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Tony Abbott in The Lodge: it’s still ‘never’

The polls suggest that Tony Abbott is close to getting his little grubby hands on the keys to The Lodge. The keys, then, will be in the wrong hands.

In January we posted an article written by John Lord and myself (80/20) titled ‘Never’ with the argument of why Tony Abbott should not make it to The Lodge. We are committed to keeping him out. Hence, we have decided to re-run that post at regular intervals between now and the election as we attract new readers and hopefully, have our message widely spread.

An Abbott in the Lodge – Never

David Marr’s quarterly essay “Political Animal” gives an engrossing, even gripping insight into the persona of the leader of the Opposition, Tony Abbott. I made many observations as I read it and I cannot of course comment on everything. I must say though (given Tony Abbot’s statement that he finds gays intimidating) that I was a little bemused at how Marr even got to interview him. They apparently spent some time together which must have been excruciatingly uncomfortable for the Opposition leader. And given that Mr Abbott only allowed him to use one quote I should think he probably wasted his time. Another thing that took my attention was the influence of Catholicism in his private and political decision making. He apparently finds it difficult to make decisions without referral to his faith.

What did catch my eye was this short paragraph: “Josh Gordon of the Sunday Age saw the parallels early. Like the Republicans in the US the Coalition’s new strategy appears to be to block, discredit, confuse, attack and hamper at every opportunity.” Do we see any similarities here? Well of course. On a daily basis the negativity of Abbott spreads like rust through the community. He seeks to confuse with the most outlandish statements. Hardly a day passes without referring to the Prime minister as a liar while at the same time telling the most outrageous ones himself. And with a straight face I might add. He seeks to hamper (as do the Republicans) all legislation with a pre-determined NO. Often without even reading it. Abbott has (as have Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan) taken lying and the frequency of it to a level in political discourse we have never experienced.

In the US the Republicans with all this propaganda have sought to create a fictional President who is the opposite to the one known outside the States. Twenty five per cent of the population still believe he is a Muslim and a large percentage still believe he was born outside the States even though the facts prove otherwise. Such is the power of the right-wing media (Fox News) and an accumulation of feral shock jocks. The GOP (the Republicans – the “Grand Old Party”) is even accused of deliberately not passing bills in order to make the economy worse.

In Australia, for two years the Prime Minister has been demonised by a right wing (Murdoch) news media pack intent on creating a false profile and bringing her down at the first opportunity. She has had thrown at her the most vile misogynist ravings un-befitting of the fourth estate but the tabloids and the shock jocks seem to thrive on it.

At this point (since we are talking in part about truth) let me say that I would describe myself as progressive social democrat. Centre-left on some issues and further left on others. I confess this so as not to be accused later of any preconceived bias. I am the originator of this quote “to be a true democrat one has to concede that your opponents have as much right to win as does your side”; I wrote that prior to the advent of this nefarious thing called neo conservatism or neo capitalism. I wrote it at a time when the political divide (despite the ideological differences) had some respect for the common good; when we in Australia admired America’s bi-partisan approach to its politics. The decline of bi-partisan politics and the rise of neo conservatism can be traced back to a third rate actor and a women with a bad hair-do. And in time respect for public office has gone out the window.

Regardless of what political persuasion you are I believe we like to see character in our leaders. Now how do we describe character. I came across this in the New York Times; it is a direct reference to Mitt Romney, however, it suffices as a general observation:

“Character is a combination of traits that etch the outlines of a life, governing moral choices and infusing personal and professional conduct. It’s an elusive thing, easily cloaked or submerged by the theatrics of a presidential campaign, but unexpected moments can sometimes reveal the fibers from which it is woven.”

When looked in isolation the lies and indiscretions of Tony Abbott, his problems with women and even his negativity could perhaps all be written off as just Tony being Tony. Or that’s just politics. However my focus here is on character and whether Mr Abbott has enough of it to be the leader of our nation. My contention is that because we are looking at a litany of instances of lying, deception and bad behaviour over a long period of time he simply doesn’t have the essence of character which is one of the main ingredients in the recipe of leadership.

