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Jetstar sorry after gay bag tag slur

Written By Unknown on Senin, 14 Oktober 2013 | 22.16

Jetstar has said it will investigate after a passenger found his luggage with this slur on it. Source: Supplied

JETSTAR has apologised to a Queensland passenger after the words "I am gay" were written on his luggage with airline baggage sticker tags.

An airline spokeswoman said a thorough investigation would be conducted after a picture of the luggage was posted on Twitter yesterday after a flight from Perth to Brisbane.

It is believed the incident took place in Perth but the airline was unable to confirm this.

"We are taking this matter very seriously and we have contacted the passenger to apologise for any distress caused," the spokeswoman said in a statement.

User @aaronpp posted the picture yesterday attached with caption: "Utterly disgusted to find my luggage front and center on the @JetstarAirways luggage carousel looking like this."

Identifying himself as a stay-at-home dad and author of blog One Sleepy Dad, the man then told users he believed the incident happened at Perth Airport, during a visit.

"It's the luggage sticker tags for the flight. Add passenger #privacy to you concerns," the user known as Sleepysaurus Rex! Wrote.

Twitter users attacked Jetstar with a post from Jason Xolmer describing the incident as "disgusting and unforgivable".

Another user Kate Doak said they were not surprised and had trouble with Jetstar staff in Sydney in May "due to being Trans".

The blogger, responding to posts about yesterday's debacle, said they were originally booked with Qantas but the flight details were changed and the flight was delayed more than an hour.

The post was retweeted more than 60 times yesterday.


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Neighbours angry at public housing deaths

Robert Roll's body was not discovered despite neighbours raising concerns for his safety with the Department of Housing. Source: PerthNow

IT wasn't the nauseating stench but an overflowing mailbox that prompted the Department of Housing to check on a 75-year-old cancer patient who had been dead in his Perth apartment for two years.

Robert Roll's skeletal remains were found slumped in the bedroom of his Wellington Street public housing unit on July 7, 2011 - two years after he discharged himself from Royal Perth Hospital, after being diagnosed with lung cancer.

Home-based care arrangements were not made for Mr Roll because he had discharged himself.

The elderly man - who had lost contact with his UK-based family several years earlier and had no close friends - was pain free and insisted he wanted to maintain his independence, although he ultimately agreed to some assistance.

The WA Coroners Court heard today that nurses from in-home health and care provider Silver Chain only visited Mr Roll once, after he was "not compliant with their services''.

After he died, there were several signs that something was amiss.

He missed an oncology appointment, his gas and electricity bills weren't paid, resulting in the services being disconnected, and a vile smell permeated the apartment block during the hot summer months.

Neighbours Leanne Scobell and Ashley Wilson initially thought Mr Roll had moved out or been put in a nursing home.

They put the foul odour down to being a dead animal possibly trapped in the lift shaft.

Outside court, Ms Scobell said they complained about the smell more than once but the Department of Housing did nothing.

"It was like a dead animal - it was horrendous. It would make you want to vomit the minute you'd walk in the foyer,'' she said.

Then in late 2010, she noticed Mr Roll's mailbox was overflowing and went next door to the department's headquarters to inform them.

"I thought they would do a routine check and see if he was okay,'' Ms Scobell told the court.

In May 2011, she and Mr Wilson also asked during a property inspection if Mr Roll had moved out.

It wasn't until another neighbour, Barbara Mansell, contacted the department twice about the mail that housing officers made the grim discovery during a welfare check some two months later.

"It was shocking really,'' Ms Scobell said.

"And it happened again afterwards - the lady next door had been left (dead) in her unit for two weeks.''

Mr Wilson said property inspections were not done regularly enough but if they had been, Mr Roll would have been found earlier.

Ms Scobell said it was frustrating the department didn't pay heed to her various concerns.

"It was like you were smacking your head against a brick wall,'' she said.


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Gale and Gomes shine at shoot

Go behind the scenes with supermodels Jessica Gomes and Megan Gale as they take over the styling for the STM.

Jessica Gomes with Megan Gale on site for the fashion shoot in Sydney. Picture: Penny Lane Source: Supplied

MEGAN Gale doesn't often step behind the camera, but she's happy to make the exception for a fellow Perth girl - especially when it's Jessica Gomes.

At a Sydney fashion shoot for her new Isola swimwear range, Megan Gale let top model and fellow David Jones ambassador, Jessica Gomes, shine in front of the lens, while she played stylist.

