Queensland LNP leader Campbell Newman did something yesterday that he should have done a long time ago — released an up-to-date statement of his financial interests to the standard required of state members of Parliament.
It’s not much of an exaggeration to say Newman had to be dragged kicking and screaming.
For more than a month, the Bligh Labor government has been targeting Newman’s failure to disclose. Until now, the opposition leader’s line has been that he had made a disclosure of pecuniary interests before standing down as Brisbane’s lord mayor. He has argued that as a candidate for state parliament, rather than a sitting MP, he was under no obligation to do more. These are personal matters, he suggests.
This highlights Newman’s anomalous position — a state leader without a parliamentary seat.
But, in the continued absence of any substantive policies from the LNP, Newman has had little to talk about in his appearances on the nightly news other than his finances. He’s appeared perennially on the back foot.
There isn’t actually much of great interest either in what came out before his statement, or what is in his statement, other than continued questions about how exactly his remuneration as opposition leader is funded. (Former Nationals leader Jeff Seeney is opposition leader in the Legislative Assembly, and Newman’s salary is not publicly funded.)
Newman’s resistance stems in large part from the fact that his wife has an interest in a family company, which made an exorbitant bid for disaster recovery consultancy funding from the government. In the event, no funding was forthcoming.
Newman has been alleging that Labor is targeting his family. This culminated last Thursday, in an extraordinary spray where the LNP leader claimed the state was being run by “punks, drunks and desperadoes”. At the same press conference, Broadwater candidate Richard Towson fainted, which had the former mayor declaring that his momentary ill health was “Anna Bligh’s fault”, a line that has sparked much merriment on Twitter.
To those who have dealt with him, Newman is well known to have a short temper and a thin skin. His attempts to shape his own press coverage as lord mayor, and battles with journalists and The Courier-Mail when stories are written not to his liking, are legendary.
The ALP, cleverly, has been exploiting concerns about Newman’s character, and his ability to deal with stress. His responses have not been a good look, and not seen as such by many in the LNP.
The Labor Party is trying to drag Newman back to the pack, disrupting his posture as an apolitical saviour figure. (Newman also made the bizarre comment last week that he “hates politics”). Interestingly, both statewide polls and a poll taken in the seat of Ashgrove, which Newman is contesting, have shown movement, albeit slight, away from the LNP.
But Newman’s woes are not over. He is still to satisfactorily respond to the misogynist victim-blaming comments of Cairns candidate Gavin King. A petition is circulating on Facebook calling on Newman to denounce such antediluvian attitudes towards s-xual violence, and Crikey reported yesterday a prominent Cairns LNP member had left the party in protest. The LNP previously dis-endorsed a Cairns candidate for writing an email that appeared to condone Julia Gillard’s assassination.
Most, including perhaps Newman himself, have assumed that the LNP’s victory in the state election, likely to be held in March, is a fait accompli. That may still be so, but the LNP has much form for shooting itself in the foot. If Newman can’t stem the bleeding over the redneck views of his Cairns candidate, more questions might be raised about the Can Do Campbell gamble.
Those that have had dealings with the fellow are usually astonished to see him so far ahead in the polls. He is well known as a bully.
More significantly, the very poor financial state he has left the BCC in (its almost broke) and his propensity to waste our money, on personal projects of his with little obvious value, should be real cause for setting off the alarm bells.
Mike M: I think the treatment Mr Newman gets from the Brisbane media is rather more, err liberal, than what his opponent gets.
I occasionally have a giggle at the thought of the LNP winning office and Labor retaining Ashgrove. But the laughter dies rapidly when I realise who presumably will then Premier.
If the LNP wins and Newman successfully snatches Ashgrove it will force me to watch the local TV news in future. Then we’ll be back to the great ol’ days of Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen where he uttered bizarre bons mots during the first minutes of the 7pm TV news. This effectively kicked off Queenslanders’ evenings on a humorous note and was a valuable public service. In fact, some days I was so eager for a laugh that I resorted to the commercial channels at 6pm.
Newman’s attempt at blaming his colleague’s fainting spell on Anna Bligh was not a bad effort for an aspiring Qld premier but I reckon, with a bit more practice, he can top it.
Zut, I think the issue of Mr Newman’s personality referred to by Mike M, suggests that a Newman regime will be more Napoleonic than Johish.But it will be entertaining.
More Nero-ish, I believe. How can the LNP possibly sit in opposition without ANY of it’s ELECTED members of parliament having the political guts to LEAD the party? It’s like having the Wallabies out on the field playing the World Cup and having Quade Cooper sitting in his lounge room and giving him the captaincy of the team…oh and let’s not forget the splendid leadership he displayed as Lord Mayor during the flood recovery…he walked away!