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The most corrupt government in Australian federal history does has some standards around accountability and integrity. It’s just that — like Bridget McKenzie — you have to have particularly awful judgment to be in danger of breaching them. And in the case of industry minister and professional man-child Christian Porter, judgment is very much the operative word.
Porter, for all his legal and political experience, has zero judgment. He believes it’s appropriate to remain a minister while unresolved allegations of historic sexual assault — vehemently denied — remain over him. He believed it was appropriate to pursue the ABC for defamation despite it never naming him in relation to the allegations. He believed it was a good idea to engage a conflicted lawyer on his team. And when his lawyer was knocked out and his case ran into the sand — fancy a defamation case that doesn’t win in Australia! — he cut bait and settled for his costs being covered, insisting at a media conference that he’d inflicted a major defeat on the ABC. Into the bargain, he wanted the ABC’s defence locked in the vault.
Even his mates at News Corp didn’t like that.
Porter’s latest spectacular misjudgment was to believe it was appropriate, even under the Commonwealth’s absurdly lax transparency requirements, to maintain that he’d been gifted money for his legal expenses from an anonymous source and, well, what’s a bloke to do?
Porter thus appears to have blindsided his colleagues and perhaps even the prime minister, who has once again reached for the Gaetjens Option — asking his home handyman Big Phil to fix a major problem. Gaetjens is notionally examining the ministerial code of conduct to see whether Porter breached it. Given section 2.2.1 says…
Ministers are required to exercise the functions of their public office unaffected by considerations of personal advantage or disadvantage. Ministers, in their official capacity, may therefore accept customary official gifts, hospitality, tokens of appreciation, and similar formal gestures in accordance with the relevant guidelines, but must not seek or encourage any form of gift in their personal capacity.
…it’s hard to see how Porter hasn’t breached it. But Gaetjens understands the political needs of his boss and can work at lightning or glacial speed as required. Likely, this one will be an hours or days job, not the year-plus Brittany Higgins effort. And it will be determined by a simply political calculation: are the Liberals’ small chances of hanging on to the seat of Pearce in WA greater or smaller with Porter?
The man is already damaged goods in a state with a rampantly popular Labor premier and a likely swing against Morrison — Porter opting to help Clive Palmer try to force open the state borders won’t be forgotten. His chances won’t be helped by being haunted by demands to reveal who his anonymous benefactor is at every campaign stop.
But what if the WA Liberals — improbably, of course, given their shambolic state — can conjure a presentable female candidate for Pearce instead of Porter? You’d have to reckon she’d perform better than that bloke, even if she lacked his personal name recognition.
On that basis, Porter might be told to out his anonymous benefactor or go to the backbench, from which vantage point he should consider pursuing other opportunities. It’s pretty clear that leaving the lingering smell of an anonymous donor over a government already well-known for rorting and corruption isn’t an attractive option for Porter’s colleagues.
Or the anonymous donor could spare Porter the trouble and out themselves. A media mogul. A prominent businessman. A longtime WA Liberal backer, a Chinese billionaire with close ties to the CCP — who knows?
But that won’t change that Christian Porter has no judgment and shouldn’t be in a ministry even as bereft of talent as this one.
It seemed to me that Porter’s greatest failure in judgement was his decision to prosecute Witness K and then his lawyer Bernard K in a desperate effort to protect Howard and Downers unconscionable breech of Timor Leste sovereignty. And then to do so in secret trials on spurious claims of national security.
Australia’s most senior LNP Government ministers breached Timor Leste national security and then the senior Ministers in the next LNP gov’t cry Australia’s national security in its secret prosecution and trials of the whistle blower and his lawyer.
I find the whole affair shameful. Porter judgement on this matter demonstrated his obsession with using law to enhance LNP power rather than using law to enhance justice. We should all fear the loss of open and transparent prosecution and judicial trials.
Porter should go on the basis of this atrocious act alone.
Surely not even the billionaires’ club in WA is going to support a man with such a questionable history and an obviously flawed character? Unless Phil Gaetjens says he’s ok and then, no problem.
Standards, I hear you ask…
What standards?
We’re talking about Porter, not Roberts-Smith.
Although I think it’s fair to assume that without a public outcry, Morrison would not have given the situation another thought. If a tree falls in the forest etc.
I think that Blind Freddy would have seen the problem immediately
Mr Morrison isn’t Blind Freddy.
I’ll be very surprised if anything happens to Porter over his latest effort. in any government worthy of the name the PM would immediately require his departure from the Parliament. . There is no such thing as a ministerial standard, or integrity, in this rolling shambles which some people, I hope tongue-in-cheek, call a government.
The PMs Divine advice and help from his two best mates the Pastor and the Qanon friend are the supporters who help form the PMs decision making ,morals and ethics
The biggest criminal gang in Australia with their hands in our pockets .Favorite food in Victoria, lobster with a few mates for company
The guest speaker was Matthew Guy, now leader of the Corruptition.
The alleged mafia boss has been previously described by police in court as a person allegedly involved in “murder, gun-shot wounding and arson”. He has been named as a suspected hit-man in two coronial inquests in the 1990s and identified in a recent police intelligence briefing as “the leader” of a “well established” Calabrian “mafia” cell in Melbourne that remains a powerful presence at Victoria’s fruit and vegetable wholesale market.
This alleged drug trafficker was given a visa in 2005 after the suspected mafia boss lobbied and donated to the Liberal Party as part of a campaign to have the Howard government overturn its decision to deport the man on character grounds.
Allegations from a Liberal insider that the donations amounted to a bribery attempt were investigated by the federal police in 2009 in a probe that generated significant publicity.
The alleged mafia boss and his associate who was granted a visa can not be named due to a criminal court suppression order. Liberal sources confirmed that hire of Melbourne Waterfront Venues was donated by the alleged mafia boss for the $250 a head dinner. Food and drink was also heavily subsidised.
No specific records of the fundraiser have been lodged with the Australian Electoral Commission, …Despite being the subject of numerous organised crime probes, the alleged mob boss has never been charged with a criminal offence and denies any involvement in organised crime or political bribery. The federal police bribery probe was closed after gathering insufficient evidence.
Second biggest criminal gang maybe
Mafia impunity
There are questions now about law enforcement priorities, to ask if the Calabrian Mafia has been overlooked, deemed too politically thorny to properly arrest. Each year, the Australian Crime Commission releases a report on organised crime. Sterilised of any critical intelligence, the report nonetheless attempts to share the scope of the problem. Except each year there is a notable omission – the ‘Ndrangheta. Of the omission, Clive Small says, “By naming the ‘Ndrangheta, the ACC might actually be forced to address the problem.”
Meanwhile, Victoria Police homicide detectives, alongside members of the Purana organised crime taskforce, are hunting Acquaro’s killer. There are rumours that no local hit man would take the job, and that an Italian assassin was flown in – and out – quickly
https://www.thesaturdaypaper.com.au/news/law-crime/2016/03/25/joseph-acquaro-and-the-calabrian-mafia/14588660413043
Another great article BK.
Professional man-child absolutely nails him. It’s a despairing time to be a politics tragic watching as standards scrape ever lower and become ever less defensible.
Porter’s like the school prefect who has spent his whole school life under the protective wing of headmaster, to the point that he’s completely unmoored from the realities of what even Sir can do to make the horrid problems go away.
Sounds like Abbott under the then Professor of Law at uni good old disgraced Dyson Heydon
I was thinking jolly-hockeysticks things-that-batter Downer myself. Don’t know if he had a protector, but he was certainly a child-man. Hard to consider someone less deserving of national high office… except of course Cash, Hunt, Joyce, Robert,…