia's foreign minister, was a divisive figure within his government and nabbing the support of some of his one-time colleagues was always going to be tough. He was elected prime minister in 2007, but was dumped by his own party in 2010. He was dubbed "Recycled Rudd" when he regained control of the chaotic and divided government weeks before Labor lost elections in 2013. Some former ministers swore they would never work with him again because of his erratic management style.

Even had he received the backing of Australia, Rudd was considered a long-shot for the post. Portugal's former prime minister Antonio Guterres recently topped the U.N. Security Council's first informal poll of candidates vying for the job, followed by Slovenia's former president Danilo Turk.

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