Former Liberal MP Julia Banks doesn’t see Prime Minister Scott Morrison winning the next election. Women are abandoning the Coalition in droves, with the government’s primary vote slashed from 41% to 37% among female voters since the last election, amid a series of sexual harassment and assault scandals in the party, and the bungling of the COVID-19 vaccine rollout.
“Morrison just sheds his accountability. We saw it in the bushfires, in the vaccine rollout and we certainly saw it in respect to gender equality,” Banks told Crikey in an exclusive interview.
“Sometimes it takes time but, especially on gender equality, I do believe people have seen through his mismanagement.”
Banks has been called a “rich bitch” a “bully”, a “nasty” “crazy corporate” woman who needs to be controlled. She’s been repeatedly questioned about her devotion to motherhood, told she “owes” the Liberal Party and alleges Morrison tried to hide her away when she did not vote for him during the 2017 leadership spill.
In her new book Power Play Banks lays out the controlling, demeaning and bullying tactics in politics — but occasionally falls prey to the snide sexism she seeks to call out. Banks tells Crikey the heightened toxicity and control under Morrison and defends calling out women who bend to bullying.
The whole spectrum of sexist insults
Banks was the only Liberal MP to win a seat from Labor at the 2016 election — her first term in politics after leaving a career as a corporate lawyer. She quit the Liberal Party following the Morrison leadership spill before sitting briefly as an independent until the 2019 election.
Despite the numerous examples of sexism under Turnbull’s leadership — including one MP arguing allowing Banks to cross-examine CEOs as part of the banking inquiry would come off as “burn the bra aggressive-ish” — Banks said as Morrison rose to power, the culture of the Liberal Party worsened.
She said Morrison was quick to clamp down on women who called out the Liberal Party’s toxic culture. Lucy Gichuhi, Linda Reynolds, Kelly O’Dwyer, and Julie Bishop each spoke out about bullying following the leadership spill, though soon walked back their claims (aside from Bishop who left politics, followed closely by Gichuhi).
“Almost immediately Reynolds had a meeting with Morrison and all these people who called out the behaviour … and then suddenly she says, ‘we have to handle this internally’ and then she gets promoted,” Banks said.
“It was almost like Morrison went through them one by one … all the Liberal women who stayed in Parliament, all of them basically went underground.”
Banks said Morrison was fond of reminding her, in a “Trumpesque tone”, that he was the prime minister.
When she told Morrison she was leaving the party, Banks said she was offered a position in New York as a UN delegate, which she believes was an attempt to hide her away.
As she stood her ground, agreeing not to speak to the media for 24 hours while Morrison got his ducks in a row, his team started backgrounding journalists about her. Banks said she started getting concerned calls from friends and colleagues as Morrison labelled her someone whose welfare was at stake. As she stood her ground, the rhetoric shifted, and she was soon labelled as a bully.
“I was taken through this whole sexist spectrum, which went slowly but surely from, ‘she’s weak as a petal’ … to ‘she’s not going to go away, she’s a bully.’”
Even after she became an independent, she said she had to weed out Liberal Party plants, receiving vile social media threats.
“[Their tactics] went way beyond the normal, traditional dirty tricks that major parties play against each other.”
Calling out women who ‘defer to the patriarchy’
But Banks occasionally resorts to sexist rhetoric herself. In her book, Bank recalls being asked by an opposition male MP during the midwinter ball whether she uses “really strong hair dye” to cover her grey roots. Perturbed, she turns to the woman next to her, who asks which electorate her husband is the MP for. Banks retorts: “I’m the MP here. He’s my handbag, like you are to your husband.”
In another instance following the leadership coup, she describes how a female MP asked other Liberal women into her office for afternoon tea, purportedly to discuss the toxicity of the workplace.
“[She messaged] with that faux-chirpy Stepford-wife tone of ‘nothing to see here’,” Banks writes in her book. “The last thing I felt like was talking about the boys’ club over a cup of tea and biscuits.”
When pressed on whether this behaviour is symptomatic of the sexist culture in Parliament, Banks said she’s calling out women purporting sexist tropes — especially when it comes to other Liberal MPs.
“There are women in our midst who basically defer to the patriarchy,” she said.
“I don’t think it’s misdirected rage to call another woman out, who assumes you’re not the MP. I just think you’ve got to call people out, whether they’re men or women.”
