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

  • Trivalve says:

    Ok: Marnus Labuschagne.

    How does one pronounce that?

    • Jack The Insider says:

      La-boo-shane. As in “Bowling La-boo-shane.”

      • Trivalve says:

        Thanks Jack. I’ve been watching a little on Go with the sound down. At 0-165 I thought we were going ok (and I guess we were.) At least there was no-one there to see the collapse.

        Commiserations to Perentie, he must feel like a Pies supporter. But there’s two innings and still room for a first-test century for Travis.

        • Jack The Insider says:

          Travis Head is a very good player and one who will have a bearing on the future of Australian cricket over the next decade. Frankly, I don’t get the armchair critics who opt for one player over another and applaud when the bloke they didn’t want fails. It is a particularly miserable business when it comes to shitcanning players on debut. Australian batsmen have problems batting on sub-continent wickets which for all intents and purposes includes the UAE. It’s been going on for a long time, stretching back to much stronger teams than this one under Waugh, Taylor, Border. Swapping one player over with another with similar weaknesses does not make a lot of sense. You can’t just keep changing the XI around and expect it will come good. Management needs to back the players. A player won’t learn much from being pinballed between First Class and Test cricket over and over.

      • Boadicea says:

        If he’s of South African origin, Jack, the correct pronunciation would be Laboo-ska agh-knee -with a guttural ”g”. I’m not sure if he’s an ex SA or not. If he is, he may be trying to change to the more to the Labuchayne version. But back home it’s the guttural version.
        I get amused when I hear the Laboochayne .

  • Razor says:

    I see what you did there Carl you naughty boy.

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      John O’Hagan says:
      October 8, 2018 at 8:43 PM
      “CFACTS? Some guy with an Arts degree, another with a Public Admin diploma or something, and a bunch of ex-GOP aides with a big pile of disinformation money from oil companies and Dicky Scaife.

      Carl, one of the keys to survival these days is knowing good information from bad.”

      John, you omitted to mention the Grand Daddy of them all, Al Gore, and his 2007 Nobel Prize acceptance speech where he reported the North Polar ice cap was “falling off a cliff” and may well be completely gone by 2015.

      Thank goodness it has survived so far, eh.

      • Trivalve says:

        It’s not kicking any goals Carl

        • Carl on the Coast says:

          And neither is the IPCC, TV. They keep moving the sticks. Have you noticed Armageddon has now been put off till 2050? Me old mate JB must be beside himself, he was banking on the lights being out 5 years ago. Bet he’s spewing that he’ll miss the show.

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        “…………. may well be….. ” Which is not the same as “will be”. The Arctic “old ice” the critical one has been reduced to a fraction of the size it was in 2007, and the seasonal sea ice is still diminishing dramatically , so Gore wasn’t too far off the mark. The reflective capacity of the sea ice is rapidly lessening as a consequence, we are just circling the plug hole.

        You and Razor and the like are helping me to understand why humanity was always doomed and accept that even busting a boiler wouldn’t have made a blind bit of difference. Keep it up, the last residue of my guilt for not having dedicated more of my life to raising awareness will disappear with the Arctic cap I am sure.

        https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2018/arctic-wintertime-sea-ice-extent-is-among-lowest-on-record

        I am sure you cannot be patronised so I will point that that is the winter sea ice

      • jack says:

        you can check it for yourself, catch the afternoon CX from JFK to HK, odds are it will be straight up the Hudson, out over the ice for six or seven hours or so.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Strewth, Mr. Insider our new Indigenous Affairs Envoy, one ex-ousted PM Tony Abbott not getting a good reception from Aboriginal Peoples a few Leaders who have already called for an “Abbott Proof Fence” to be erected!
    Still Tony has no shame sitting up on the Backbench unloved and unwanted like a “Boil on an Arse”.
    Maybe he could challenge Tony Mundine to a Boxing Match, Tony Abbott having won 3 out of 3 at uni when he was known as the ‘Whirling Dervish”.
    But we must not be unkind.
    https://tinyurl.com/y7rvd9oc

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      How wonderful, how pleasing, and the thing is Henry I couldn’t think of a more appropriate boil on the arse for the conservatives. Abbott is the manifest dark side of those grinning sleaze bags.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      What “can’t be?” What, 70 anomalies found from millions of recordings? Whacko, how desperate is the denial/obfuscation lobby getting.
      Out of interest Razor, exactly what bearing do you think those startling revelations should have on our perception of AGW?
      https://edition.cnn.com/2018/10/07/world/climate-change-new-ipcc-report-wxc/index.html
      Let me make a prediction. About five years from now. ” Demented Recluse Makes Stunning Claims About AGW Data After Reading Flattened Frog Guts on Motorway.”

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        Hang on JB! Your go to man, Guy McPherson, predicted quite some time ago it’d be all over red rover in less than 5 years. Don’t tell me you’ve given him the flick, or are you both perpetually having two bob each way me old mate?

      • Razor says:

        But you see old bean this is just the problem. When one is dealing with very small numbers when dealing with the alleged increases then it doesn’t take much at all to skew them. This is a key set of numbers used in the modelling which the IPCC are using to justify its push to have Australia destroy its economy and way of life.

        Also now where have I heard that expression we must act in this decade or it’s too late? 15 years ago was supposed to be too late! Since the we’ve bought ourselves two more lots of 10.

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          Quite correct. It was probably too late twenty years ago when even some of the most rabid Republicans were insisting we needed to take action on climate change immediately. It is definitely, absolutely positively too late now.

