Malcolm misses his days of Glory
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Malcolm misses his days of Glory
Through all the political mayhem, deceit, betrayal of confidences and posturing only one stands tall and unbesmirched - MT. A very sad read when the emperor doesn't realise he has no clothes and applies a scorched earth policy on his exit.
Inside Malcolm’s world of gossip and axe-grinding
By SIMON BENSON From PoliticsApril 16, 2020
Malcolm Turnbull has sensationally claimed Scott Morrison and the Coalition he once led didn’t deserve to win the 2019 election in his highly anticipated memoir.
Former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull outside his Sydney residence. Picture: AAP
Malcolm Turnbull has sensationally claimed that Scott Morrison and the Coalition he once led didn’t deserve to win the 2019 election and delivered highly personal accounts of his relationship with the current Prime Minister and scathing assessments of his former cabinet colleagues.
In his highly anticipated memoir, due to be released on Monday, Mr Turnbull recounts his own version of events that led to his dismissal as prime minister in August 2018, while revealing the darkest days of a political career that was marked by a bout of severe depression.
In claims that will be hotly disputed by those he attacks, Mr Turnbull says that colleagues of Mr Morrison, including the Prime Minister’s now closest confidants Mathias Cormann and Peter Dutton, had once described Mr Morrison as a “Machiavellian plotter” who could not be trusted.
According to those who have read the manuscripts, Mr Turnbull describes Mr Dutton as a “narcissist” and “self-delusional” in his belief that he could become prime minister while revealing his personal anguish at what he believes was the ultimate betrayal at the hands of his finance minister, Senator Cormann.
Mathias Cormann and Peter Dutton leave a partyroom meeting at Parliament House after Malcolm Turnbull declared the Liberal leadership vacant in August 2018. Picture: AAP
But he also accuses Mr Morrison of double dealing in his bid to steal the prime ministership when he had had to be propped up as treasurer and later describes his “cringe-worthy” campaign to portray himself as the “daggy dad” from the suburbs.
“He’s a professional politician who understands marketing and messaging better than most,” Mr Turnbull writes. “His cringe-worthy ‘daggy dad’ persona is more exaggerated than it is conflated, but in net terms it probably helped.
‘Cringe-worthy daggy dad persona’: Malcolm Turnbull’s successor as Prime Minister, Scott Morrison. Picture: AAP
“All that aside, however, the truth is that Labor lost the election that the Coalition, after the August coup, did not deserve to win.”
Mr Turnbull’s criticisms extend even to those closest to him, including Julie Bishop. While describing her as one of his closest friends, he reveals how his former deputy had wanted to become leader but would never have had the support to attain it.
He also lightheartedly accuses fellow moderate Christopher Pyne, whom he also described as close, as being a “gossip”.
“He was a superb raconteur and while very efficient as a minister, his circumspection had its limits,” Mr Turnbull writes.
“When it came to gossip, he was the soul of indiscretion, especially if it was amusing or salacious.”
GRAPHIC: Malcolm’s views on ...
Christopher Pyne, Malcolm Turnbull and Josh Frydenberg take a look inside the dispatch box in the House of Representatives at Parliament House in Canberra ahead of the May 2018 Budget. Picture: AAP
The former Liberal leader also claims to have been the mastermind behind the creation of an Australian version of the left-wing news site The Guardian, urging its UK boss to set up in Australia, brokering its funding and also being instrumental in appointing two senior press gallery journalists, Lenore Taylor and Katharine Murphy, to run its editorial direction out of Canberra.
Mr Turnbull admits that he would have personally funded the project himself, which would have required $20m, but couldn’t because he was a politician.
“Given my political role, I could hardly participate myself but I knew someone who would,” Mr Turnbull writes. He then retells the story of how he approached businessman Graeme Wood, who was on “the political left” and had been a generous donor to the Greens, and persuaded him to “use his fortune to bankroll an Australian edition of The Guardian”.
Mr Turnbull admits that even The Guardian then “rarely endorsed my or my government’s policies”. At the same time, he repeats his claims that the loss of his leadership was not the result of his own political failings but a conspiracy of “the right-wing thugs” with the complicity of conservative media, including The Australian and Sky News.
Malcolm Turnbull visits a childcare centre in Sydney’s west the month before his leadership ended in 2018. Picture: Britta Campion
Mr Turnbull repeats false claims of a Murdoch family conspiracy to depose him in favour of his predecessor Tony Abbott.
In the book, A Bigger Picture, Mr Turnbull devotes many pages to divulging highly personal and confidential messages between colleagues, including detailed WhatsApp conversations and diary entries quoting messages from his senior colleagues and others, including journalists from Nine newspapers. He also quotes a private conversation with then US president Barack Obama, who told him not to worry about the prospect of the election of Donald Trump, saying Americans would never elect a “lunatic” to the White House.
Yet, despite releasing swaths of confidential messages and conversations, Mr Turnbull admonishes his former colleagues, political rivals and others throughout the book for releasing confidential information and cabinet considerations.
He does not mention that throughout Mr Abbott’s time as prime minister, the political interests of Mr Turnbull and his supporters were often leaked, including cabinet discussions, to embarrass Mr Abbott.
Malcolm Turnbull speaks in front of a portrait of former prime minister Tony Abbott at Parliament House in 2017. Picture: AAP
While insisting he didn’t ever believe Mr Morrison was trying to damage the government, he repeatedly raises “trust” issues about the then senior minister he accused of using the media to float ideas and promote his causes.
Mr Turnbull also publishes a long personal note written by Mr Morrison after he became Prime Minister, in which the new leader praised his vanquished predecessor.
“Only you can know how I feel today but I cannot begin to know how you feel,” Mr Morrison is claimed to have told Mr Turnbull in a message.
“I loved working for and with you. I’m really proud of what we did. And that is always how I will always feel and speak of it.
“I don’t know why this all happened but now it has come upon me, you know I will be relying on my faith friends and values to overcome and conquer what is ahead.
“But from one PM to another, thank you for all you did for your country. No one knows that contribution better than me. Love you mate.”
Mr Turnbull replied: “You too Scomo”.
Malcolm Turnbull with Scott Morrison in the House of Representatives.
Mr Turnbull was praiseworthy of Mr Morrison’s abilities and said he had resisted calls from Senator Cormann to cut Mr Morrison out of the loop when he was treasurer. “Mathias regarded Scott as emotional, narcissistic and untrustworthy and told me so regularly,” Mr Turnbull claims.
“Of course if Mathias had a poor opinion of Scott, Dutton’s dislike of him was even stronger.”
After he seized the prime ministership from Mr Abbott in 2015, Mr Turnbull writes about the thrill of it all.
“The pace of events hadn’t allowed a moment of reflection, but it had happened: Lucy and I were sitting in C1. I was the prime minister,” he writes.
The proud reference to the prime ministerial vehicle, C1, is in contrast to Mr Turnbull’s criticism, also not in the book, of Mr Morrison for not calling an early election after becoming leader because he wanted to “keep his ass in the back of C1”.
