Humble servant of the Nation

Malcolm in the middle… again

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Keep your heads down, folks. Prepare yourself for the ghastly din of the ABC engaging in impassioned discourse with itself. It could go on for months.

Let’s not be too harsh. Remember, one man’s narcissism is another man’s yearning for self-concept. And it does make a nice change from the federal government talking endlessly about itself. The Morrison government is quite pleased to have the topic of the national conversation moved along.

At the same time, Morrison and the gang will be keen not to dig too deeply into the ABC morass as there is the considerable chance of a political back splash.

The allegations are serious and involve the former prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull, allegedly throwing his weight around in calls to the ABC Chairman, Justin Milne and again, allegedly, calling for the summary dismissal of two ABC journalists.

Malcolm Turnbull has denied he issued instructions for any journalist to be sacked. Milne, in turn, has said he was never asked to hire or fire.

All I’ll say is the English language is a wondrous thing and people who are known to use it well, like lawyers for example, are quite capable of saying one thing while meaning another.

The only way to get to the bottom of this is a judicial inquiry where evidence is given under oath. Just between you and me and the gate post, that will not be happening as there is considerable downside for the Morrison government with the possibility of it becoming involved in a scandal it cannot control.

Aware of the political risks, the Morrison government thinks it better to summon up the memory of a dozen Yes, Minister episodes and launch a departmental inquiry where the findings are almost certainly known in advance and a press statement of the “It is a deep and abiding mystery. Let us never speak of this again” kind is released around 5.30pm on a Friday.

If heads must roll then we can be certain they will be heads that have already rolled, rolled out the door and are currently up on spikes in Harris Street, Ultimo.

But wait, Labor and the Greens have called for a Senate inquiry. We shouldn’t get our hopes up there either. The Senate, collectively, could not find their own arses with a sextant and a well-thumbed copy of Gray’s Anatomy.

Ultimately, we will never know the extent of the Turnbull government’s interference into the running of the ABC. Perhaps those who do not think kindly of the ABC will say this does not matter but it does. The ABC is a public broadcaster, not a state one. It is owned by you and by me, not the government of the day.

I seek to add some further evidence. It is circumstantial, certainly, but it speaks of an often irate prime minister who has made his displeasure known to a number of institutions, private and public, over the telephone and immediately after those calls, people have been given their marching orders.

On Anzac Day, 2015 an SBS sports reporter, Scott McIntrye, tweeted up some truly awful remarks regarding Australia’s involvement in World War One. Some of the worst of it if was directed at Australian servicemen from that appalling conflict, all now deceased.

The controversy quickly spiralled into a debate around free-speech and the limits around using employer-linked twitter accounts to express personal views.

Back when he was a mere minister for communications, Malcolm Turnbull publicly condemned Mr McIntyre’s comments describing them as “despicable remarks which deserved to be condemned.”

It’s impossible to disagree with Turnbull’s comments but his intervention went further. Turnbull then discussed McIntyre’s tweets directly with the broadcaster’s managing director Michael Ebeid in a late-night phone call on the very same day.

McIntyre was sacked the following morning. Both SBS and Mr Turnbull denied the Minister had directed SBS to take any action in relation to McIntyre’s employment.

Then there was a telephone call Turnbull as Prime Minister made to Cricket Australia Chairman, David Peever, in the immediate aftermath of the ball tampering brouhaha. The contents of what was later described as a “frank discussion” were not disclosed but Test captain, Steve Smith and his vice-captain, David Warner, both ‘agreed’ to stand down from their leadership positions that very same day, right in the middle of the match, pending further action from Cricket Australia. Australia was captained by Tim Paine in days four and five of the Third Test in Johannesburg.

Turnbull had roundly condemned the players in a presser earlier that day.

“We all woke up this morning shocked and bitterly disappointed by the news from South Africa,” Turnbull said.

“It seemed completely beyond the belief, that the Australian cricket team had been involved in cheating. After all, our cricketers are role models. And cricket is synonymous with fair play. How can our team be involved in cheating like this? It beggars belief.”

“(David Peever) has said to me that Cricket Australia will be responding decisively, as they should.”