PICTURES: Jess Gomes models Megan Gale swimwear

"Working with Megan on this shoot was a dream come true," Gomes, 28, said.

Jessica Gomes poses up for Megan Gale at the Sydney fashion shoot. Picture: Penny Lane Source: News Limited

"She's someone I've always looked up to and admired for her career success.

"And, of course, we are both Perth girls. Us Perth girls really get out there. We are taking the world by storm."

Gomes, who took over from Miranda Kerr as the face of the iconic department store earlier this year, said she's always admired Gale.

Jessica Gomes poses up for Megan Gale at the Sydney fashion shoot. Picture: Penny Lane Source: Supplied

"I first worked with her 10 years ago when I was the youth fashion ambassador for David Jones and she was the Fashion Ambassador, so now to be appointed in her role is amazing," she said.

"Hopefully I will go on to achieve similar success as Megan."

Gale, who has branched out into acting, TV presenting and swimwear designing, said she has enjoyed diversifying her career.

Jessica Gomes poses up for Megan Gale at the Sydney fashion shoot. Picture: Penny Lane Source: Supplied

The 38-year-old admitted she's just as happy working behind the camera.

"It's such a natural transition for me," Gale said.

"I like to be hands on in my work as a model and in TV so to take on the role of stylist and designer seems like a natural progression. I love it."

Jessica Gomes poses up for Megan Gale at the Sydney fashion shoot. Picture: Penny Lane Source: Supplied

Gale said she's enjoyed watching Gomes come into her own as a model and woman.

"I really love her look," she said.

"I love that she's a Perth girl who is quite curvy and isn't afraid to flaunt it.

"We've known each other for years and it's been great to see her really coming into herself and becoming a woman and becoming more confident. She's a seasoned pro."

Jessica Gomes poses up for Megan Gale at the Sydney fashion shoot. Picture: Penny Lane Source: Supplied


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AFL stars share holiday snaps

Richmond captain Trent Cotchin relaxes with fiancee Brooke Kennedy in Bali. Source: Twitter

FROM Bali beaches to Rio, Las Vegas and Disneyland, AFL players are letting their hair down away from home.

In August players won a long-running battle to extend their end-of-season leave, and after a gruelling season they are taking full advantage.

And they are sharing the highlights with the world on Twitter and Instagram.

SEE THE BEST OF AFL PLAYERS' HAPPY SNAPS BELOW

Bali is the destination of choice for footy stars, with players from Geelong, Fremantle, Hawthorn and Richmond among those hitting the tropical holiday spot.

The old footy team end-of-season trip seems to be a thing of the past, with clubs splitting up and players hanging out with rivals from other teams.

While Trent Cotchin and Dustin Martin relax by the pool in Bali, a crew of Richmond players are in Brazil on an inter-cultural exchange, while injured teammate Liam McBean represents the tougher face of footy - his holiday is being spent on the couch with his leg in a cast after late-season surgery.

Players including Joel Selwood, David Zaharakis and Dane Swan are in the US, along with Demon Jeremy Howe, who continues to defy gravity - this time on the Disneyworld rollercoaster.

Bomber Brendon Goddard is in New York, tweeting a series of photos as he played a round at the famed Winged Foot golf course in New York - where Geoff Ogilvy won the 2006 US Open.

Days after joining Sydney on a mega nine-year contract, Lance Franklin jetted out to London to join the Indigenous All-Stars in Ireland, and former Hawk teammate Isaac Smith is seeing the sights in Prague.

But some players are happy to stay closer to home. Crows star Patrick Dangerfield is in Darwin and Nic Naitanui is building his pre-season fitness on WA's Bibbulmun Track. If he's taking it seriously he will be very fit - the full track is almost 1000km long.

More on the latest AFL news:

Gavin Brown is set to join North Melbourne's coaching staff as a development coach.


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Rio pink diamond fetches $2 million

RIO Tinto has sold a rare Argyle diamond for a record $2 million as overseas buyers snapped up dozens of precious stones in this year's Pink Diamonds Tender.

The tender of 64 pink, red and blue diamonds set a string of records for Rio, including the highest price for a diamond from the Argyle mine in the Kimberley region.

The Argyle Phoenix, a 1.56 carat Fancy Red diamond, fetched the highest per carat price for a diamond ever produced from the mine.