Malcolm Turnbull and George Brandis visit Governor-General, Sir Peter Cosgrove, for the assent of the Marriage Amendment (Definition and Religious Freedoms) Bill 2017 in 2017. Picture: Kym Smith
Mr Turnbull also reveals a message he was sent by former attorney-general George Brandis, a moderate ally, who accused him of being politically naive.
“But in contradictory claims he had never regarded Mr Morrison as working against him,” he writes. “I didn’t regard Scott as working against me in a rivalrous way and reposed trust in him but he needed to be managed carefully and always counselled intensely about the need for confidentiality.
“Mathias and I were at our wits’ end as to how to manage Scott. As Mathias said: we have a treasurer problem and the problem was one of trust”.
In one of the most provocative tell-all memoirs from a former prime minister, Mr Turnbull also recounts a conversation with former prime minister Kevin Rudd over the rebuttal of his bid to become UN secretary-general.
Mr Turnbull claims that Mr Rudd described him as a “little f..king rat”.
“You piece of shit,” Mr Rudd was reported to have told Mr Turnbull. “I’m going to get you for this. I’m going to come down to Australia and campaign against you in every part of the country. I will remind them of Godwin f..king Grech you …”
Former Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd. Picture: AAP
He reveals that Bill Shorten and Ms Bishop, the then foreign minister, thought it would be a good idea to support the Rudd bid for the UN, but Mr Morrison persuaded him not to back the idea.
Mr Turnbull devotes a chapter to Mr Abbott and his then chief of staff Peta Credlin whom he also cites as being instrumental in the destruction of his leadership.
He is unflattering of Mr Abbott, claiming that privately Ms Credlin was disdainful. But he writes that Ms Credlin transformed Mr Abbott into a prime minister.
While Mr Abbott won a mammoth victory in the 2013 election, Mr Turnbull said he needed a “positive agenda” to be successful.
Mr Turnbull skates over the dismal election result he later presided over, in which Mr Shorten almost snatched power.
Mr Turnbull is also critical of his former deputy, then Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce, who he accuses of lying to him over his relationship with a staff member.
“It wouldn’t be true to say that I had no doubt he was lying to me as there’ve been examples of very intense relationships between ministers and staff that aren’t sexual in nature,” he says.
“Among far too many politicians there is an ugly blokey culture of disrespecting women that had nothing to do with adultery but was all about the abuse of power,” he writes. He feared voters would think: “So that’s what our politicians do in Canberra, spend our money boozing and screwing the staff.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation ... cb8861f3b4
Inside Malcolm’s world of gossip and axe-grinding
By SIMON BENSON From PoliticsApril 16, 2020
Malcolm Turnbull has sensationally claimed Scott Morrison and the Coalition he once led didn’t deserve to win the 2019 election in his highly anticipated memoir.
Former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull outside his Sydney residence. Picture: AAP
Malcolm Turnbull has sensationally claimed that Scott Morrison and the Coalition he once led didn’t deserve to win the 2019 election and delivered highly personal accounts of his relationship with the current Prime Minister and scathing assessments of his former cabinet colleagues.
In his highly anticipated memoir, due to be released on Monday, Mr Turnbull recounts his own version of events that led to his dismissal as prime minister in August 2018, while revealing the darkest days of a political career that was marked by a bout of severe depression.
In claims that will be hotly disputed by those he attacks, Mr Turnbull says that colleagues of Mr Morrison, including the Prime Minister’s now closest confidants Mathias Cormann and Peter Dutton, had once described Mr Morrison as a “Machiavellian plotter” who could not be trusted.
According to those who have read the manuscripts, Mr Turnbull describes Mr Dutton as a “narcissist” and “self-delusional” in his belief that he could become prime minister while revealing his personal anguish at what he believes was the ultimate betrayal at the hands of his finance minister, Senator Cormann.
Mathias Cormann and Peter Dutton leave a partyroom meeting at Parliament House after Malcolm Turnbull declared the Liberal leadership vacant in August 2018. Picture: AAP
But he also accuses Mr Morrison of double dealing in his bid to steal the prime ministership when he had had to be propped up as treasurer and later describes his “cringe-worthy” campaign to portray himself as the “daggy dad” from the suburbs.
“He’s a professional politician who understands marketing and messaging better than most,” Mr Turnbull writes. “His cringe-worthy ‘daggy dad’ persona is more exaggerated than it is conflated, but in net terms it probably helped.
‘Cringe-worthy daggy dad persona’: Malcolm Turnbull’s successor as Prime Minister, Scott Morrison. Picture: AAP
“All that aside, however, the truth is that Labor lost the election that the Coalition, after the August coup, did not deserve to win.”
Mr Turnbull’s criticisms extend even to those closest to him, including Julie Bishop. While describing her as one of his closest friends, he reveals how his former deputy had wanted to become leader but would never have had the support to attain it.
He also lightheartedly accuses fellow moderate Christopher Pyne, whom he also described as close, as being a “gossip”.
“He was a superb raconteur and while very efficient as a minister, his circumspection had its limits,” Mr Turnbull writes.
“When it came to gossip, he was the soul of indiscretion, especially if it was amusing or salacious.”
GRAPHIC: Malcolm’s views on ...
Christopher Pyne, Malcolm Turnbull and Josh Frydenberg take a look inside the dispatch box in the House of Representatives at Parliament House in Canberra ahead of the May 2018 Budget. Picture: AAP
The former Liberal leader also claims to have been the mastermind behind the creation of an Australian version of the left-wing news site The Guardian, urging its UK boss to set up in Australia, brokering its funding and also being instrumental in appointing two senior press gallery journalists, Lenore Taylor and Katharine Murphy, to run its editorial direction out of Canberra.
Mr Turnbull admits that he would have personally funded the project himself, which would have required $20m, but couldn’t because he was a politician.
“Given my political role, I could hardly participate myself but I knew someone who would,” Mr Turnbull writes. He then retells the story of how he approached businessman Graeme Wood, who was on “the political left” and had been a generous donor to the Greens, and persuaded him to “use his fortune to bankroll an Australian edition of The Guardian”.
Mr Turnbull admits that even The Guardian then “rarely endorsed my or my government’s policies”. At the same time, he repeats his claims that the loss of his leadership was not the result of his own political failings but a conspiracy of “the right-wing thugs” with the complicity of conservative media, including The Australian and Sky News.
Malcolm Turnbull visits a childcare centre in Sydney’s west the month before his leadership ended in 2018. Picture: Britta Campion
Mr Turnbull repeats false claims of a Murdoch family conspiracy to depose him in favour of his predecessor Tony Abbott.
In the book, A Bigger Picture, Mr Turnbull devotes many pages to divulging highly personal and confidential messages between colleagues, including detailed WhatsApp conversations and diary entries quoting messages from his senior colleagues and others, including journalists from Nine newspapers. He also quotes a private conversation with then US president Barack Obama, who told him not to worry about the prospect of the election of Donald Trump, saying Americans would never elect a “lunatic” to the White House.
Yet, despite releasing swaths of confidential messages and conversations, Mr Turnbull admonishes his former colleagues, political rivals and others throughout the book for releasing confidential information and cabinet considerations.
He does not mention that throughout Mr Abbott’s time as prime minister, the political interests of Mr Turnbull and his supporters were often leaked, including cabinet discussions, to embarrass Mr Abbott.