The evidence for this assertion follows. None of these events are in chronological order. They are just as they come to mind and are listed randomly in order to build a character profile.

When the President of the US visited he broke long standing conventions by politicising his speech as Opposition leader.

He did the same when the Indonesian president visited.

He did the same when the Queen visited.

He would not allow pairs (another long standing convention) so that the Minister for the Arts could attend the funeral of painter Margaret Olley; an Australian icon. Malcolm Turnbull, a personnel friend was also prevented from attending. There have been other instances of not allowing pairs.

More recently he refused a pair whilst the Prime Minister was on bereavement leave following the death of her father.

At university he kicked in a glass panel door when defeated in an election.

Referred to a women Chairperson as “Chairthing”.

He was accused of assaulting a women at university and later acquitted. He was defended by a QC and the girl defended herself.

Another women accuses him of throwing punches at her. And hitting either side of a wall she was standing against. He says it never happened but others corroborated her story.

He threatens to punch the head in of Lindsay Foyle who disagreed with him on a women’s right to an abortion.

In 1978 a young teacher by the name of Peter Woof bought assault charges against Abbott. He punched him in the face. It never went anywhere. Abbott was represented by a legal team of six and the young man could not afford to defend himself.

And he did punch out Joe Hockey’s lights during a rugby match? Yes, he did.

He established a slush fund to bring down Pauline Hansen and then lied about its existence.

And let’s not forget the role he played also in the jailing of Pauline Hanson. After One Nation shocked the Coalition by winning 11 seats in Queensland in June 1998, Abbott was determined to dig up every piece of dirt he could on Hanson. In his own words, on her demise he boasts this was:

“All my doing, for better or for worse. It has got Tony Abbott’s fingerprints on it and no-one else’s.”

Yes, even after saying that, he still lies about its existence.

He was ejected from the House of Representatives once in obscure circumstances. Hansard is unclear why but it is alleged that he physically threatened Graham Edwards. Edwards lost both his legs in Vietnam.

In 2000 he was ejected from the House along with six others. Philip Coorey reports that he was headed toward the Labor back benches ready to thump a member who had heckled him.

Abused Nicola Roxon after he had turned up late for a debate.

Then there was the interview with Mark Riley where he had a brain fade that seemed like it would never end. I thought he was deciding between a right hook or a left cross. Something that I found mentally disturbing and worrying at the same time. After all this was the man who could be our next Prime Minister.

Together with Christopher Pyne seen running from the House of Representatives to avoid embarrassment at being outwitted.

Being the first Opposition leader to be ejected from the house in 26 years because he repeated an accusation of lying after withdrawing it.

The infamous “Sell my arse” statement verified by Tony Windsor. Will Windsor ever release the mobile phone transcript?

The interview with Kerry O’Brien where he admitted that unless it was in writing he didn’t always tell the truth.

And in another O’Brien interview he admitted lying about a meeting with the Catholic Archbishop George Pell.

During the Republic Referendum he told many outrageous untruths.

His famous “Climate change is crap” comment and later saying that he was speaking to an audience. This of course elicited the question: “Is that what you always do?”

His almost daily visits to businesses with messages of gloom and doom about the ‘carbon tax’ (a scare campaign best described as fraudulent). None of which have come to fruition. His blatant lying often repudiated by the management of the businesses. The most notable being the CEO of BHP and their decision not to proceed with the Olympic Dam mine. Whole towns being closed down. Industries being forced to sack thousands. The end of the coal industry etc.

And of course there is the now infamous Leigh Sales interview where beyond any doubt he lied three times and continued to do so in Parliament the next day.

Then there was his statement that the Aboriginal Tent Embassy near Old Parliament House be closed. To call his statement an error in judgement is too kind. It almost sounded like an incitement to riot.