          Then the Koch Brothers and their cronies shut them down by threatening to withdraw campaign donations.

          It is too late Razor, we have murdered our grandchildren. Perversely, and the human race is deserving of a major dose of perversity as it exits with a whimper, things are now irreversible and decreasing our emissions will make things hotter and worse!

          Burn coal I say. But don’t try and put lipstick on the pig. Our children are waking up to the selfish monkey nut jar trapped old bastards who bought this about.

          Start practising some humility. It’s never too late to realise that the filthy rich and their paid handmaidens have had their hands up your shirt all your life. They don’t tell you jack**** about what is really happening.

    • Bella says:

      Again I can’t get the link mate but the source leads me to believe it’s not.
      AGW is happening & that’s a fact that 97% of global scientists agree with now, so to continue to deny what we have done & continue to do to our planet, is folly in the extreme.
      How Morrison gets away with deliberately falsifying the real data on carbon emissions makes me sick but fortunately most Australians now understand that the current government have no intentions of meeting the Paris Agreement nor lowering power prices with investment in renewables.
      Clearly, the fossil fuel industry has retained their ‘influence’ on the LibNats pockets & minds but nobody gives a rats about what’s ahead for my son or the family he wanted to have.
      Young people like him in their twenties/thirties are disgusted with the blind ignorance of our politicians, knowing that the coming catastrophe could have been reversed but is now probably unstoppable.

    • Trivalve says:

      Probably not, no.

    • John O'Hagan says:

      You mean, surely it can’t be that NewsCorp is trotting out the standard disinformation campaign it runs each time an IPCC report comes out?

      Of course, each of the journalists involved has arrived at their conclusions utterly independently, and they happen to line up with the non-science funded by the fossil fuel industry by sheer coincidence.

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        Actually JOH , I’m beginning to see the light myself. Morrison in presenting his credentials to the coal industry carried a lump of coal into the parliament and held it in his arms.
        As far as I know not one person in Parliament House that day has developed a terminal illness or died from the exposure to that lump of coal.

        I’m sure a coat of clear lacquer would not have rendered it safe if the stuff is dangerous.

    • Razor says:

      I see our old friends at the University of East Anglia are involved again…….

    • Dismayed says:

      razor you should have got rid of your coal shares years ago. You continue to mislead because of your own self interest. Coal assets are dead assets and will be written down in value over the next decade.No Surprises.

  • Wissendorf@mail.com says:

    J O’H Open this link and scroll to the table at the bottom. All the extra costs associated with growing soy beans are absent with animal production. From agriculture Victoria. http://agriculture.vic.gov.au/agriculture/grains-and-other-crops/crop-production/growing-soybean.
    I had actually overestimated the average production by 12kg per hectare. Note the amount of tractor work required to work the seed bed (4 passes) and the addition of weedicides and fertilizers and other costs. Harvesting also costs a bomb. All these odds and sods add up to a lot of money that the consumer ultimately pays.

    Cattle require 2 compulsory veterinary medicines. The price of cattle varies a bit but you could check the price of a yearling steer, and look up the killout Hot Carcass Weight for a yearling steer. It would average about 150kg.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Oh yeah, that explains why steak is cheaper than soybeans.

      • Milton says:

        Supply and demand not one of your strengths, Jean? Mind you, checking out the price of organic or vegetarian type burgers etc suggest some people know their maths and are simply catering to the wealthy elites. The lefty, greenie, socialist, labor types hypocrisy knows no bounds. Í mean fair suck of the soy bottle, cobber!

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          We can agree on one thing, I have no idea how you came up with that and nor do you!
          If steak could be produced cheaper than soy beans do you think there would be more demand for steak? Or not?
          You’ve managed to be a complete goose on just about everything Milt. please don’t have a crack at economics. You’ll cop a class action from people straining their guts laughing.

  • jack says:

    Just thinking about the footy, has there ever been a losing coach in a grand final who has come out of the season with his reputation quite so enhanced as Nathan Buckley has?

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Hard to think of one. Maybe Lyon after St Kilda and Freo.

    • Trivalve says:

      I have to say I never bagged him like many did. I figure I don’t know enough to comment. With luck(!) he’ll be further advanced this time next year.

      • jack says:

        well credit where it’s due, I don’t think they were the better side over the year, WCE beat them three times, but they managed to knock off the red hot favourites in a prelim and lead a grand final until beer o’clock

        • Trivalve says:

          With all the ifs and buts they might have won but they didn’t. They sure looked like a team that deserved to be there though.

  • Boadicea says:

    Is Alan Jones running the country these days? Just askin’

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    POTUS Trump kicking goal after goal, transforming the USA for the better. He does 1 or 2 live Rallies a week and when we go to the USA in March next year we shall be attending one for sure.
    Love him or loath him we have never seen someone like this in Public Office. He is not and never will be a Politician and speaks his mind on all subjects.
    Here is his last rally late last week in Kansas, they are packed to the rafters!
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1kPtrXgbXTA

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    “….drastic changes in land use …. ” etc,etc.
    Hope I can still grow me lentil and chick pea crops.
    Unprecedented changes in all aspects of society needed to meet global warming target: IPCC report
    https://www.theaustralian.com.au › national-affairs › climate

  • Milton says:

    Mark Latham’s editor cuts some of his finest creative work, The Defamation Defence, from 76 pages to 3 pages. Don’t let them do it, Mark. Be true to your gift and genius.

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