Malcolm Turnbull speaks in front of a portrait of former prime minister Tony Abbott at Parliament House in 2017. Picture: AAP
While insisting he didn’t ever believe Mr Morrison was trying to damage the government, he repeatedly raises “trust” issues about the then senior minister he accused of using the media to float ideas and promote his causes.
Mr Turnbull also publishes a long personal note written by Mr Morrison after he became Prime Minister, in which the new leader praised his vanquished predecessor.
“Only you can know how I feel today but I cannot begin to know how you feel,” Mr Morrison is claimed to have told Mr Turnbull in a message.
“I loved working for and with you. I’m really proud of what we did. And that is always how I will always feel and speak of it.
“I don’t know why this all happened but now it has come upon me, you know I will be relying on my faith friends and values to overcome and conquer what is ahead.
“But from one PM to another, thank you for all you did for your country. No one knows that contribution better than me. Love you mate.”
Mr Turnbull replied: “You too Scomo”.
Malcolm Turnbull with Scott Morrison in the House of Representatives.
Mr Turnbull was praiseworthy of Mr Morrison’s abilities and said he had resisted calls from Senator Cormann to cut Mr Morrison out of the loop when he was treasurer. “Mathias regarded Scott as emotional, narcissistic and untrustworthy and told me so regularly,” Mr Turnbull claims.
“Of course if Mathias had a poor opinion of Scott, Dutton’s dislike of him was even stronger.”
After he seized the prime ministership from Mr Abbott in 2015, Mr Turnbull writes about the thrill of it all.
“The pace of events hadn’t allowed a moment of reflection, but it had happened: Lucy and I were sitting in C1. I was the prime minister,” he writes.
The proud reference to the prime ministerial vehicle, C1, is in contrast to Mr Turnbull’s criticism, also not in the book, of Mr Morrison for not calling an early election after becoming leader because he wanted to “keep his ass in the back of C1”.
Malcolm Turnbull and George Brandis visit Governor-General, Sir Peter Cosgrove, for the assent of the Marriage Amendment (Definition and Religious Freedoms) Bill 2017 in 2017. Picture: Kym Smith
Mr Turnbull also reveals a message he was sent by former attorney-general George Brandis, a moderate ally, who accused him of being politically naive.
“But in contradictory claims he had never regarded Mr Morrison as working against him,” he writes. “I didn’t regard Scott as working against me in a rivalrous way and reposed trust in him but he needed to be managed carefully and always counselled intensely about the need for confidentiality.
“Mathias and I were at our wits’ end as to how to manage Scott. As Mathias said: we have a treasurer problem and the problem was one of trust”.
In one of the most provocative tell-all memoirs from a former prime minister, Mr Turnbull also recounts a conversation with former prime minister Kevin Rudd over the rebuttal of his bid to become UN secretary-general.
Mr Turnbull claims that Mr Rudd described him as a “little f..king rat”.
“You piece of shit,” Mr Rudd was reported to have told Mr Turnbull. “I’m going to get you for this. I’m going to come down to Australia and campaign against you in every part of the country. I will remind them of Godwin f..king Grech you …”
Former Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd. Picture: AAP
He reveals that Bill Shorten and Ms Bishop, the then foreign minister, thought it would be a good idea to support the Rudd bid for the UN, but Mr Morrison persuaded him not to back the idea.
Mr Turnbull devotes a chapter to Mr Abbott and his then chief of staff Peta Credlin whom he also cites as being instrumental in the destruction of his leadership.
He is unflattering of Mr Abbott, claiming that privately Ms Credlin was disdainful. But he writes that Ms Credlin transformed Mr Abbott into a prime minister.
While Mr Abbott won a mammoth victory in the 2013 election, Mr Turnbull said he needed a “positive agenda” to be successful.
Mr Turnbull skates over the dismal election result he later presided over, in which Mr Shorten almost snatched power.
Mr Turnbull is also critical of his former deputy, then Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce, who he accuses of lying to him over his relationship with a staff member.
“It wouldn’t be true to say that I had no doubt he was lying to me as there’ve been examples of very intense relationships between ministers and staff that aren’t sexual in nature,” he says.
“Among far too many politicians there is an ugly blokey culture of disrespecting women that had nothing to do with adultery but was all about the abuse of power,” he writes. He feared voters would think: “So that’s what our politicians do in Canberra, spend our money boozing and screwing the staff.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation ... cb8861f3b4
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- Posts: 1355
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2016 10:56 am
Re: Malcolm misses his days of Glory
The COMMENTS praising Malcolm are real lulus.
bevan 21 MINUTES AGO
Takes one to know one.. na na na na na na!
Tim 22 MINUTES AGO
What a bitter old man! Just shows money can't buy happiness!!
Lyn 21 MINUTES AGO
Or respect.
Sally 18 MINUTES AGO
Perfect headline
Helen 23 MINUTES AGO
I expected MT would turn out to be a better more decisive politician than Tony Abbott. Time has shown that he really was out of his depth.
Ann 19 MINUTES AGO
Oh Malcolm you can't fool all of the people all of the time
Garry 22 MINUTES AGO
I suppose this all shows why Mr. Turnbull had to go.
evan 28 MINUTES AGO
Mirror, mirror on the wall. ..
jillian 31 MINUTES AGO
After all this bile and bitterness....do you feel better Malcom??
I feel quite sick for you and your family, and the legacy you will have to live with.
Graham 33 MINUTES AGO
Malcolm Turnbull's stature as an ex Prime Minister diminishes further with every utterance about his former colleagues. If he wants to find out the cause of his loss of the leadership he needs to take a look in the mirror.
Maxwell 36 MINUTES AGO
The waffle continues.....
Andrew 29 MINUTES AGO
Yes here in the comments , nothing new either
Ian 13 MINUTES AGO
Yes Andrew, like you we all get to voice an opinion.
william 36 MINUTES AGO
Well lets give credit where credit is due ! The Labor party with all the dumb things they have done , nailed Turnbull right from the start its a pity that the Liberals didn't see the train wreck that was always going to happen
Peter 36 MINUTES AGO
It’s to bad the ‘old bard’ wasn’t alive.
He would be able to deliver us a Shakespearean tragedy or comedy. Either would he appropriate!
Robert 37 MINUTES AGO
Malcolm will easily win the Olympics Dummy-Spit contest by a long shot. Hands down, one tied behind his back.
john 37 MINUTES AGO
Really, who cares? Yesterday's man-and not a great one either
Sir Les 37 MINUTES AGO
The biggest loser from Malcolm Turnbull's demise was not Malcolm Turnbull but Bill Shorten.
Undoubtedly had Turnbull remained as PM the Labor Party would have won a landslide election victory.
Peter 38 MINUTES AGO
It is fascinating that nearly all former Prime Ministers feel a need to 'set the record straight' by publishing autobiographies which are really self-justificatory diatribes. In the end, these creations have little or no value other than as reflections of the author's insecurities. A really confident political leader would let history speak for itself and get on with life. The bigger the volume (Turnbull's is 704 pages), the more insecure the author. And to extend it to two volumes, as Kevin Rudd did (!) ....
Helen 25 MINUTES AGO
They make excellent door stops.