He is quoted as saying in the Parliament that Prime Minister Gillard and Minister Albanese had targets on their heads. He later apologised.

And of course there is also the lie about asylum seekers being illegal.

Added to that is his statement that the PM refused to lay down and die.

And the deliberate lie he told to the Australian Minerals Council that the Chinese intended increasing their emissions by 500 per cent.

I think I have exhausted it all but I cannot be sure. Oh wait.

We should not leave out his insensitive comments about the attempted suicide of John Brogden. I used to think that John Howard was a mean-spirited, nasty piece of work, but in comparison to Tony Abbott he appears as kind, caring and compassionate as Mother Teresa. Tony Abbott is far, far more mean-spirited. He demonstrates this in the way he ignores human misery and the way he belittles those who are suffering from it. He is, in a nutshell, nasty to the core. Stories surface that he’s been inherently nasty for as long as people have known him, but it wasn’t until 2005 that I first took notice of his extreme level of nastiness and lack of compassion for human misery when it was hoisted onto the national stage. It came only hours after the NSW Leader of the Opposition, John Brogden, had attempted suicide. The Age reported at the time that:

The day after Mr Brogden was found unconscious in his electorate office with self-inflicted wounds, Mr Abbott publicly joked at two separate Liberal Party functions about the disgraced leader’s career-wrecking behaviour . . . Mr Abbott was asked at a fund-raising lunch about a particular health reform proposal and reportedly answered: “If we did that, we would be as dead as the former Liberal leader’s political prospects.”

Nasty. To the core. And to a mate.

He also claimed that Bernie Banton was a mate. Not that he acted like one.

When Abbott was the Minister for Health, the dying asbestos disease sufferer Bernie Banton obtained a petition containing 17,000 signatures of those who supported the listing of the mesothelioma drug Alimta on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme. This petition was to be presented in person to Tony Abbott. If it wasn’t disrespectful enough to snub the petition, then his verbal response certainly was.

Yesterday, Mr Abbott was quick to dismiss the petition. “It was a stunt,” Mr Abbott said on the Nine Network.

“I know Bernie is very sick, but just because a person is sick doesn’t necessarily mean that he is pure of heart in all things.”

He loves making fun of dying people. Does he expect we’ll all laugh along with him?

He even has a go at deceased people. Margaret Whitlam wasn’t even in the grave before Tony Abbott used her death to score cheap political points.

The death of Margaret Whitlam caused such an outpouring of saddened fondness that comments by the Opposition Leader, Tony Abbott, linking her passing with the sins of the Whitlam government appear to have struck an extremely wrong note.

He said she was a ”woman of style and substance” and ”a marvellous consort to a very significant Labor leader and an epochal Australian prime minister”.

”There was a lot wrong with the Whitlam Government but nevertheless, it was a very significant episode in our history and Margaret Whitlam was a very significant element in the political success of Gough Whitlam,” Mr Abbott said.

Nasty. To the core.

If politics is fundamentally about ideas it is also about leadership. In this piece I have deliberately steered clear of policy argument in order to concentrate on character. On three occasions I have invited people on Facebook to list five attributes of Tony Abbott that would warrant his election as Prime Minister of Australia. I have never received a reply. And when you look at the aforementioned list is it any wonder. He is simply bereft of any character at all. He has been described as the Mad Monk and many other things but essentially he is a repugnant gutter politician of the worst kind. In following the American Republican party’s example his shock and awe tactics associated with perpetual crisis has done nothing but degenerate the standard of Australian politics and the Parliament generally. In the public eye he is most effective in attack dog mode. However he is found wanting when he needs to defend himself and simply reverts to stuttering hesitation and lies. Or just walking out on press conferences when he stumbles over tough questions. This is particularly noticeable when he tries to explain the complexity of policy detail.

