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Beazley still has an appeal before the Supreme Court seeking a full review of his case.
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Labor, now headed by Kim Beazley, is proposing to do the same this time.
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But neither the government nor the opposition Labor Party, led by Kim Beazley, a republican, supports direct election.
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Kim Beazley, in his second stint, was preparing to lead Labor into a general election due in late 2007.
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With the negligible surplus, Mr Costello has left the Labor leader, Kim Beazley, little room to offer big promises in the election.
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On December 4th, Labor members of parliament changed leaders a fifth time, dumping Mr Beazley in favour of Kevin Rudd, the party's foreign-affairs spokesman.
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More tellingly, the poll gave the coalition government a five-point lead over Labor, and Mr Howard the same lead over Mr Beazley as preferred prime minister.
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Mr Beazley himself, however, has consistently fared badly in the polls, because he has been unable to explain how, or indeed if, Labor differs from the conservatives.
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Mr Beazley had gone into the vote buoyed by an opinion poll showing Labor 12 percentage points ahead of the government after the distribution of second-preference votes.
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Needless to say, both Mr Howard, the leader of the Liberal Party, and his Labor counterpart, Kim Beazley, have competing plans for how it should be done.
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Mr Beazley proposes tax cuts for the less well off.
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Even Mr Beazley, however, will have to tread carefully.
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