Ailsa 19 MINUTES AGO
Look in the bargain bin soon at KMart to pick up a copy!
Philip 38 MINUTES AGO
A choice between Shorten and Turnbull, what a nightmare that was.
A choice between,
1. at some levels, a very smart man who failed to grow out of his primary narcissism, and,
2. a graduate of the union system whose mediocrity is wildly at odds with his level of ambition.
We are well rid of both on our public life.
John 38 MINUTES AGO
Mr Turnbull skates over the dismal election result he later presided over, in which Mr Shorten almost snatched power
This says it all about the man.
Peter 39 MINUTES AGO
It seems the entire country is commenting here? And all negative towards Turnbull. Another voting disaster for him to notch up.
Leigh 40 MINUTES AGO
In these days of self isolation the most perfect couple to isolate together must be former Prime Ministers, Malcolm Turnbull and Kevin Rudd.
No doubt, Mr Turnbull’s expansive home would be the palace of choice, it seems just large enough to room two such egos.
What devilish dinner parties they could have together, the tales they could tell.
It would never be anyone else’s fault, they would be the cleverest person they ever met, they would be the font of all knowledge.
We are truly blessed to have two such compelling former Prime Ministers at our disposal.
Mark 40 MINUTES AGO
Been in business and team sport most of my life. You encounter surprisingly few people that are not interested in team values and are purely in it for themselves. Unfortunately in those environments administrators or remote managers sometimes make these duds leaders. In the case of MT the Liberals have no excuse. The Party room tore down a sitting Prime Minister and voted MT in all on their own - even after the failed Labor example. They should hang their heads in shame at one of the greatest wounds ever deliberately inflicted on the Australian public.
JD 41 MINUTES AGO
Mr Turnbull recounts his own version of events that led to his dismissal as prime minister in August 2018
Dismissal ???? I recall he didn't even contest the ballot.
Stephen 40 MINUTES AGO
Thank God he is gone.
He can go and drink beer with he other "yesterday's hero" mates, like K. Rudd.
"...take a look at me, I' yesterdays hero..."
Don't come back now Malcolm.
(Written and spoken by a 'dyed in the wool Liberal voter').
Peter 41 MINUTES AGO
" Turnbull has sensationally claimed that Scott Morrison and the Coalition he once led didn’t deserve to win the 2019 election" you write here .
Nothing about the shallow empty money rich man would surprise anyone surely?
The worst politician for the good of the country bar none to my mind since Federation
Go the present Federal Government. The best by far Ive ever seen since federation & I'm proud of them
J&J 41 MINUTES AGO
A great reminder of what a courageous man Peter Dutton is. He did the country a huge favour.
Joost 42 MINUTES AGO
A tedious account of and by a politician - Turnbull - who is totally self-absorbed and cannot ever see or accept his own very limited ability and in particular his many faults as a politician - including lack of political insight into how others saw him, and what made others tick. He led an existence of mega self-belief and blundered time and again when insight was required. His self-preoccupation is clear from everything we read here: it was harmful to himself and of course the wrong emphasis to adopt for a politician who should instead have his eye on the nation. Good riddance!
John 44 MINUTES AGO
Apparently Graham Richardson knocked him back when he tried to join the labor party. How lucky were they!
sillyfilly 45 MINUTES AGO
Ah! the "broad church" of Liberal Party disunity, worse than the previous Labor regime.
bevan 21 MINUTES AGO
Takes one to know one.. na na na na na na!
Tim 22 MINUTES AGO
What a bitter old man! Just shows money can't buy happiness!!
Lyn 21 MINUTES AGO
Or respect.
Sally 18 MINUTES AGO
Perfect headline
Helen 23 MINUTES AGO
I expected MT would turn out to be a better more decisive politician than Tony Abbott. Time has shown that he really was out of his depth.
Ann 19 MINUTES AGO
Oh Malcolm you can't fool all of the people all of the time
Garry 22 MINUTES AGO
I suppose this all shows why Mr. Turnbull had to go.
evan 28 MINUTES AGO
Mirror, mirror on the wall. ..
jillian 31 MINUTES AGO
After all this bile and bitterness....do you feel better Malcom??
I feel quite sick for you and your family, and the legacy you will have to live with.
Graham 33 MINUTES AGO
Malcolm Turnbull's stature as an ex Prime Minister diminishes further with every utterance about his former colleagues. If he wants to find out the cause of his loss of the leadership he needs to take a look in the mirror.
Maxwell 36 MINUTES AGO
The waffle continues.....
Andrew 29 MINUTES AGO
Yes here in the comments , nothing new either
Ian 13 MINUTES AGO
Yes Andrew, like you we all get to voice an opinion.
william 36 MINUTES AGO
Well lets give credit where credit is due ! The Labor party with all the dumb things they have done , nailed Turnbull right from the start its a pity that the Liberals didn't see the train wreck that was always going to happen
Peter 36 MINUTES AGO
It’s to bad the ‘old bard’ wasn’t alive.
He would be able to deliver us a Shakespearean tragedy or comedy. Either would he appropriate!
Robert 37 MINUTES AGO
Malcolm will easily win the Olympics Dummy-Spit contest by a long shot. Hands down, one tied behind his back.
john 37 MINUTES AGO
Really, who cares? Yesterday's man-and not a great one either
Sir Les 37 MINUTES AGO
The biggest loser from Malcolm Turnbull's demise was not Malcolm Turnbull but Bill Shorten.
Undoubtedly had Turnbull remained as PM the Labor Party would have won a landslide election victory.
Peter 38 MINUTES AGO
It is fascinating that nearly all former Prime Ministers feel a need to 'set the record straight' by publishing autobiographies which are really self-justificatory diatribes. In the end, these creations have little or no value other than as reflections of the author's insecurities. A really confident political leader would let history speak for itself and get on with life. The bigger the volume (Turnbull's is 704 pages), the more insecure the author. And to extend it to two volumes, as Kevin Rudd did (!) ....
Helen 25 MINUTES AGO
They make excellent door stops.
Ailsa 19 MINUTES AGO
Look in the bargain bin soon at KMart to pick up a copy!
Philip 38 MINUTES AGO
A choice between Shorten and Turnbull, what a nightmare that was.
A choice between,
1. at some levels, a very smart man who failed to grow out of his primary narcissism, and,
2. a graduate of the union system whose mediocrity is wildly at odds with his level of ambition.
We are well rid of both on our public life.
John 38 MINUTES AGO
Mr Turnbull skates over the dismal election result he later presided over, in which Mr Shorten almost snatched power
This says it all about the man.
Peter 39 MINUTES AGO
It seems the entire country is commenting here? And all negative towards Turnbull. Another voting disaster for him to notch up.
Leigh 40 MINUTES AGO
In these days of self isolation the most perfect couple to isolate together must be former Prime Ministers, Malcolm Turnbull and Kevin Rudd.
No doubt, Mr Turnbull’s expansive home would be the palace of choice, it seems just large enough to room two such egos.
What devilish dinner parties they could have together, the tales they could tell.
It would never be anyone else’s fault, they would be the cleverest person they ever met, they would be the font of all knowledge.
We are truly blessed to have two such compelling former Prime Ministers at our disposal.