The future of this country is of vital importance. So much so that its leadership should never be entrusted to a politician of such little virtue and character. A man who has failed to articulate a narrative for Australia’s future other than a personal desire to occupy The Lodge. Given his performance of late he would do well to consider these words: Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt. It’s easy to understand what Abbott says because he only speaks in slogans. The difficulty is knowing what he means.

I have used this line in one of my short stories and it aptly sums up the character of Honourable Leader of Her Majesty’s loyal Opposition.

As he spoke, truth came from the beginning of a smile or was it just a sneer of deception.

Please note, this was written prior to the Prime Minister’s now famous ‘sexist speech’ and does not include these snippets of Tonyisms.

His dying of shame comment.

His “lack of experience in raising children” comment.

His “make an honest women of herself” comment.

His “no doesn’t mean no” comment.

  1. “Jesus knew that there was a place for everything and it’s not necessarily everyone’s place to come to Australia.”
  2. “These people aren’t so much seeking asylum, they’re seeking permanent residency. If they were happy with temporary protection visas, then they might be able to argue better that they were asylum seekers.”

On rights at work:

  1. “If we’re honest, most of us would accept that a bad boss is a little bit like a bad father or a bad husband … you find that he tends to do more good than harm. He might be a bad boss but at least he’s employing someone while he is in fact a boss”.

On women:

  1. “The problem with the Australian practice of abortion is that an objectively grave matter has been reduced to a question of the mother’s convenience.”
  2. “I think it would be folly to expect that women will ever dominate or even approach equal representation in a large number of areas simply because their aptitudes, abilities and interests are different for physiological reasons.”
  3. “I think there does need to be give and take on both sides, and this idea that sex is kind of a woman’s right to absolutely withhold, just as the idea that sex is a man’s right to demand I think they are both they both need to be moderated, so to speak.”
  4. “What the housewives of Australia need to understand as they do the ironing is that if they get it done commercially it’s going to go up in price and their own power bills when they switch the iron on are going to go up, every year …”

On Julia Gillard:

  1. “Gillard won’t lie down and die..

On climate change:

  1. “Climate change is absolute crap.”
  2. “If you want to put a price on carbon why not just do it with a simple tax.”

On homosexuality:

  1. “I’d probably … I feel a bit threatened.”
  2. “If you’d asked me for advice I would have said to have – adopt a sort of “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy about all of these things … “

On Indigenous Australia:

  1. “Now, I know that there are some Aboriginal people who aren’t happy with Australia Day. For them it remains Invasion Day. I think a better view is the view of Noel Pearson, who has said that Aboriginal people have much to celebrate in this country’s British Heritage.”
  2. ‘”Western civilisation came to this country in 1788 and I’m proud of that …”
  3. “There may not be a great job for them but whatever there is, they just have to do it, and if it’s picking up rubbish around the community, it just has to be done.”

On Nicola Roxon:

16: “That’s bullshit. You’re being deliberately unpleasant. I suppose you can’t help yourself, can you?”

I could go on. History is filled with examples of how low this man is; of how nasty he is.

I fear that we may not yet have seen the full extent of his nastiness. We might have to wait – God forbid – for the day he ever becomes Prime Minister.

It’ll be nasty for all of us.

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38 comments

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  1. Cool Pete

    Abbott is a bastard of the lowest order. He doesn’t deserve to ever get his filthy hands on the keys to the Lodge. If he does, mind you, we will consider him PM non-gratia and treat him like Australia and the USA treated Mainland China from 1949 to 1972.

  2. Les Hulm

    Good job Michael! I wish I could get some of my, head in the sand, liberal mates to read this! Funny, like you I have been saying, “Whats your favorite Abbott policy” Like you, no replies. They refuse to read or acknowlege anything negative about Abbott. This frightens me because Abbott probably will get in on this basis because people want change for changes sake and they think this idiot is the only option? I keep saying “You don’t eat dogshit because you hate broccoli”

  3. Leon

    I take offence as the use of the word bastard. As my parents were never married, I must ask that any reference to Tony Abbott does not impinge on myself and fellow bastards. 🙂

    As for the nastiness, I’m waiting till Abbott takes a visit over here, so I can heckle away, I know a bully when I see one. I know a bully when I read their comments, hear their words. If only there was a way to make it obvious to the rest of the country.

