It’s somehow fitting. In 2018 — a year long yawn of mediocrity, occasionally interrupted by a burst of nastiness — a recurring theme has been political staffers becoming the centre of major news stories, something it is their whole job to avoid. Let’s look back at all the times 2018 pulled the people from behind the scenes to the centre of the stage.
Anonymous Barry O’Sullivan staffer
Over the weekend, a staffer for Nationals Senator Barry O’Sullivan unleashed a vile tirade of abuse at national politics editor for the News Corp weekend tabloids Annika Smethurst. The text said she was ” vicious feminist cunt” who he would “slap on her bitch face”.
Further, he hoped the text recipient’s family died of “painful cancer”. The reason we have to frame it in that slightly clunky way is on account of the excuse that followed: he argued the texts were meant for someone else. I cannot stress this enough: a man paid a very decent amount of money to be a public relations operative thought that the best look available to him was to be the public relations operative who can’t recognise the phone number of the national politics editor for several major newspapers.
News Corp decided not to name the staffer, but, as we’ve seen time and time again, you can simply go on Twitter to find this kind of information out. The staffer has been put on “indefinite leave”, which is a bit like getting fired for being both vile and incompetent, except you might get your job back and you probably still get paid.
Greens irony poster
News Corps’ sudden restraint, and the Nats’ spirit of understanding, might be of interest to poor Paul McMillan, a former staffer for former Victorian Greens MP Lidia Thorpe. McMillan had been making weird jokes on Twitter for years (sample tweet: “Pretty fucked how Muslims want to ban my favourite hobby, greasing myself up in pig fat and oinking like a grunter at the traffic lights”), before a hit job in the Herald Sun and Oz saw a handful published in the lead up to November’s state election.
He said they were satire — and others suggested it was an overblown and disingenuous move in the lead-up to the election — but he still had to quit. After his dismissal, Thorpe said she was “shocked, disappointed and frustrated” at his tweets, which had been publicly available the entire time he’d been in her employ.
Keeping mum
The mother of all staffer scandals (sorry everyone) this year would have to be the revelation of a long affair between then-Nationals leader Barnaby Joyce and his staffer Vikki Campion. The Daily Telegraph papped visibly pregnant Campion in February and set off a chain of events that would have massive implications; it cost Joyce the Nats leadership and deputy prime minister role, caused a messy public feud between him and then-prime minister Malcolm Turnbull and, most farcically of all, lead to a “bonk ban”, prohibiting sexual relations between ministers and their staff, because prohibitions of that sort always work.
Taking Stock
Former Australian Border Force commissioner Roman Quaedvlieg now fills his days throwing bombs at his former employer (as well as using distressingly horny and antiquated language to describe Canberra). In September he claimed he had been approached by Home Affairs minister Peter Dutton and pressed to give two of Dutton’s mates a job. One of whom, Matt Stock, ended up as a policy adviser for Dutton. Dutton denied any interference in the ABF hiring process, describing Stock as a “decorated and distinguished officer with over 20 years of service with the Queensland police srvice”.
Cannon fodder
Aside from the individuals who got caught up in scandal this year, we had entire offices dragged into the spotlight. Firstly, there was Senator Michaelia Cash’s bizarre decision to, apropos of nothing, fling members of a rivals office in front of the bus. Being grilled in senate estimates about her own disgraced staff, she said, in a low threatening tone:
If you want to start discussing staff matters, be very, very careful. Because I’m happy to sit here and name every young woman in Mr Shorten’s office over which rumours in this place abound. Do you want to start naming them and for Mr Shorten to come out and deny any of the rumours that have been circulating in this building now for many, many years?
In the Labor ranks we had the ongoing, grubby and highly damaging stories emanating from the office of Emma Husar. It was alleged that Husar had bullied, abused and sexually harassed her staff, as well as forcing them to do menial and domestic tasks outside their job description. Husar initially said she wouldn’t run for her seat of Lindsay again, saying she’d been “slut-shamed” out of politics, but recently backflipped.
In another desperate attempt to distract from Labor’s national conference the “Coalition” have arranged for an assistant minister to resign today.
Magnificent timing, it buried the Coalition’s announcement of planned surpluses. So much for Liberals & Nationals working in sync.
The scandal was revealed to the Nats two weeks ago according to McCormack – are the Coalition parties even communicating with each other?
The truly horrifying aspect of this is that this list consists only of the ones we know about. The rule of thumb of three under logs for every one out in the open is enough to make anyone nauseous.
O’Sullivan’s staffer – he sure can pick ’em? I wonder if there’s a little bit of O’Sullivan in all his staff?
It is terrible this text went to the wrong person – like Homer Dutton texting Maiden “by mistake”?
But on the “(not so) bright” side, it is nice to know how these staffers, we’re paying for, think and the language that they use?
It is “funny” those “non-reciprocating” standards of Limited News – almost as if they use their market-share position to push their own political agenda :- “good/mitigated news to the right : bad news to the left”?
……. Sort of like GetUp! but in reverse? ….. Difference being, of course, that when GetUp! does it that’s “bad”?
If the political shoe fits wear it and It is somehow is fitting that 2018 has been a long year of nastiness as some political staffers have got the boot in a recurring theme of them becoming the centre of front page headlines.
Look back over the shoulder and down the main road of 2018 when people have been pulled from behind the shrubbery in a rubbery way to be the main attraction on centre stage.
Quite a short list, considering.