Mark 40 MINUTES AGO
Been in business and team sport most of my life. You encounter surprisingly few people that are not interested in team values and are purely in it for themselves. Unfortunately in those environments administrators or remote managers sometimes make these duds leaders. In the case of MT the Liberals have no excuse. The Party room tore down a sitting Prime Minister and voted MT in all on their own - even after the failed Labor example. They should hang their heads in shame at one of the greatest wounds ever deliberately inflicted on the Australian public.
JD 41 MINUTES AGO
Mr Turnbull recounts his own version of events that led to his dismissal as prime minister in August 2018
Dismissal ???? I recall he didn't even contest the ballot.
Stephen 40 MINUTES AGO
Thank God he is gone.
He can go and drink beer with he other "yesterday's hero" mates, like K. Rudd.
"...take a look at me, I' yesterdays hero..."
Don't come back now Malcolm.
(Written and spoken by a 'dyed in the wool Liberal voter').
Peter 41 MINUTES AGO
" Turnbull has sensationally claimed that Scott Morrison and the Coalition he once led didn’t deserve to win the 2019 election" you write here .
Nothing about the shallow empty money rich man would surprise anyone surely?
The worst politician for the good of the country bar none to my mind since Federation
Go the present Federal Government. The best by far Ive ever seen since federation & I'm proud of them
J&J 41 MINUTES AGO
A great reminder of what a courageous man Peter Dutton is. He did the country a huge favour.
Joost 42 MINUTES AGO
A tedious account of and by a politician - Turnbull - who is totally self-absorbed and cannot ever see or accept his own very limited ability and in particular his many faults as a politician - including lack of political insight into how others saw him, and what made others tick. He led an existence of mega self-belief and blundered time and again when insight was required. His self-preoccupation is clear from everything we read here: it was harmful to himself and of course the wrong emphasis to adopt for a politician who should instead have his eye on the nation. Good riddance!
John 44 MINUTES AGO
Apparently Graham Richardson knocked him back when he tried to join the labor party. How lucky were they!
sillyfilly 45 MINUTES AGO
Ah! the "broad church" of Liberal Party disunity, worse than the previous Labor regime.
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- Posts: 1355
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2016 10:56 am
Re: Malcolm misses his days of Glory
Peta Credlin on Malcom Turnbull, on the eve of Truffles' new book, where he dumps on just about every one of his former collegues...
Peta Credlin on former boss Malcolm Turnbull: ‘He has no moral compass’
Rohan Smith APRIL 16, 2020 5:35PM
Peta Credlin has come out swinging against her former boss and ex-PM Malcolm Turnbull in an extraordinary radio interview reacting to his new book.
VIDEO:- Corona virus should be investigated:- https://www.skynews.com.au/details/_6150082449001
Peta Credlin wants the world to know exactly what she thinks of her former boss, ex-Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull … and it’s not much.
The Sky News presenter gave an extraordinary radio interview on Thursday, telling 2GB’s Ben Fordham that Mr Turnbull “has no moral compass” and declaring: “I’ve never met a more reprehensible human being”.
The comments come four days out from the release of Mr Turnbull’s memoir, A Bigger Picture, which reportedly takes aim at former colleagues including Scott Morrison, Julie Bishop and Peter Dutton.
Ms Credlin said the timing of the book’s release — during a global crisis — was “the measure of a man”.
“Politics requires intelligence and, to be fair to Malcolm Turnbull, there were genuine flashes of brilliance,” she said.
“Way back when, when he was a backbencher, but you need a lot more than that. You’ve got to have a work ethic. He had none. You’ve got to have temperament. He certainly did not have that.
Peta Credlin was scathing of the her former boss. Picture: Jane Dempster/The AustralianSource:News Corp Australia
“You’ve got to have judgment and just the mere timing of this book … and I’ve just watched the Prime Minister’s press conference. Regardless of whether you voted for Scott Morrison or not, you can’t fault the way he’s doing his best to get Australia through this crisis. And this bloke lobs a grenade like this at the party which gave him the honour of leading it.
“I just think it says everything about Turnbull. And more, actually, the book says everything about Turnbull’s character rather than the character, I have to say, of the people he attacks, which … he even gave Julie Bishop, his supposed friend, a slap.”
Asked whether Mr Turnbull “crosses a line” in the book by revealing private messages, Credlin responded: “I don’t think he crosses a line that Malcolm would believe he crossed.
“I think common decency … most other people would say he’s crossed a line but he has no moral compass. I worked for him for a year when he was leader of the opposition … and I’ve never met a more reprehensible human being, I have to say that. And politics is a pretty grubby business.
“There was no honour in Turnbull. There was nothing that was ever said to him in confidence where confidences were maintained.”
Former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull’s memoir comes out on Monday. Picture: Bianca De Marchi/AAPSource:AAP
The book discusses the 2019 election that put Mr Morrison in power. Mr Turnbull says the Prime Minister portrayed himself as “the daggy dad” from the suburbs to get across the line.
“He’s a professional politician who understands marketing and messaging better than most,” he writes in his memoir.
“His cringe-worthy ‘daggy dad’ persona is more exaggerated than it is conflated, but in net terms it probably helped.
“All that aside, however, the truth is that Labor lost the election that the coalition, after the August coup, did not deserve to win.”
Asked to address his former colleague’s comments, Mr Morrison told a press conference this afternoon: “I’m not interested in any distractions. I’m interested in the health and wellbeing of Australians.”
Mr Turnbull describes Mr Dutton, the coup leader, as a “narcissist” and “self-delusional” for thinking he could be prime minister. Mr Dutton is going to give the book a miss.
“I wish Mr Turnbull all the best in his retirement and I’m not going into a tit for tat,” he told 2GB radio on Thursday.
https://www.news.com.au/national/politi ... a2b89939fc
Peta Credlin on former boss Malcolm Turnbull: ‘He has no moral compass’
Rohan Smith APRIL 16, 2020 5:35PM
Peta Credlin has come out swinging against her former boss and ex-PM Malcolm Turnbull in an extraordinary radio interview reacting to his new book.
VIDEO:- Corona virus should be investigated:- https://www.skynews.com.au/details/_6150082449001
Peta Credlin wants the world to know exactly what she thinks of her former boss, ex-Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull … and it’s not much.
The Sky News presenter gave an extraordinary radio interview on Thursday, telling 2GB’s Ben Fordham that Mr Turnbull “has no moral compass” and declaring: “I’ve never met a more reprehensible human being”.
The comments come four days out from the release of Mr Turnbull’s memoir, A Bigger Picture, which reportedly takes aim at former colleagues including Scott Morrison, Julie Bishop and Peter Dutton.
Ms Credlin said the timing of the book’s release — during a global crisis — was “the measure of a man”.
“Politics requires intelligence and, to be fair to Malcolm Turnbull, there were genuine flashes of brilliance,” she said.
“Way back when, when he was a backbencher, but you need a lot more than that. You’ve got to have a work ethic. He had none. You’ve got to have temperament. He certainly did not have that.