  4. johnlord2013

    We should have included his birth mother gaff.

  5. didisaythataloud

    Absolutely, we must not allow this thug the keys to our government. But what we must concentrate on is finding the communities that are online and pitch to them.

  6. hannahquinn

    Reblogged this on The Kettle Press

  7. steven james

    it seems to me that ignorance is bliss in regards to tony abbott. we have a big fight on our hands to convert the ignorant. they have been blinded by the bullshit.

  8. BMac

    If only there was a way to get a response to each of these points, or even have it printed in a newspaper.

  9. Herman

    It was on the Tony Jones (lateline) where he denied meeting George Pell. The Chasers made a marvelous clip about it.

  10. J.Fraser

    I have always thought “Slick” Abbott would never be Prime Minister and Michael has reinforced this belief.

    “Slick” Abbott is a disgraceful person and at every opportunity I use the term “Slick” Abbott because it drives the “Slick” Abbott cheer squad nuts.

    Thanks for this Michael I will post it wherever I can.

  11. Luke

    A fantastic article and one I’ll be sharing a lot in the next few months. As you intend to continue re-posting, please check the following spelling/grammar notes:

    – “And he did punch out Joe Hockey’s lights during a rugby match?” Should that be “And did he…”?
    – Multiple instances of “women” instead of “woman”
    – “Pauline Hansen” instead of “Hanson”.

    Still, excellently-written, and thank you.

  12. Bradley Willis

    Great insight, and I’ve been long aware of this man and I use the word loosely, he is a coward and a man without honour. I believe he must be stopped and held to account. It saddens me to think what we have become to allow what we are seeing to happen, this is not just about him, but a reflection on us as a nation. This is a good caring country, and now we are divided did the Howard years teach us nothing?

  13. Mark Hyde

    Heartily agree with every word of this but I’d hate there to be a strategy in LNP HQ that worked based around making Abbott a martyr figure soaking up ANY from of attention and focus just to be sacrifice for the cause of their potential election as a government. The positive reform agenda of this government REALLY matters and must be maintained and not torn down. The elected one in 2007 AND the one reduced to minority in 2010.
    Holding Abbott accountable and having him face scrutiny is everything that goes toward challenging him effectively but a compelling narrative for future incumbency is much more vital.
    Thank you for this piece though. It’s next to nothing like what we see from MSM media at the moment. The rich diversity of alternative and independent media is going to be crucial to this election.

  14. LOVO

    Print an article from the fifth estate that you think ‘all should read’…. place in old magazine…. take old magazine with you on next Dr’s appointment….. place old magazine with even older magazines in waiting room…. repeat,- but change Dr’s to Chinese Take-away… or laundramat….. or where ever there are waiting areas with magazines….. get the news out there in every way, every day…..
    Well done again Migs… your a tide turner 😉

  15. Mush

    The politics of fear and division have travelled around the world… The British Prime Minister David Cameron uses all the same tactics as Abbott…(We’re on the side of the strivers not the skivers).
    The austerity mania we have here is a recipe for disaster, with cuts leading to more cuts with no end in sight…. The last Labour govt has been so successfully blamed by the Conservatives abetted by the media for “the economic mess we inherited” that everyone seem to believe it even though it is a lie!
    Oz still has a chance, and I pray that it comes to it’s senses before it’s too late!

  16. Nicole Bonfield

    I agree with everything (just go back and correct the errors of ‘women’ when it should be ‘woman’ in a few of the points in the first list).