Politics is brutal — but we need circuit breakers
Banks has been a long-standing advocate for gender quotas in the Liberal Party, arguing diversity and equality are key to successful workplaces. They’re also key to women’s safety: Banks recounts one incident where MPs were having a late-night drink in Turnbull’s office while waiting for a vote to be called. Another male MP put his hand on her leg and ran it up her thigh. Banks quickly stood up and found another woman in the room and asked her to keep talking to her until the male MP had moved elsewhere.
“This is critical to everything, and I will argue this until the day I die. If you have gender-equal leadership it does make all the difference, and until we have that we won’t have a healthy workplace culture in Parliament House,” she said.
When asked whether she would advise women to enter politics, Banks hesitated.
“I would say make sure the leader is aligned to your values, and pick someone you can trust. Pick the party carefully,” she said. She believes more progressive, pro-climate politicians are needed to level the playing field in Parliament.
“The balance of power, I really think that’s the future,” she said.
Banks now runs a consultancy business, is a keynote speaker, and said a return to politics is not off the table.
Morrison’s office has been contacted for comment.
Power Play by Julia Banks is published by Hardie Grant Books and is out July 7.
Both the Liberal party and the National Party hate women
And they both hate the poor (those “unable to donate”?) – only giving that up for the “Lent” before the arrival of the Election Bunny.
Banks (who is quite “well off”) was quite happy with that sort of “religion”/”boollying” while she was “under the Party wing” :- May 2018 : “I could live on 40 bucks a day knowing that the Government is supporting me with Newstart looking for employment”? What did that do to the people on welfare – and Robodebt – under the government she was happy to be part of?
Then, when she got the chop, suddenly that all changed? …. Suddenly she got another religion?
Now that’s all changed and “forgotten” out here?
“Normal, traditional dirty tricks that major parties play against each other“? Where’s the rule book on those; they’re all right?
…. And now she’s trying to sell a book – I’m not buying either.
She’s a woman of privilege who relishes the dishing it from her safe height – and hates copping it back.
I will agree with her on one thing :- “I just think you’ve got to call people out, whether they’re men or women” especially these privileged born to rule/whatever it takes/self-entitled political types, short on empathy when it counts. They don’t mind making life more difficult for those less able to defend themselves.
And we don’t need more, of any gender, of that sort in parliament.
“…. boollying”?
Totally agree. She was my M.H.R. a 1 percenter with no empathy or understanding of others
The strong terrorise whom they wish; the weak terrorise those closest to them.
Should your conclusion sustainable Allan: Then Julia’s book will sell because of up-coming Federal Election. And women across the nation turn-out in full force? We can only hope so. Not because LNP as you infer, currently dominated by males; rather due to a toxic political culture re-inforced by a very weary, disconnected or bloody angry electorate. Frustrated beyond belief! We are, because we have allowed.
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/jul/07/nationals-top-nsw-senate-pick-was-subject-of-apprehended-domestic-violence-order-application
True, but Banks has never named any names.
Yep, a fish rots from the head down
And from the guts!
And that head is of the Dark Triad type, incurably impulsive, aggressive and narcissistic. To ice the cake, it is completely lost in 1950s religiosity and sexism, with its handmaid helping out its Christian Brethren honours thesis.
In other words, it has no place at the head of a 21st century OECD nation, and must be separated from the Australian body politic at the soonest. Readers were aghast when Bernard suggested Dutton, but this is an true national emergency, and the head is about to be re-elected, whereupon its repellent behaviour will only redouble.
I would definitely go psychopath, rather than narcissist. And personally, I doubt if he’s all that religious. My hunch is, that portraying himself as religious, is probably just image creation. The image being that he is someone with a strong set of moral values and someone who can be trusted. Which is a public cover, for how he operates in private: a more extended version of, “this is my leader”, when already privately undermining Turnbull.
Did you see Ronni Salt’s tweets this morning? Check out the one and that reads “Remember last week I said Morrison’s rotating imagery had changed drastically?” with two two photos included. One is a pic of Morrison standing sideways in front of a camera from a Guardian article, and the other one of the right shows a cartoon of a woman in a mask and the text 7 million. Double click on the one on the second picture and scroll down to the photo of Morrison with Jen and the girls. And check out Jen’s left hand resting in front of her daughter, showing the OK thumb and forefinger gesture used by white supremacists and I suspect Qanon as well.