Peta Credlin was scathing of the her former boss. Picture: Jane Dempster/The AustralianSource:News Corp Australia
“You’ve got to have judgment and just the mere timing of this book … and I’ve just watched the Prime Minister’s press conference. Regardless of whether you voted for Scott Morrison or not, you can’t fault the way he’s doing his best to get Australia through this crisis. And this bloke lobs a grenade like this at the party which gave him the honour of leading it.
“I just think it says everything about Turnbull. And more, actually, the book says everything about Turnbull’s character rather than the character, I have to say, of the people he attacks, which … he even gave Julie Bishop, his supposed friend, a slap.”
Asked whether Mr Turnbull “crosses a line” in the book by revealing private messages, Credlin responded: “I don’t think he crosses a line that Malcolm would believe he crossed.
“I think common decency … most other people would say he’s crossed a line but he has no moral compass. I worked for him for a year when he was leader of the opposition … and I’ve never met a more reprehensible human being, I have to say that. And politics is a pretty grubby business.
“There was no honour in Turnbull. There was nothing that was ever said to him in confidence where confidences were maintained.”
Former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull’s memoir comes out on Monday. Picture: Bianca De Marchi/AAPSource:AAP
The book discusses the 2019 election that put Mr Morrison in power. Mr Turnbull says the Prime Minister portrayed himself as “the daggy dad” from the suburbs to get across the line.
“He’s a professional politician who understands marketing and messaging better than most,” he writes in his memoir.
“His cringe-worthy ‘daggy dad’ persona is more exaggerated than it is conflated, but in net terms it probably helped.
“All that aside, however, the truth is that Labor lost the election that the coalition, after the August coup, did not deserve to win.”
Asked to address his former colleague’s comments, Mr Morrison told a press conference this afternoon: “I’m not interested in any distractions. I’m interested in the health and wellbeing of Australians.”
Mr Turnbull describes Mr Dutton, the coup leader, as a “narcissist” and “self-delusional” for thinking he could be prime minister. Mr Dutton is going to give the book a miss.
“I wish Mr Turnbull all the best in his retirement and I’m not going into a tit for tat,” he told 2GB radio on Thursday.
https://www.news.com.au/national/politi ... a2b89939fc
- Black Orchid
- Posts: 25688
- Joined: Sun Sep 25, 2011 1:10 am
Re: Malcolm misses his days of Glory
I don't particularly like Peta Credlin but I agree with her on all points. Turnbull bringing out his book at this point in time just shows what a self serving POS he is. He should move to the US and become a DemiCommie.
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- Posts: 1355
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2016 10:56 am
Re: Malcolm misses his days of Glory
Is ScoMo in danger of catching the Malcolm Virus ?
Malcolm is a bit too late to met the toilet roll crisis.
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- Posts: 1355
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2016 10:56 am
Re: Malcolm misses his days of Glory
And talking of toilet roll shortages a hoarder gets flushed.
of course, in a toilet roll crisis, there is always the Guardian which is normally covered in Lefty ****.
Toilet paper hoarder chasing refund gets blunt reply
The New Daily 1:06pm, Apr 15, 2020 Updated: 12:59pm, Apr 17
Toilet paper panic buying. The man had used associates to purchase 150 packets of toilet paper. Photo: Twitter/@SoniaCrestpac
An Adelaide supermarket boss has wiped the smile off the face of a would-be profiteer who attempted to return 150 packets of toilet paper for a refund.
John-Paul Drake, the director of Drakes Supermarkets, posted a video on YouTube recounting the customer’s outrageous refund demand.
“He said he wanted to get a refund yesterday on 150 packets of 32-pack toilet paper, and 150 units of one-litre sanitiser,” Mr Drake said.
But the supermarket owner promptly washed his hands of the transaction.
“I told him that,” Mr Drake said, sticking his middle finger up at the camera.
“That is the sort of person that is causing the problem in the whole country.”
He said the shopper had bought the goods, worth around $10,000, with the help of a “team” of stockpilers when panic-buying spiked about four weeks ago.
“The person had a team of people that brought the products, because they were only allowed to buy one of each at a time,” he said.
“You do your sums – that’s 150 separate purchases to buy those.
“Absolutely disgraceful.”
Mr Drake told ABC radio the hoarder said his eBay site had been shut down, so he couldn’t sell the goods.
Drakes Supermarkets, which has 50 stores in South Australia and Queensland, has been hit hard by panic buying in recent weeks.
“We’ve sold eight months of toilet paper in four weeks … a year’s supply of flour in nine days,” Mr Drake said.
“If everyone had just bought the things they needed in their immediate short term, we would be fine,” he said.
“We have had some staggering statistics.”
Supermarkets across the country have imposed limits on items that have been subject to frenzied buying.
Toilet paper was among the first items that frantic Australians began panic-buying en masse.
Most of Australia’s toilet paper is manufactured domestically.
https://thenewdaily.com.au/news/state/s ... er-refund/
of course, in a toilet roll crisis, there is always the Guardian which is normally covered in Lefty ****.
Toilet paper hoarder chasing refund gets blunt reply
The New Daily 1:06pm, Apr 15, 2020 Updated: 12:59pm, Apr 17
Toilet paper panic buying. The man had used associates to purchase 150 packets of toilet paper. Photo: Twitter/@SoniaCrestpac
An Adelaide supermarket boss has wiped the smile off the face of a would-be profiteer who attempted to return 150 packets of toilet paper for a refund.
John-Paul Drake, the director of Drakes Supermarkets, posted a video on YouTube recounting the customer’s outrageous refund demand.
“He said he wanted to get a refund yesterday on 150 packets of 32-pack toilet paper, and 150 units of one-litre sanitiser,” Mr Drake said.
But the supermarket owner promptly washed his hands of the transaction.
“I told him that,” Mr Drake said, sticking his middle finger up at the camera.
“That is the sort of person that is causing the problem in the whole country.”
He said the shopper had bought the goods, worth around $10,000, with the help of a “team” of stockpilers when panic-buying spiked about four weeks ago.
“The person had a team of people that brought the products, because they were only allowed to buy one of each at a time,” he said.
“You do your sums – that’s 150 separate purchases to buy those.
“Absolutely disgraceful.”
Mr Drake told ABC radio the hoarder said his eBay site had been shut down, so he couldn’t sell the goods.
Drakes Supermarkets, which has 50 stores in South Australia and Queensland, has been hit hard by panic buying in recent weeks.
“We’ve sold eight months of toilet paper in four weeks … a year’s supply of flour in nine days,” Mr Drake said.
“If everyone had just bought the things they needed in their immediate short term, we would be fine,” he said.
“We have had some staggering statistics.”
Supermarkets across the country have imposed limits on items that have been subject to frenzied buying.
Toilet paper was among the first items that frantic Australians began panic-buying en masse.
Most of Australia’s toilet paper is manufactured domestically.
https://thenewdaily.com.au/news/state/s ... er-refund/
- Black Orchid
- Posts: 25688
- Joined: Sun Sep 25, 2011 1:10 am
Re: Malcolm misses his days of Glory
Good to see!
-
- Posts: 1355
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2016 10:56 am
Re: Malcolm misses his days of Glory
Pushing Malcolm out of the liberal party will make him some sort of anti hero....just what he is attempting to create..