Bids broke through the $US2 million ceiling and there were a record number of bids above $US1 million for other single stones.

"We are delighted with the results for the 2013 tender collection which are a reflection of their rarity, provenance and global reach,'' Rio Tinto Diamonds managing director Jean-Marc Lieberherr said.

Many of the diamonds fetched prices above pre-tender estimates, reflecting increasing demand from the world's top jewellers, designers, collectors and connoisseurs, he said.

All of the 64 diamonds in the 2013 Tender were sold.

"Both established and emerging markets were well represented in the winning bids,'' Rio said.

Argyle produces around 90 per cent of the world's rare pink diamonds and is the world's largest supplier of natural coloured diamonds.

In April Rio opened its new $2.2 billion underground diamond mine at Argyle amid predictions it will produce up to 20 million carats per year and extend the overall mine life until 2020.

In June the company took its global diamonds business off the market following a strategic review.


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Shark trackers tag 4m Great White

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 13 Oktober 2013 | 22.16

WA's Shark Monitoring Network is expanding and getting faster alerts on more than 300 tagged sharks, including a 4-metre great white.

The Fisheries shark monitoring unit at work off the coast of WA. Picture: Supplied. Source: PerthNow

WESTERN Australia's Shark Monitoring Network is expanding and using new technology to provide faster alerts on more than 300 tagged sharks, including a 4-metre great white.

The Fisheries Department says alerts can now be delivered less than two minutes after a shark is detected.

The network was expanded this week with the deployment of two satellite-linked shark monitors near Busselton in the state's southwest. Six more will be added to the network on the south coast this summer.

Abalone diver attacked by shark east of Esperance

There are now about 320 receivers in the seabed and 20 satellite receivers to monitor tagged sharks including 136 white sharks, 171 whaler sharks and 19 tiger sharks.

Fisheries Minister Troy Buswell said the network upgrades meant the public could access alerts sooner on Surf Life Saving WA's Twitter feed or website.

"This summer, response agencies will have even more time to close a beach and alert water users of potential shark hazards, with alerts from receivers being sent faster,'' he said.

Scientists tagged their largest shark - the 4-metre great white - off Albany's Cheynes Beach in August.

The department says the mature male is the biggest great white shark in Australian waters to be internally fitted with an acoustic transmitter tag.

The scientists surgically implanted small acoustic transmitters in the shark's stomach before releasing it.

Fisheries Department principal research scientist Rory McAuley said acoustic tags provided important knowledge about sharks.

"The battery life of internal acoustic tags is up to 10 years so the scientific data that may be collected from this shark is unprecedented,'' he said.

The state government is also planning a dedicated website for shark information and alerts this summer.


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'Arrest made over missing Maddie'

Detectives are set to reveal new information about the hunt for Madeleine McCann in a television appeal.

BRITISH detectives investigating the 2007 disappearance of Madeleine McCann in Portugal have reportedly arrested a man and raided his home.

Britain's Sunday Mirror, which last week featured claims from a lawyer who insisted a man he met at a party had seen the missing child on an island in the Mediterranean, now says an arrest has been made.

The paper is reporting that a man has been arrested by Greater Manchester Police and computers from a private home were seized.

"The arrest only happened as a result of a claim that Madeleine may still be alive," a source said to be close to the missing girl's family told the paper.

British detectives will release new e-fits of men they wish to contact over the 2007 disappearance of Madeleine McCann. Picture: AP Photo/PA, Metropolitan Police, Teri Blythe

On Monday in the UK, detectives will publish new e-fits of men they want to contact, in a major public appeal that will also be shown in Germany and the Netherlands.

The prime time television programme will also present a fresh timeline of events surrounding the disappearance of the British girl from her family's holiday apartment, just a few days before her fourth birthday.

There is speculation they are seeking two German-speaking men over Maddie's disappearance, The Mail on Sunday reports.

The appeal will be shown on Tv in Germany and the Netherlands after Monday's British broadcast, in a bid to widen the search for new information.

"The reviewing and analysis of all available information has led to new insights and leads that, for the first time, point to Germany," a spokesperson for German TV's Aktenzeichen XY ...   Ungelost told The Mail.

The e-fits will also appear on Dutch programme Opsporing Verzocht in an effort to find the men who may have been speaking German or Dutch, the paper said.

The British show will also include a new 25-minute reconstruction as well as live interviews with Gerry and Kate McCann, who launched a global media campaign to find their daughter and still hold out hope she is alive.

