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AAP
AAP
Politics
Dominic Giannini

'Lower temp' on security politics: Bishop

national security should be a non-partisan issue, former foreign minister Julie Bishop says. (AAP)

Former foreign minister and deputy Liberal leader Julie Bishop says national security shouldn't be a political issue as the coalition ramps up its attacks against Labor.

The prime minister and defence minister have been leading the charge against the opposition, saying Labor is weak on national security and soft on China.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison labelled deputy Labor leader Richard Marles a Manchurian candidate - a term denoting a puppet of a foreign power - in parliament before withdrawing the remark.

Ms Bishop says national security should be a non-partisan issue and politicians should heed the warnings of security heads calling for it to remain bipartisan.

"You can have a debate about it and there can be differences at the edges, but overall it is in Australia's national interest for this not to be a political issue," she told the Nine Network.

"There should be long-term stability and certainty on the issue of national security. I think everyone needs to lower the temperature."

Ms Bishop says she would accept the advice of ASIO director Mike Burgess who said it wasn't helpful for the intelligence agency when national security was brought into the fray.

Labor's foreign affairs spokesperson Penny Wong says the politicisation of national security and attacks against the opposition reveal a desperate prime minister.

"(Scott Morrison) is saying these things because he is desperate to ensure he wins some political point-scoring," she told the ABC.

"The fact is, we all know Australians have come to know the prime minister is a man who's prepared to tell lies (and) is obsessed with political game-playing rather than doing his job."

But the prime minister and the coalition have been keen to point out Labor's funding record when it comes to defence and national security when they were last in government.

"When Labor was in government, they cut all of those things - defence, intelligence, Australian Federal Police, border protection," Mr Morrison told a Tasmanian radio station on Monday.

"It's not an area where Australians should be unaware of the differences. We set a high bar for bipartisanship and Labor don't measure up to it."

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