Highlights of Tony Abbott's career

Australia's 28th prime minister has become the latest major politician in this manic new age of instantly disposable leaders to be torn down.

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott at a press conference at Beaver Tree Services depot in Kelmscott, Perth, Western Australia on Saturday, Sept. 12, 2015. (AAP Image/Richard Wainwright) NO ARCHIVING

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott Source: AAP

TONY ABBOTT:

* Born on November 4, 1957, in London, England

* Attended St Aloysius' College in Milsons Point, before completing school at St Ignatius' College Riverview in Lane Cove

* Completed a Bachelor of Economics and a Bachelor of Law at Sydney University

* Gained a Master of Arts at the Queen's College at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar
* Entered the St Patrick's Seminary in Manly, studied to become a Catholic priest but left to work as a journalist for the Bulletin and The Australian

* Became press secretary for then Liberal and opposition leader Dr John Hewson in 1990

* Executive Director of Australians for Constitutional Monarchy from 1993 to 1994

* Elected as the member for Warringah at a by-election in March 1994 after the resignation of Michael MacKellar

* Appointed parliamentary secretary to the Minister for Employment, Education, Training and Youth Affairs in 1996

* Became Minister for Employment Services in 1998

* Promoted to cabinet as Minister for Employment, Workplace Relations and Small Business in January 2001

* Took on extra roles of Leader of the House and Minister Assisting the Prime Minister for the Public Service after the 2001 election

* Changed portfolios to Health and Ageing in October 2003

* As health minister in 2006 his anti-abortion stance led to controversy over his refusal to allow the abortion drug RU486 to be made available

* Re-elected in the 2007 general election despite the coalition government losing power

* Nominated for the vacant leader position after John Howard lost his seat but withdrew before the ballot, which was won by Brendan Nelson

* Became shadow minister for families, community services and indigenous affairs in 2007

* In November 2009 Abbott was the first of several shadow cabinet members to resign in protest against Opposition Leader Malcolm Turnbull's support for the government's ETS

* Announced he would stand for the Liberal Party parliamentary leadership against Turnbull later that month

* Beat Turnbull by one vote in a leadership spill, 42 votes to 41, and became opposition leader

* Coalition defeated Kevin Rudd-led Labor government at September 2013 election

* Abbott appointed prime minister on September 18, 2013

* Sparks controversy by awarding the Queen's husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, a knighthood on Australia Day 2015

* Survived leadership spill by 61 votes to 39 in February 2015


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Source: AAP


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