Portuguese authorities closed their investigation in 2008, but London's Metropolitan Police spent two years reviewing the evidence and opened their own probe in July this year.

Last week, the British force said analysis of mobile phone data from thousands of people who were in the resort of Praia da Luz when Madeleine disappeared could provide a new lead.

The detectives have interviewed 442 people over the last couple of years and have identified 41 potential suspects, although no arrests have been made.

In the BBC 'Crimewatch' programme on Monday night, e-fits of men seen in and around Praia da Luz at the time will be published in a bid to identify the men and eliminate innocent sightings.

"Primarily what we sought to do from the beginning is try and draw everything back to zero,'' said the chief investigating officer, Detective Chief Inspector Andy Redwood, in a clip from the programme released to the media.

"Try and take everything back to the beginning and reanalyse and reassess everything, accepting nothing.''

He said detectives were focused on the time between 8:30pm on May 3, 2007, when Kate and Gerry McCann left the apartment to dine at a nearby tapas restaurant with friends, to when Kate McCann found Madeleine was missing at 10:00pm.

"Our work to date has significantly changed the timeline and the accepted version of events that has been in the public domain to date,'' DCI Redwood added.

Last week the McCanns said they were "greatly encouraged by new information coming to light'' and said they hoped the BBC appeal would take them closer to find Madeleine.

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Mongols patch over the Finks in WA

Police operation confirms the Mongols bikie gang has patched over the Finks in WA.

WA police say the notorious Mongols outlaw motorcycle gang has patched over the Finks in WA. Source: Supplied

A POLICE operation has confirmed the notorious Mongols outlaw motorcycle gang has patched over the Finks in Western Australia.

Police Commissioner Karl O'Callaghan flagged concerns last week about the US-based bikie gang taking over the Finks and said police had been monitoring the situation.

There were previously only three Mongols in WA and all are in prison.

There are about 12 Finks members in WA and about half are in prison, while their club house has been frozen.

Deputy Commissioner Chris Dawson told reporters today that police were monitoring all gangs and played down the threat of the Mongols, who have a violent rivalry with the Hells Angels in the US.

"Irrespective of what they call themselves, police regard them (all) as criminal gangs and will continue to treat them as such,'' Mr Dawson said.

Laws allowing WA police and the state's corruption watchdog to declare bikie gangs illegal were passed by parliament late last year, but have not yet been proclaimed.

The intelligence was gathered as part of a national day of action against outlaw motorcycle gangs.

Police executed search warrants throughout Perth's metropolitan area on Saturday targeting two club houses and residences in Woodvale, Aveley, Balga, Henley Brooke, Butler, Ocean Reef, Landsdale, Quinns Rock and Wilson.

Seized items included a baton, a tracking device believed to be used for vehicles, 28g of white powder that is yet to be identified, and $56,000 in cash.

Further operations were carried out at licensed premises in Fremantle, Burswood and regional areas.

Charges included disorderly behaviour, five counts of possessing a prohibited drug and possessing a smoking implement.

In a joint operation with the Department of Corrective Services, 71 prison cells occupied by gang members were also searched and prison contraband was seized. Nationally, 53 people were charged, 79 search warrants were executed and 362 licensed premises were patrolled.

Mr Dawson said the operation was successful despite a small haul in WA.

"The outcome of the operation is not necessarily the volume of what is seized, but it's the effective policing and the gathering of any evidence,'' he said.


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'Patients not affected by SCGH job cuts'

Health Minister Kim Hames talks to media about the 200 job cuts at Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital. Picture: Bohdan Warchomij Source: PerthNow

Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital. Source: The Sunday Times

HEALTH Minister Kim Hames claims patient care at Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital will not be affected by the 'adjustment' of 200 jobs.

As revealed in The Sunday Times today, several Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital department heads have been told they need to shed the equivalent of 200 full-time positions as soon as possible, including doctors and nurses.

Yesterday a top insider said they had been warned that up to 10 per cent of the hospital's workforce - up to 500 jobs - could eventually go.

Dr Hames confirmed today an expected 200 jobs were likely to be "adjusted".

"My understanding is that 200 is likely, but it's not going to be that suddenly 200 people are losing a job," he said.

"We'll be having transfers to other hospitals, moving patients to where the demand is and reduction by natural attrition.

"We're not reducing numbers, we're not cutting staff, people are not getting the sack. What we're doing is adjusting our numbers across the system."

