Labor heavyweights are meeting to decide who will step up to fill two Left faction positions in cabinet created by the resignations of ministers Linda Burney and Brendan O'Connor.
Both will retire at the next federal election, due by May 2025, but bow out of cabinet immediately to make way for fresh legs in the run-up to polling day.
Senior ministers Linda Burney and Brendan O'Connor will retire at the next federal election in 2025. (Lukas Coch, Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)
As assistant minister to Ms Burney, Indigenous senator Malarndirri McCarthy is widely regarded as her heir apparent and is also from the Left faction.
NSW Left faction senators Tim Ayres - a close ally of Mr Albanese - and Jenny McAllister are considered strong performers while Queensland senator Anthony Chisholm is also in the mix.Â
All three are assistant ministers.
There is a view more senators need to be brought in as ministers to help share the workload during busy parliament weeks and estimates, when they represent ministers from the lower house.
Lower house MPs Ged Kearney and Julian Hill are also being mentioned by Canberra insiders, while Northern Territory MP Marion Scrymgour could pick up Senator McCarthy's assistant Indigenous affairs position.
Indigenous senator Malarndirri McCarthy is considered the heir apparent to minister Linda Burney. (Lukas Coch/AAP PHOTOS)
Assistant ministries are handed out by the prime minister.
A Senator McCarthy promotion would leave one cabinet spot open if Mr Albanese decides to maintain its current size.
Outer minister Pat Conroy, another Albanese confidant, is a strong contender for promotion, which would leave an outer ministry spot available and clear the decks for a Left senator call up.
How much Mr Albanese is willing to shake up a cabinet and ministry he has lauded as stable will be revealed on Sunday.
"No government in living memory has had the same cabinet and ministerial positions for its first two years in office," he said when he announced the retirements on Thursday.
Immigration Minister Andrew Giles and Minister for Home Affairs Clare O'Neil could be moved. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)
The future of Home Affairs Minister Clare O'Neil is uncertain, with talk she could be moved sideways into another ministry to allow someone such as frontbencher Murray Watt to take over the portfolio.
The NSW and Victorian party branches will also need to roll out pre-selection processes for new candidates.
Ms Burney won the inner-Sydney seat of Barton with more than 50 per cent of the primary vote and more than 65 per cent overall at the 2022 federal election.
Mr O'Connor's outer Melbourne seat of Gorton is held on a 10 per cent margin and considered a safe seat but recorded a more than 10 per cent swing against Labor's primary vote and four per cent overall swing to the Liberals in 2022.