File photo Australian leader Tony Abbott
Sydney:
Ousted Australian leader Tony Abbott conceded Thursday that his decision to award Britain's Prince Philip a knighthood, which sparked a huge public and political backlash, was "injudicious".
Abbott -- a London-born staunch monarchist who lost his job as prime minister in a party coup two weeks ago -- was heavily criticised for bringing back the knights and dames honours list in March last year.
He faced further ridicule, including from MPs within his own conservative Liberal Party, when he decided in January to award the Duke of Edinburgh the Order of Australia.
"Obviously, it was an injudicious appointment, obviously," Abbott told Melbourne radio station 3AW.
"Interestingly though, it prompted me to put all awards in the Order of Australia into the hands of the Council of the Order and that's probably what should have happened from the beginning."
He would not respond to a question on whether Queen Elizabeth II had asked for the honour to be awarded to her husband.
At that time, the knighthood gaffe piled pressure on Abbott -- who was already slipping in the polls -- and a month later he faced the first of two party-room efforts to topple him. Malcolm Turnbull was successful in the second attempt in mid-September.
In contrast to Abbott, 60-year-old Turnbull is a vocal republican and is reportedly set to dump knights and dames from the honours list.
The multi-millionaire former barrister and banker, who entered public life when he chaired the Australian Republican Movement during a 1999 referendum on the monarchy, is expected to be supported in cabinet with a proposal to remove the royal titles.
Abbott -- a London-born staunch monarchist who lost his job as prime minister in a party coup two weeks ago -- was heavily criticised for bringing back the knights and dames honours list in March last year.
He faced further ridicule, including from MPs within his own conservative Liberal Party, when he decided in January to award the Duke of Edinburgh the Order of Australia.
"Obviously, it was an injudicious appointment, obviously," Abbott told Melbourne radio station 3AW.
"Interestingly though, it prompted me to put all awards in the Order of Australia into the hands of the Council of the Order and that's probably what should have happened from the beginning."
He would not respond to a question on whether Queen Elizabeth II had asked for the honour to be awarded to her husband.
At that time, the knighthood gaffe piled pressure on Abbott -- who was already slipping in the polls -- and a month later he faced the first of two party-room efforts to topple him. Malcolm Turnbull was successful in the second attempt in mid-September.
In contrast to Abbott, 60-year-old Turnbull is a vocal republican and is reportedly set to dump knights and dames from the honours list.
The multi-millionaire former barrister and banker, who entered public life when he chaired the Australian Republican Movement during a 1999 referendum on the monarchy, is expected to be supported in cabinet with a proposal to remove the royal titles.
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