Opposition health spokesman Roger Cook says the job losses at Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital will "severely" affect patient care. Picture: Bohdan Warchomij Source: PerthNow

Dr Hames said staffing numbers had to be adjusted after the hospital had a drop in patient numbers.

"So they've got to adjust their staffing levels back to the right amount, the same amount that every other hospital in Australia is doing and make sure that they get their numbers matching the patients coming in," he said.

"But at the same time we're having those adjustments, we've had more than 200 added extra full-time equivalents at Joondalup Hospital.

"It's not efficient to fund far more for a hospital whose patient numbers are actually going down."

The Health Services Union of WA and the Opposition, however, say the job cuts will drastically affect patient care.

Opposition health spokesman Roger Cook said the budget cuts would have a "severe impact on hospital services".

"I don't see any doctors and nurses standing around wondering where their next patient is going to come from," Mr Cook said.

"I don't think any of the patients in this ED today will be saying 'goodness me, things have dropped off. I'm getting served much quicker.'

"Hospitals are still struggling to deal with the demand from Perth's growing populations and as a result of these cuts patients will wait longer and patient care will suffer."

HSUWA Secretary Dan Hill commenting on the reduction of jobs at Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital. Picture: Bohdan Warchomij Source: PerthNow

HSUWA secretary Dan Hill said he believed casual and contracted staff would be targeted.

"Slashing 200 FTE's (full time equivalent) actually translates into many more people losing their jobs, because many staff will be in part time positions," Mr Hill said.

"For example, up to five staff members could make up just 1 FTE position.

"The health sector has already been cut to the bone and any further cuts could severely impact the quality of care given to patients."

SCGH has more than 600 beds and is one of Australia's leading teaching tertiary hospitals, treating more than 400,000 patients every year.
 


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Shorten wins Labor leadership

New Labor leader Bill Shorten tells the media that he will resist the Government's attempts to dismantle the carbon pricing scheme.

BILL Shorten has been elected as Labor's new leader, beating out former deputy prime minister Anthony Albanese.

News the former education minister was selected over Mr Albanese was announced by the Labor Party on Twitter and in an email to party faithful about 2.30pm.

It followed a 2pm Caucus meeting at Parliament House in which the results from the Caucus and rank-and-file votes were made known.

Governor-General Quentin Bryce, Mr Shorten's mother-in law, offered to resign her office to avoid any perceptions of bias but Prime Minister Tony Abbott has refused to accept her resignation.

Addressing the media after his win, Mr Shorten said he hoped Tanya Plibersek would be his deputy but that would be a matter for Caucus.

He paid tribute to Mr Albanese and said he had let no one down.

"He is a decent, determined, notable Labor warrior," he said.

Bill Shorten has been elected the new leader of Labor. Picture: Norm Oorloff

"He has the ferocious capacity to apply considerable intellect to holding the Coalition to account, both in government and I have no doubt going forward in opposition."

He said the result of the ballot showed there were still things for him to learn, having failed to win the majority of membership support.

"And I certainly look forward to working with Anthony Albanese to understand some of those lessons," he said.

Anthony Albanese congratulates Bill Shorten following the announcement of the Labor leadership ballot, and announces his resignation as deputy leader of the ALP.

He said he understood rebuilding the Labor Party would be hard and would need a team effort.

"I'm confident that the Labor Party has the skills within its parliamentary ranks and also beyond its parliamentary ranks to be up to this task," he said.

"I believe that the best days of Labor are yet to come."

Questioned on environmental policy, he said he personally believed it was important to have a price on carbon.

Mr Shorten said he was not in a position to set out his policies today because he was interested in listening to his colleagues first.

But he still believed in the national broadband network, the national disability insurance scheme, putting a price on carbon and the importance of giving school children the best education, he said.

He said he did have the experience for the job, despite having been in parliament for a shorter time than Mr Albanese.

He said he would take some lessons from how Tony Abbott had conducted himself as opposition leader.

"I note that when he became leader of the opposition he won by one vote," he said.

"He still managed to go on and unite the party and indeed convince the majority of Australians to vote for him.

"What I would say about Mr Abbott's style is, I don't believe, as Opposition Leader, that I would be as relentlessly negative as him."

READ OUR BLOG ON THE LABOR LEADERSHIP

Mr Albanese congratulated his winning colleague, and paid tribute to the overall spirit of the leadership contest as he thanked those who had cast their vote for him.