  17. ReB

    Great idea from Lovo. I’ve found it’s the older folks that support Abbott most and they make up the highest percentage of people in doctors’ and medical centres’ waiting rooms. Great way to reach those that have no/limited contact with social media and hence miss out on stumbling across these truths about our potential PM (such a scary thought I can hardly bring myself to type those words!).

  18. Dorothy

    Terrible to see it all put together like this. What always amazes me is that he can call himself a christian. Isn’t christianity supposed to be about honesty, love and compassion?

    I’ve been trying to share this on FB just now, both from this page and directly. FB keeps telling me something’s gone wrong! sabotage?

  19. Dorothy

    Thanks Nicole, I did that as my second option and it is still waiting to be posted, been trying for half an hour!

  20. Nicole Bonfield

    Try copying the URL and pasting it directly into your FB comment, instead of attempting to ‘share’ from this page. That usually gets paste any blocking attempts.

  21. Sandra Searle (@SandraSearle)

    There was someone on ABC24, an IT person, who was saying that there is something happening to slow down the networks. Its not hacking per say but it is affecting transfers etc to big business and it is just slowing down the system.
    Guess Facebook is being affected, cause I have had the same problem.
    The trouble is coming from Europe, doesn’t all problems come from there.
    Just heard that it is a spam warfare that is affecting. Watch News 24.

  22. Bill Ellerton

    Apparently people in the UK thought it very funny when David Cameron thought LOL meant lots of love. Not as hilarious as the rumour I just heard that Tony Abbott thought broadband was an American music group made up of fat women.

  23. Angela

    unfortunately, all the above is NOT getting out to the majority of voters in West. Syd. and WA…how can we change this? Meetings in the Pensioner villages – they love to spread ‘news’? Mass emails to friends, family, businesses & any contacts in lists requesting forward on’s?

  24. Pingback: The Abbott enigma | The Sniper

  25. David Smith

    Tony Abbott is a religious extremist. Would I like to live by his moral code? NO. He appears to have had a makeover, but his real personality keeps leaking through. I would be ashamed of our government if he was to gain power. People forget the past actions of this man. Think back to the Howard government. I agree he is a nasty person. I wish people would go back to calling him the mad monk. Let him deal with that one before the election.

  26. Cuppa

    Help, comment caught in spaminator!

  27. Cuppa

    Afternoon before Easter long weekend, worst time to be caught in traffic Migs, commiserations.

  28. Miglo

    Sorry about that, Cuppa. I was caught up in the traffic. 🙁

  29. Al

    And what was it he said to his daughters that their greatest gift was? Intelligence? Kindness? Charity? Humour? Bravery? Oh no, it was their virginity. You can be a brain surgeon but whatever you do, don’t open your legs girls. I hate this man.

  30. steve

    Tony Abbott is a legend.Julia Gillard is a corrupt lying dog.Ans come September 14,the Australian public will have their say.

  31. LOVO

    Tony Abbott is a corrupt lying dog. Julia Gillard is a legend…… there Steve… fixed it for ya 😀
    Julia is still here…. come the Ides of July…will Tony…

  32. Dallas Beaufort

    More man made global warming crap from the left over nothingness brigade who slowly pace their green labor hearse justly entering the political morgue.

  33. LOVO

    Two words Dallas…. “Methane Hydrate” , good luck with your non argument this Arctic melt season….. wake up 🙄

  34. Bacchus

    David, you wouldn’t vote Labor if Tony Abbott was convicted of kiddy fiddling and it was proven beyond any doubt that the Liberal party was Australia’s own mafia. 🙄

  35. david

    i wouldnt vote for julia gillard if my life depended on it . its sad that the only choices are gillard or abbott but she has lied to many times about the slush fund and she PROMISED no carbon tax and she promised she wouldnt run against rudd she cant be trusted soo…… what now?

  36. Jane

    Wow. The best nutshell I’ve read about the Mad Abbott.

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