I’d like to think Cricket Australia’s response to a call of this kind would have been, “Malcolm, if we need you to pop the pads on and bat at four for Australia, we’ll let you know. Don’t call us et cetera etc.”

As a rule of thumb, Cricket Australia should not be copping lectures on ethics from politicians for rather obvious reasons.

Remember the FIFA World Cup when the Optus streaming service collapsed? Turnbull jumped in then, too.

“I had a call with Allen Lew, with Optus, to seek his assurance that the failures in the streaming service have been rectified,” Turnbull said.

Did he think he could solve a complex technical problem by sheer weight of a telephone call? Apparently, Turnbull thought so but Optus put the white flag up a day later and handed its exclusive coverage of the tournament over to SBS.

No one was sacked on this occasion or at least not publicly but at the time it stood as an odd form of intervention by the then prime minister. One has to wonder whether this was a sound use of his time. Perhaps Turnbull, uncertain of his authority within his own parliamentary party, felt he had to impose it elsewhere.

Sadly, we will never get to the bottom of this. The political stakes are too high. I am sure Malcolm Turnbull would welcome the opportunity to set the record straight under oath because as it stands there is abundant evidence of a tendency to engage in matters where he did not belong.

This column was published in The Australian 28 September, 2018

582 Comments

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Lieutenant James Cook copping the “raw prawn” over in NZ now, Mr. Insider.
    Seems our Kiwi Brothers are not happy with Cookies arrival on their shores where they claim some of his landing party shot dead some of their folk.
    The “mystique” of Cook seems of late to be fading as indeed he was really a “Johnny come lately” to the shores of Australia too, long being beaten by the Dutch and others.
    https://tinyurl.com/y9ymvlsb

    • Trivalve says:

      Cook beaten to ‘New Holland’ by others? Quite. Not to mention the Egyptians according to a story in the Daily Telegraph back in the 60s.

      I have a book which recounts some lesser-advertised facts about Cook that we weren’t taught at school. First amongst those is an explanation of why the duplicitous Sandwich Islanders turned on him so suddenly after joyously welcoming him, but more to the point, that they, ahem, cooked him, before passing some Jimbits back to the crew. I have seen mention that they did not actually eat him, but that this was some mark of *respect*.

      Prior to this, according to my source, the expedition was offshore of the bottom of the South Island (Riverton district I assume) and a party in a boat was sent ashore for fresh water. When they did not return in a timely manner, another boat was dispatched, only to find the lungs and other bits of the first party draped over the beached boat. I’m working from memory here, but I would say that if Cook’s men shot some locals at one point, well, there was some return of fire elsewhere to even up the score.

      He remains an explorer and navigator of the highest quality.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Boris Johnson moving closer to kicking PM May out of Chequers, Mr. Insider, just a matter of time now imho. Thanks for coming Therese!

  • Milton says:

    Logic, or even consistency, would suggest that all the people on here who are willing to believe that Kavanaugh is guilty of sexual harassment of a minor when a minor, and exposing himself, on nebulous accounts given over 30 years after the alleged event, would obviously consider Julian Assange guilty of raping 2 women as a result of 2 contemporaneous accounts given to the police and his well documented evasion of the law concerning those charges.

  • Milton says:

    Fake news! Fake honey! I’m sorely tempted to have a quiet word with the missus.

  • Milton says:

    It’s about bloody time they removed the tampon tax.

  • Milton says:

    The familiar sound of duelling ex-pm’s, and it’s only going to get worse as we are producing them at an incredible rate.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      3 “sound” years of Billy Shorten PM will make us all sit up straight, Milton, not a happy thought is it? Cheers

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        Well Henry if it would make you and Milton unhappy I might just get up off my date and seriously campaign for “Billy”.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Venezuela, Mr. Insider, the Socialist dream turned nightmare where Inflation is 1,000,000%
    When will folk realise that Socialism and Communism simply doesn’t work and never has.
    The simple-minded who think they are supporting a “cause” are horribly brought back down to earth when the “dream” turns to ashes.
    Meanwhile, the Leaders of these countries live in luxury.
    https://tinyurl.com/y7pcownx

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Salutary lesson Henry. Don’t get on the wrong side of the USA.