"Throughout all of it, it has been conducted in a spirit which shows that you can actually have a democratic process in this great Australian Labor Party without having personal rancour involved," he said.

He also hailed the job Chris Bowen had done as acting leader.

"I have no doubt that he will continue to serve very well indeed as the Shadow Treasurer," he said.

He said the party would now unite behind Mr Shorten between now and the 2016 election.

"I said at the outset of this campaign that it wasn't a lifetime ambition to lead the Australian Labor Party," Mr Albanese said.

"That it was something that I had only considered in recent times, that I had always thought I would be a team player - that was the contribution that I would make rather than be the leader.

"I will be back to being a team player again."

Today's announcement follows more than a month of cordial campaigning from the two men.

Anthony Albanese and Bill Shorten walkto the party room meeting in Parliament House in Canberra. Source: News Limited

In an email to party members, Mr Bowen revealed Mr Shorten had won 63.95 per cent of the Caucus vote and 40.08 per cent of the membership vote, meaning he had won 52.02 per cent of the total vote.

"Together we've chosen a new Labor leader," he wrote.

"This historic vote which combines the votes of Labor Caucus with the votes of 30,426 Labor Party members - a 74% turnout - has changed our great Party forever and is already making us stronger."

11 THINGS ABOUT BILL'N' ALBO

He said more than 4500 people had made expressions of interest to join Labor since the leadership campaign started.

"Both Anthony Albanese and Bill Shorten campaigned hard and campaigned with respect for each other and a firm commitment to the Labor Party," Mr Bowen said.

"To those who cast their vote, thank you for your involvement.

"Today we start the work of holding the Abbott Government to account and showing we are a better and fairer alternative for Australia's future."

The new way of electing the leader - which takes in Caucus votes and the rank-and-file choice, weighted evenly - was brought in by former prime minister Kevin Rudd.

Senior Labor figures have said there will be no going back from the new election model, with Mr Bowen even predicting the Coalition will eventually adopt a similar model for the election of their leader.

Mr Bowen said the entire party had spoken, as he paid tribute to "great warrior" Mr Albanese.

"The entire Labor Party has elected an alternative prime minister and I believe the next Labor prime minister of Australia," he said.

"Bill Shorten is a man who has dedicated his working life to representing vulnerable people and to improving this nation, whether they be workers, people with a disability.

"People right across the country have a friend and supporter in Bill Shorten and they now have an alternative prime minister who is on their side."

He said Mr Albanese had also made a huge contribution to the part.

"Of course, I also want to pay tribute to Anthony Albanese, a great warrior for our cause."

Mr Bowen said despite being a tight result, it was a solid one.

"Never again can the branch members of our great party be taken for granted or ignored," he said.

"Anybody who seeks to lead the Labor Party will need to pay them due deference and respect going forward."

Mr Bowen said former prime minister Kevin Rudd had expressed "no interest in returning to the front bench and that's perfectly understandable given his service as prime minister".

Labor national president Jenny McAllister said members had "enormous respect" for both candidates.

"The vast bulk of our members are in fact not factionally aligned," she said.

"I think many people would look at Anthony and his very long experience in advocating for members and their rights within our organisation and would have seen in Anthony a candidate they wish to support.

"In saying that, I don't think they are at all insensitive to the very great merits to Bill Shorten brought to the process and I spoke to many members who were really quite undecided about how they would cast this vote."

Mr Bowen said the party had a difficult decision to make, as evidenced by the close vote.

The former treasurer said he had ruled himself out of the race because of "unfinished business" in the treasury portfolio, indicating he hoped to hold that portfolio.

"I think that's the role where I can make the best contribution," he said.

"I've fulfilled the role of interim leader of the Opposition, holding the Government to account, and they've given us some grounds to hold them to account in the last month.

"But now that task falls to Bill and I will be supporting him in the capacity of holding (Treasurer) Joe Hockey to account."

Asked about the fact Mr Shorten had been the very man to have helped unseat two former sitting prime ministers, Mr Bowen said those issues were in the past.

"Well, it's true to say that we've had our issues over recent years when it has come to leadership," he said.

"We have bypassed that today by embarking on a whole new process.

"There is no better way of doing that than on the process we have embarked upon, opening up the decision for the entire party and providing that trip wire so that the leadership cannot be declared vacant lightly."

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