Last night Julia Gillard paid a visit to an annual News Limited gathering in Sydney. Greens leader Bob Brown has said in the past that he didn’t have a problem with meeting News Ltd representatives — but he’d have them visit him on his turf, thank you very much.
Not so the PM who accepted an invitation from CEO John Hartigan in the wake of heated public statements from both sides.
Gillard said it was to be a private discussion, but added: “You would expect me to be talking about the government’s reform agenda and my vision for the nation’s future. Such meetings have been addressed by prime ministers and opposition leaders in the past so when I was invited by Mr Hartigan I accepted the invitation.” Neither side would comment on last night’s discussions.
Perhaps they went a little something like this exchange, recounted by Chris Mitchell to Sally Neighbour, in a profile on the editor in chief of The Australian in the latest edition of The Monthly to hits stands this week:
One night in mid May 2010 Mitchell was invited again for drinks at Kirribilli House, accompanied by the Australian’s political editor, Dennis Shanahan. Mitchell says he wanted to warn Rudd that the outcry over the mining tax could bring him down.
“I said, ‘Look, I think you should know that from what we are hearing you are in personal danger … We are picking up a lot of rumbling — you personally have to get this off the agenda as soon as possible.'”
Mitchell’s account is a startling reflection on the hubris of one — or maybe both — of these men. “I felt he [Rudd] didn’t really understand what was happening around him and that he was in grave danger. He was so aloof from the party, he didn’t have anyone to run numbers for him … The problem in running a very centralised and aloof kind of office is it’s very hard for people to knock on your door and tell you it’s going off the rails.”
I was intrigued that Mitchell told me this story (and made a point of saying he had checked with Rudd first), because it seems to illustrate more than anything that he relishes being at the centre of power. This echoes the view of a minister who knows him, who says Mitchell has ‘delusions of grandeur’ about his role in politics. Mitchell told me: “I wanted you to understand we had a reasonable relationship before he lost his job. I didn’t want it to seem the Australian is crowing about Kevin losing his job.”
Given the silence from all sides, guess we’ll never.
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i support julia gillard
but what a joke, why is she so shit scared of murdochs lackeys in australia
if the smh report today is correct, john hartigan the news corp boss in australia invited julia gillard to meet him to disscuss the governments concerns about news corp bias again the federal governemt
what was there to discuss, andbody who can read or write can see that everyone of murdochs publications in australia are running a vindictive campaigan again gillard and her minority government
and she goes grovelling to meet him on his turf
what is it with murdoch that politicians grovel to his beck and call
One would love to hear more from the circles this type of vermin travels in; but there probably isn’t any room left on the front page. What an supercilious wanker he is.
He is the only one hearing the voices and he prints what they say to him. Get mental health on the agenda quick
I don’t support Gillard, she is a war mongering, refugee terrorising law breaking moron.
SHEPHERDMARILYN – I agree with your opinions on Gillard, but are you supporting Abbott in preference? Do you honestly think he would be any less of a ‘war mongering, refugee terrorising law breaking moron’?
With 11 senior executives arrested, top cops resigning and scandal in the US and UK and with everyone else saying nyet to the Murdoch empire it is embarrassing to see Gillard sucking up to the likes of Harto and Mitchell.