Don't give in to mindless indulgence of those who want to kick him out....make him a life member... that would be an exquisite punishment...then if he walks out it will show clearly ..it was his doing.
Malcolm Turnbull faces lifetime ban from Liberal Party
ALICE WORKMAN 4:50PM APRIL 19, 2020
Malcolm Turnbull faces expulsion from the party that made him prime minister. Picture: AAP
Could the dysfunctional relationship between Malcolm Bligh Turnbull and the Liberal Party finally be set for a hostile divorce?
An email calling for Turnbull to be expelled from the party and slapped with a lifetime ban was sent to NSW Liberal state executive members on Sunday afternoon. If the motion is successful, Strewth understands this would be the first time anyone has been chastised with a lifetime Liberal membership ban, let alone Australian’s 29th prime minister.
Christian Ellis — a former Turnbull government adviser from the conservative bloc of the state executive — has asked for an extraordinary general meeting to vote on Turnbull’s expulsion within weeks.
Ellis was scathing in his email rebuke, focusing on the former Liberal leader’s scorched-earth book A Bigger Picture, published on Monday.
“Malcolm Turnbull has shown in the last few weeks how he is not a servant of the Liberal Party, but himself,” Ellis wrote.
“I intend to move for the immediate expulsion of Malcolm Turnbull from the Liberal Party. On top of this, as he may no longer be a member, I will move for a lifetime ban to be imposed on him.”
“Whilst productive commentary from former leaders ought to be encouraged, to use this time to talk about oneself and attack Ministers of the Government is not on.”
Ellis continued: While choosing to attack the ‘wreckers’, he takes aim at Minister Hunt, the current Health minister, working tirelessly during a global pandemic, Minister Dutton, the current Minister monitoring any threat entering Australia, and Scott Morrison, who won an election against all odds and proves everyday how he is able to perform as a leader in times of crisis.”
“This is not a motion of vengeance or spite. His membership needs to be terminated because if he continues to keep attacking the party as a member, or connected in anyway, he damages the party brand.”
So much for the notion it’s better for disgruntled members to be inside the tent pissing out, than outside the tent pissing in!
Ellis told his state executive colleagues that it’s “important” they remain consistent on decisions, citing the expulsion of former federal MP Ross Cameron for his “less egregious comments”.
He concluded: “We need members contributing to a policy debate and the support of our Party through this crisis, and as such I intend to do that by reprimanding a man who isn’t”.
Brought to book
Hasn’t it been a big weekend for Turnbull? We hear encrypted messaging apps were working overtime across our wide brown land, with “unauthorised” copies of A Bigger Picture furiously forwarded between Liberal, National and even Labor MPs and staffers.
Malcolm Turnbull’s new book has already been discounted.
Why? Firstly, it’s much easier to ctrl+f search through a PDF to find out if you’ve scored a memoir mention. Secondly, to punish Turnbull for his criticism of “control freak” Scott Morrison (among others). And thirdly, to prevent people paying the $19.99 pre-order price on Apple Books — down more than 63 per cent from the original recommended retail price of $55 — on Turnbull’s 704-page opus.
One disgruntled Liberal indicated it was an effort to stop their former leader scoring a place on the bestsellers list (safe to say Turnbull doesn’t need the money). One final “f-you,” to the man nicknamed Mr Harbourside Mansion.
Now a legal stoush is looming. Turnbull’s publisher, Hardie Grant blamed the “massive scale” book breach on a “top aide” in the Prime Minister’s office who also encouraged others to send it on. Lawyers for Hardie Grant fired off a “cease and desist” notice on Saturday for “malicious conduct and infringement of copyright” to the Morrison staffer, claiming the bootlegged e-book had been hacked or pirated. A curious claim made even more curious by Canberra press gallery journos, who tell us their requests for an electronic copy were rejected in favour of a good old-fashioned hard copy.
No Payne, no gain
Foreign Minister Marise Payne was less than illuminating about the source of the leak when she confessed to being sent a copy during her Sunday morning sit down with ABC Insiders host David Speers. Only the transcript can do the awkward interaction justice.
Speers: Malcolm Turnbull and his publisher, pretty fired up that pirated electronic copies of his book have been circulating this weekend far and wide. Have you received a copy?
Payne: I understand that. I’ve not been responsible for disseminating any, David.
Speers: Did you receive one?
Payne: I’ve received and deleted. And I would encourage anyone who had received (it) to do the same thing.
Speers: Did it come from the Prime Minister’s office, this is the suggestion from the publisher?
Payne: Absolutely not.
Speers: Who did it come from?
Payne: David, I’ve received and deleted. That’s the most important thing.
Speers: You won’t tell us who it’s come from?
Payne: Received and deleted.
Speers: I take that as a no answer?
Payne: (silent but smiling)
Speers: I think we will.
For the record, Morrison has previously said he’s “not interested” in Turnbull’s version of events and Health Minister Greg Hunt (who backed Peter Dutton in the 2018 leadership spill) told journalists he “certainly haven’t read it, and I can’t see any circumstances under which I’ll have the time to be reading it”.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation ... 3ff2022543
COMMENTS praising Malcolm and his book
Doug 1 HOUR AGO
Why waste space on him and give him more publicity - isn;t that waht he craves?
Craig 1 HOUR AGO
MT was a bit like the Lone Ranger - what he really needed was a cabinet of Tontos - and politics and people management just isn't like that.
I suspect MT never led a team of people - he maybe was good at directing a compliant selected group - again that's not what politics is about
VINCENT 2 HOURS AGO
Can't wait to buy the book.
Cnsrvtv 1 HOUR AGO
Yep it'll make a great doorstop!
Harvey 1 HOUR AGO
Don't waste your money Vincent.
John 2 HOURS AGO
Wouldn't it be better just to completely ignore him?
Douglas
2 HOURS AGO
Let’s just hope that Mr. Ellis is successful in his bid to have Mr. Turnbull expelled from the Liberal Party. That would be a real boost to their reputation as a party with integrity.
Paul 2 HOURS AGO
Does anyone care, the reality MT is irrelevant, his contributions, ie Murray darling plan etc will be revealed as the worse of government policy, and his legacies will continue to fall in everyone esteem
Janet I 2 HOURS AGO
I wonder if he's still an active member of the party? When did he last turn up for a Liberal Party meeting?
hugh 2 HOURS AGO
What was a phrase coined by Turnbull ? Ah yes, "miserable ghosts"!
Self descriptive I think.
Jennifer 2 HOURS AGO
I predict that MT will submit a “lifetime resignation” from the LNP before they have a chance to kick him out. Am surprised he is still a member.
Arvid 2 HOURS AGO
The loyalty Morrison showed Turnbull by sending him off to the ASEAN conference after Turnbull was ousted was interesting.
It showed an integrity and loyalty and deep seated ethical behaviour on one side, quiet (at the time acceptance and entitlement) on the other.
In the comments at the time people were mainly going huh? What an odd thing to do, this man is NOT your friend.
Something sweet (lollies, Allen’s Snakes etc) left in reception or on a desk in a bowl will disappear pretty quickly enjoyed by everyone, vinegar, not at all.
Don't give in to mindless indulgence of those who want to kick him out....make him a life member... that would be an exquisite punishment...then if he walks out it will show clearly ..it was his doing.
