FORMER Labor Party leader and republican Kim Beazley is set to be offered the job of Australia's next — and possibly last — governor-general.
Federal cabinet is likely to discuss the idea as early as tomorrow, when it meets in Mr Beazley's home town of Perth.
Senior Government figures have mounted a campaign to have Mr Beazley take over from the incumbent Governor-General, Michael Jeffery, whose term expires in months.
Backing Mr Beazley for the job are cabinet secretary John Faulkner, Foreign Minister Stephen Smith and Treasurer Wayne Swan. Mr Rudd does not oppose appointing Mr Beazley, but wants others to be considered — including the possibility of appointing the first woman to Yarralumla.
Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard is also thought to want at least one woman considered for the role.
A senior ALP figure told The Sunday Age the influential Senator Faulkner judged Mr Beazley an ideal choice.
"John has indicated his clear preference for Kim to take over, based on his view that Kim made an outstanding contribution throughout his 27 years in Parliament," the source said. The governor-general's office was mired in controversy between 2001 and 2003, when it was occupied by former Anglican archbishop Peter Hollingworth, who was forced to resign after vocal criticism of the way he handled sexual abuse allegations by an Anglican priest when he was archbishop of Brisbane.
One cabinet minister said: "There is a feeling that we owe it to Kim. He wore an awful lot of pain on behalf of the party, and yet despite not winning an election he achieved a great deal in terms of keeping us together."
What Mr Beazley's boosters avoided yesterday was the fact that he was a prominent supporter of the push for a republic, being pictured several times at republic rallies.
In his favor is the fact that there are several precedents for appointing serving and former politicians to Government House.
Former Labor prime minister Ben Chifley made then NSW Labor premier William McKell governor-general in 1947, and Sir Robert Menzies appointed former Liberal MP and one-time leadership rival Richard Casey to the job in 1965.
John Gorton appointed the then external affairs minister, Paul Hasluck, to succeed Mr Casey in 1969; in 1989, Bob Hawke gave the job to his minister for foreign affairs, Bill Hayden.
Mr Beazley, now a professorial fellow at the University of Western Australia, was unavailable for comment yesterday.