Hmm, I’m not really up on Q-anon imagery, so I wouldn’t know. But I suspect that, if Morrison thought that there was enough in it for him, then he wouldn’t be adverse to giving the occasional shout at. Though I don’t know if there’s enough of them in Australia, for him to think that it’s worth his while? As for Jenny, I can’t recall ever hearing her speak more than a perfunctory sentence or two. So I have no real idea what she thinks.
Though when I went looking, I did appreciate another tweet, that said something like: the Morrison government is an organisation that harvests the public’s thoughts and opinions, and then feeds it back to them.
Oops – single click on the photo on the right.
…oh pleez let this be true of the configuration.
meenying-schmeening.
I have used that gesture for 60 years. It has no such meaning to me. It was also used by the indigenous snorkel guide on my reef trip last week
I suspect it’s a photo shopped image .. don’t get distracted but conspiracy when there is so much actual rot within his government
Christians adhere to the Second Great Commandment ( given by the Boss himself) to “love your neighbour”
They do NOT lock up refugees!
Happy clappers are not, in general, “Christians”. They are basically usurpers who cherry pick from the bible for bits that will enhance the wealth and power of their promoters. Unfortunately they will, with the offensive utterances from some of them, be the major beneficiaries of Morrison’s proposed laws to protect religious bigotry.
Prosperity religion is the ultimate anti-Christ position. Jesus was a commie. (If he existed)
Morrison isn’t a real Christian.
This one does.
He says he’s a Christian so he must be, mustn’t he?
I agree. The whole ‘religion’ – the suburban church, the prosperity gospel stuff, the talking in tongues – is a sham, just like the PM who’s one of its most ardent adherents. I don’t think he’s religious at all, and every facet of his revealed character goes against the modest tenets of Christianity. It’s all for show, as you suggest. I mean, just look at the member for Fadden, Stuart Robert, who’s a fellow traveller and good friend of Morrison’s. What a nasty joke; the two of them complicit up to their eyeballs in Robodebt and Horizon church. Interesting, eh, how we now have ‘vaccination horizons‘ instead of targets. Insidious.
Yes, it’s interesting. Even though I’m not religious, I tend to think that most religious people are decent and caring. But I also think, that there’s a few people, especially in the more evangelical sects, who are attracted to religion, to take advantage of those decent and caring people.
Trump said,” wow, look at all the money those hucksters rake in from the losers and suckers. I’m impressed.”
Also the pro-life evangelicals are terrified to mention sex, especially to their kids. Yet the bible says go forth and procreate ( fornicate?).Perhaps a centrefold in the bible of Miss Deuteronomy would help things
A lucrative tax free sham, worth a trillion dollars in America so Scum’s bosom buddy has begun operations over there to cash in on the lunatics in USA, and there’s around 73 million of them for starters.
No, his daddy was an advocate of religious fundamentalism and nuttary, it’s a DNA defect
Gadfly in TSP today has a great column
I agree he is not religious. A strong spirituality demonstrates a capacity for contemplation and a deeper level of awareness. IAS is noted in spiritual wisdom the fruits of the Spirit are peace, patience, kindness, understanding, joy, perseverance, gentleness, faithfulness and so the list goes on in this vein.
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/jul/07/nationals-top-nsw-senate-pick-was-subject-of-apprehended-domestic-violence-order-application
Why do so many women claim that Prime Minister Scott Morrison has bullied them and caused them mental health issues?
https://kangaroocourtofaustralia.com/2021/07/07/why-do-so-many-women-claim-that-prime-minister-scott-morrison-has-bullied-them-and-caused-them-mental-health-issues/
Undoubtedly because he did
The photo of Morrison phoning in his condolences to Buckingham Palace while the little women, the good woman, the hand maiden, keeps a respectful distance, head bowed, before her master.
That image.
Should be enough to get every woman in Australia united to remove this toxic misogynist government.
Should be enough, but actually not. There is a sizable number of women who accept, support and quite possibly are happy with their subordinate roles in patriarchal systems such as those promoted by the more fundamentalist strands of Judeo-Christian-Islamic religion.
‘(Banks) believes more progressive, pro-climate politicians are needed to level the playing field in Parliament’
This from the person that voted strongly against the following:
Spare me the feminist outrage Banks, your appalling record when you were in Parliament speaks for itself.
Rather than a woman quota how about a decent person quota for parliament?
One would be far, far easier than the other.