    • Milton says:

      On the plus side Henry, except for the rotting human carcasses, the lefty, green types will ensure a vast reduction in emissions, employment, social services, life span etc etc. Except, as you say, for the elites and their protectors. The worst hit of course will be the females, those with disabilities, the uneducated, and all the minorities and the marginalised whom they professed to support before getting elected/or winning the coup. No surprises.
      Credit where due though, Henry the left do death, propaganda, censorship, mass mediocrity and poverty, oppression, and the murder of: homosexuals, religious types, intellectuals, poets, journalists, graffiti artists, comedians, cartoonists, jugglers, rioting pussies, pot smokers and other louche looking hipsters, or any Melbourne looking type, etc like nobodies business and mean motor scooters and real go-getters.
      Why is it so, Hank that none of our anti-Trump, anti-capitalist luvvies on here haven’t emigrated to the left leaning utopia’s? ok, I know that answer, but why is it that with all the refugees in the world, refugees are heading towards western secular democracies (even preferring England over socialist France, Oz over Indo) like Australia, Canada, the hated USA, and not Russia, or Cuba, or Nth Korea, Venezuela, Canberra or Vietnam?? I am curious (yellow).

      • John O'Hagan says:

        Probably the same reason that the conservatives on here didn’t emigrate to Pinochet’s Chile, Franco’s Spain, or 1930s Germany when the geting was good.

        Now we have both complied with Godwin’s Law, can you please stop it?

    • Dwight says:

      If a body count of 100 million won’t dissuade them, some Venezuelans eating their pets won’t.

    • Trivalve says:

      Venezuela has suffered the fate of other attempts at socialism/communism/most-other-isms: taken over by power-hungry nutters. Most of these disasters have nothing to do with the supposed ideologies – they are simply the effect of arseholes scrambling to the top. It’s about power, not ideology.

      • jack says:

        but that’s a design fault with Marxism, it happens every time.

        Deng tried to re-design China’s version, by setting in place protections against the bad emperor, and they were successful up to a point.

        Unfortunately, the new emperor Xi Jingping has removed those protections, so god help the Chinese.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    “You would need a microscope to find his true beliefs” says Paul Keating as he savages Malcolm Turnbull.
    Spot on PJK, sadly for himself Turnbull was simply full of s%^t and wasted his time in charge of the levers of power.
    Turnbulls Memoirs should be out soon in a thin ‘quick read on the bus” Paperback.
    https://tinyurl.com/y7a59bmr

    • Milton says:

      You’d also need a keen eye to find Keating giving credit to the Campbell report; acknowledging that he was Hawke’s batman; or taking credit for 17^% interest rates on home loans, and the recession we had to have; nor the financial mess that Howard/Costello had to mop up, paving the way for those less well off to be better off fiscally than ever before. And now Keating applauds Rudd for staving off a recession (that we seriously needed then for our long term health), that will eventually happen to us (in a big way) and the big players, despite the veneer and papering over of serious flaws in what is considered first world economies That was the recession that we, and the world, had to have.
      And you’d certainly need more than a microscope, a sextant, and a well thumbed copy of Gray’s anatomy to hear or read of Keating and his disciples spruiking (they’re selective and noticeably silent that way – ok, for mine duplicitous hypocrites and liars, or to be generous, brainwashed, sheep like idiots) his personal contribution to our laws: indefinite mandatory detention:
      http://www.abc.net.au/news/2011-11-11/obrien-the-founding-father-of-australias-indefinite-mandat/3658804

      Keating – he did nothing for our indigenous people, except give a lecture (that may have been written by someone else). Did he ever go bush, like Abbott? He did nothing on the republic except grope our Queen, guaranteeing a vote for mannered, non sexist, monarchy over his uncouth, malignant, uneducated, mediocracy, Yet, despite all his many failures, Keating’s one and only benign legacy is in delivering the lengthy, overwhelmingly successful years, Howard years.

  • Milton says:

    Vale Charles Aznavour. He wrote and sung some great songs.

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