Malcolm Turnbull faces lifetime ban from Liberal Party
ALICE WORKMAN 4:50PM APRIL 19, 2020
Malcolm Turnbull faces expulsion from the party that made him prime minister. Picture: AAP
Could the dysfunctional relationship between Malcolm Bligh Turnbull and the Liberal Party finally be set for a hostile divorce?
An email calling for Turnbull to be expelled from the party and slapped with a lifetime ban was sent to NSW Liberal state executive members on Sunday afternoon. If the motion is successful, Strewth understands this would be the first time anyone has been chastised with a lifetime Liberal membership ban, let alone Australian’s 29th prime minister.
Christian Ellis — a former Turnbull government adviser from the conservative bloc of the state executive — has asked for an extraordinary general meeting to vote on Turnbull’s expulsion within weeks.
Ellis was scathing in his email rebuke, focusing on the former Liberal leader’s scorched-earth book A Bigger Picture, published on Monday.
“Malcolm Turnbull has shown in the last few weeks how he is not a servant of the Liberal Party, but himself,” Ellis wrote.
“I intend to move for the immediate expulsion of Malcolm Turnbull from the Liberal Party. On top of this, as he may no longer be a member, I will move for a lifetime ban to be imposed on him.”
“Whilst productive commentary from former leaders ought to be encouraged, to use this time to talk about oneself and attack Ministers of the Government is not on.”
Ellis continued: While choosing to attack the ‘wreckers’, he takes aim at Minister Hunt, the current Health minister, working tirelessly during a global pandemic, Minister Dutton, the current Minister monitoring any threat entering Australia, and Scott Morrison, who won an election against all odds and proves everyday how he is able to perform as a leader in times of crisis.”
“This is not a motion of vengeance or spite. His membership needs to be terminated because if he continues to keep attacking the party as a member, or connected in anyway, he damages the party brand.”
So much for the notion it’s better for disgruntled members to be inside the tent pissing out, than outside the tent pissing in!
Ellis told his state executive colleagues that it’s “important” they remain consistent on decisions, citing the expulsion of former federal MP Ross Cameron for his “less egregious comments”.
He concluded: “We need members contributing to a policy debate and the support of our Party through this crisis, and as such I intend to do that by reprimanding a man who isn’t”.
Brought to book
Hasn’t it been a big weekend for Turnbull? We hear encrypted messaging apps were working overtime across our wide brown land, with “unauthorised” copies of A Bigger Picture furiously forwarded between Liberal, National and even Labor MPs and staffers.
Malcolm Turnbull’s new book has already been discounted.
Why? Firstly, it’s much easier to ctrl+f search through a PDF to find out if you’ve scored a memoir mention. Secondly, to punish Turnbull for his criticism of “control freak” Scott Morrison (among others). And thirdly, to prevent people paying the $19.99 pre-order price on Apple Books — down more than 63 per cent from the original recommended retail price of $55 — on Turnbull’s 704-page opus.
One disgruntled Liberal indicated it was an effort to stop their former leader scoring a place on the bestsellers list (safe to say Turnbull doesn’t need the money). One final “f-you,” to the man nicknamed Mr Harbourside Mansion.
Now a legal stoush is looming. Turnbull’s publisher, Hardie Grant blamed the “massive scale” book breach on a “top aide” in the Prime Minister’s office who also encouraged others to send it on. Lawyers for Hardie Grant fired off a “cease and desist” notice on Saturday for “malicious conduct and infringement of copyright” to the Morrison staffer, claiming the bootlegged e-book had been hacked or pirated. A curious claim made even more curious by Canberra press gallery journos, who tell us their requests for an electronic copy were rejected in favour of a good old-fashioned hard copy.
No Payne, no gain
Foreign Minister Marise Payne was less than illuminating about the source of the leak when she confessed to being sent a copy during her Sunday morning sit down with ABC Insiders host David Speers. Only the transcript can do the awkward interaction justice.
Speers: Malcolm Turnbull and his publisher, pretty fired up that pirated electronic copies of his book have been circulating this weekend far and wide. Have you received a copy?
Payne: I understand that. I’ve not been responsible for disseminating any, David.
Speers: Did you receive one?
Payne: I’ve received and deleted. And I would encourage anyone who had received (it) to do the same thing.
Speers: Did it come from the Prime Minister’s office, this is the suggestion from the publisher?
Payne: Absolutely not.
Speers: Who did it come from?
Payne: David, I’ve received and deleted. That’s the most important thing.
Speers: You won’t tell us who it’s come from?
Payne: Received and deleted.
Speers: I take that as a no answer?
Payne: (silent but smiling)
Speers: I think we will.
For the record, Morrison has previously said he’s “not interested” in Turnbull’s version of events and Health Minister Greg Hunt (who backed Peter Dutton in the 2018 leadership spill) told journalists he “certainly haven’t read it, and I can’t see any circumstances under which I’ll have the time to be reading it”.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation ... 3ff2022543
COMMENTS praising Malcolm and his book
Doug 1 HOUR AGO
Why waste space on him and give him more publicity - isn;t that waht he craves?
Craig 1 HOUR AGO
MT was a bit like the Lone Ranger - what he really needed was a cabinet of Tontos - and politics and people management just isn't like that.
I suspect MT never led a team of people - he maybe was good at directing a compliant selected group - again that's not what politics is about
VINCENT 2 HOURS AGO
Can't wait to buy the book.
Cnsrvtv 1 HOUR AGO
Yep it'll make a great doorstop!
Harvey 1 HOUR AGO
Don't waste your money Vincent.
John 2 HOURS AGO
Wouldn't it be better just to completely ignore him?
Douglas
2 HOURS AGO
Let’s just hope that Mr. Ellis is successful in his bid to have Mr. Turnbull expelled from the Liberal Party. That would be a real boost to their reputation as a party with integrity.
Paul 2 HOURS AGO
Does anyone care, the reality MT is irrelevant, his contributions, ie Murray darling plan etc will be revealed as the worse of government policy, and his legacies will continue to fall in everyone esteem
Janet I 2 HOURS AGO
I wonder if he's still an active member of the party? When did he last turn up for a Liberal Party meeting?
hugh 2 HOURS AGO
What was a phrase coined by Turnbull ? Ah yes, "miserable ghosts"!
Self descriptive I think.
Jennifer 2 HOURS AGO
I predict that MT will submit a “lifetime resignation” from the LNP before they have a chance to kick him out. Am surprised he is still a member.
Arvid 2 HOURS AGO
The loyalty Morrison showed Turnbull by sending him off to the ASEAN conference after Turnbull was ousted was interesting.
It showed an integrity and loyalty and deep seated ethical behaviour on one side, quiet (at the time acceptance and entitlement) on the other.
In the comments at the time people were mainly going huh? What an odd thing to do, this man is NOT your friend.
Something sweet (lollies, Allen’s Snakes etc) left in reception or on a desk in a bowl will disappear pretty quickly enjoyed by everyone, vinegar, not at all.
- Neferti
- Posts: 18113
- Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2011 3:26 pm
Re: Malcolm misses his days of Glory
God, I am sick of this bloke. Go Away, Malcolm!
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