Google AI
The Times Australia
The Times News

.

Scott Morrison trips on a truth test

  • Written by Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

With the opposition and other critics homing in on the issues of his character and integrity, Scott Morrison on Monday played right into their hands.

It was question time on the first day of parliament’s final sitting fortnight for the year (and incidentally, the last day the much-respected Tony Smith would be in the Speaker’s chair).

The issue was an old one, that had been canvassed before, giving all the more reason why the prime minister should have been careful with his words.

Labor MP Fiona Phillips, from the NSW marginal seat of Gilmore (which the government hopes to reclaim) asked Morrison why, when her electorate was burning in the bushfires of 2019, his office told journalists he wasn’t on holiday in Hawaii.

Morrison replied that he’d texted Anthony Albanese “from the plane when I was going on that leave, and told him where I was going and he was fully aware of where I was travelling with my family”.

Half of this was untrue, as Albanese knew full well. Morrison had not said “where” he was going at all. There were some angry exchanges across the table.

After question time, Albanese in a personal explanation said Morrison had not indicated his destination in the text.

Read more: Grattan on Friday: Morrison gives religious discrimination bill priority over national integrity commission[1]

Morrison then made his looseness-with-the-truth worse, redefining the meaning of “where”.

“Where I was going was on leave, Mr Speaker, and that was the important thing I sent to the leader of the opposition. […] I told him I was taking leave.”

But soon after, Morrison or his advisers realised the need to get the carpet sweeper out. The PM made another intervention.

In a rare admission, he told the House: “I wish to add to an answer. I want to confirm what the leader of the opposition said, that in that text I did not tell him the destination of where I was going on leave with my family.

"I simply communicated to him that I was taking leave.

"When I was referring to, ‘He knew where I was going and was fully aware I was travelling with my family,’ what I meant was that we were going on leave together.

"I know I didn’t tell him where we were going because, Mr Speaker, that is a private matter where members take leave, and I know I didn’t tell him the destination – nor would I and nor would he expect me to have told him where he [sic] was going.

"I simply confirmed to him that I was taking leave with my family and he was aware of that at that time.”

This is extraordinary. First the PM says he told Albanese “where” he was going and emphasised the point. Then, pushed onto the back foot, he admits he didn’t tell him that and says neither of them would have expected him to do so. It was a spectacular example of Morrison’s penchant to slip and slide around things, but one that, given the written evidence and his own logic, was always going to end badly.

Read more: View from The Hill: Scott Morrison caught in catch-22 over the issue of his integrity[2]

This wasn’t the only untidiness of the day.

In the Senate, five government senators crossed the floor to support Pauline Hanson’s bill to ban discrimination against the unvaccinated. The bill covered federal, state and territory government and the private sector.

Those Coalition senators who voted for the bill were two former ministers, Matt Canavan and Concetta Fierravanti-Wells, as well as Alex Antic, Gerard Rennick and Sam McMahon.

Ironically Hanson could not vote for her own bill, defeated 5-44, because she was participating in parliament remotely, which doesn’t permit casting a vote. She had to confine herself to a fiery speech, that was matched by an opposing one from another crossbencher, Jacqui Lambie, who launched a ferocious attack on One Nation.

Hanson said: “State governments are relishing this extraordinary power to command and control […]

"The Victorian government relishes this power so much they’re trying to permanently enshrine it in law, giving the premier unprecedented authority to act like a dictator – and still the prime minister has done nothing to stop this discrimination.”

But Lambie said: “If you want to champion against discrimination, you don’t want One Nation”.

“One Nation is not a fighter against discrimination. One Nation seeks to profit from it. It’s just a fundraising exercise for them and that’s all this is.”

Read more: White supremacist and far right ideology underpin anti-vax movements[3]

Morrison had facilitated the bill being considered in an attempt to mollify Hanson, who is opposing government legislation generally over the vaccine mandate issue. Despite this gesture, she is maintaining her position.

Senators Rennick and Antic are withholding their votes from the government over the same issue, making the outlook in the Senate chaotic for this fortnight.

On Tuesday the Coalition party room will get the government’s religious discrimination legislation.

Read more https://theconversation.com/view-from-the-hill-scott-morrison-trips-on-a-truth-test-172316

Times Magazine

TRUCKIES UNDER THE PUMP AS FUEL PRICES BECOME TWO THIRDS OF OPERATING COSTS FOR SOME BUSINESS OWNERS

As Australia’s fuel crisis continues, truck drivers across the nation are being hit hard despite t...

iPhone: What are the latest features in iOS 26.5 Beta 1?

Apple has quietly released the first developer beta of iOS 26.5, and while it may not be the hea...

The Voltx Topband V1200 Portable Power Station Review

When we received a Voltx Topband V1200 portable power station for review, a staff member at The Time...

Is E10 fuel bad for my car? And could it save me money?

Fuel has become a precious, and increasingly expensive, commodity. The ongoing Middle East co...

Efficient Water Carts for Dust Control

Managing dust effectively is a critical challenge across numerous industries in Australia. From sp...

How new rules could stop AI scrapers destroying the internet

Australians are among the most anxious in the world[1] about artificial intelligence (AI). This...

The Times Features

THE MTick® ARRIVES IN AUSTRALIA

GenM – The Menopause Partner for Brands and Home of the MTick®, - has brought its life  changing, ...

Brisbane celebrates 25 years of Roma Street Parkland

One of Brisbane’s gardening jewels will mark its 25th anniversary on April 6, commemorating the ...

You’re hungry. There’s a McDonald’s ahead. Should you g…

What are the unhealthy options? It’s a familiar moment. You’re driving, working late, travelli...

Hearing Australia first in the world to provide innovat…

Australians with hearing loss will benefit from a new generation hearing aid fitting prescription...

Running Run Army this month? Here's how to prep for rac…

With Run Army Brisbane this Sunday and Townsville to follow on 19 April, GO2 Health’s Kate Boucher...

As the Iran war disrupts supplies, will it affect acces…

As the conflict in the Middle East disrupts fuel, shipping and food supplies, many are starting ...

Finding the Right Disability Housing in Perth: A Practi…

Where you live shapes everything. It shapes the relationships you build, the community you belong ...

Housing construction costs are already rising, increasi…

For Australia’s building industry, higher fuel costs since the start of the Middle East war have...

Shou Sugi Ban: The Ancient Japanese Timber Technique Tr…

There is something quietly extraordinary about a building material that has been refined over cent...