Note: this article mentions sexual assault
Former Liberal staffer Brittany Higgins and 2021 Australian of the Year Grace Tame fronted Canberra’s National Press Club today to address the government’s response to the reckoning around sexual assault and abuse in Parliament.
Introduced by National Press Club president Laura Tingle, Higgins spoke first, walking to the stage to cheers and applause. Wearing all white — as she did during the March4Justice protests — she opened by recounting her abuse.
“I was raped on a couch in what I thought was the safest and most secure building in Australia. In a workplace that has a police and security presence 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The Parliament of Australia is safe, it is secure — except if you’re a woman,” she said.
“If what happened to me can happen there, it can happen anywhere. And it does.”
Higgins said she faced judgement, vitriol and abuse and had to quit her job to go public — but did so because “the alternative was to be part of the culture of silence inside Parliament House”.
In sharing her story, Higgins said, she hoped to make it easier for others to share theirs. Despite her advocacy, though, too little has changed. After the March4Justice rallies in March last year, she said, there was “a feeling of unstoppable momentum” that would “not be turned aside by tired old platitudes from father of daughters”.
But, she added, “I stand here today fearful that this moment of transformative potential, the bravery of all those women who spoke up and stood up and said ‘Enough is enough’ is in danger of being minimised to a flare-up, a blip on the radar, a month-long wonder in the national conversation. Or, worse, just a political perception problem neutralised and turned into a net positive.”
Criticising neutral language used by the media when discussing assault — “we have this passive, anonymous language vaguely talking about ‘wrongs done’ as if sexual violence falls out of the sky. As if it is perpetrated by no one. As if it is inflicted on no one” — Higgins then turned her attention to Prime Minister Scott Morrison.
His comments on “imagine if it were our daughters” were bad, Higgins said, but wouldn’t have been so terrible if followed by action: “I didn’t want his sympathy as a father. I wanted him to use his power as prime minister.”
Higgins criticised the failures of Australia’s national plan to reduce violence against women and their children — especially given the high rates of abuse of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and women with disabilities — saying its aims are “lofty and vague … filled with warm sentiments and platitudes”.
“Without clearer action and firm targets, there can be no accountability,” she said.
Higgins received a standing ovation, although Government Services Minister Linda Reynolds, Social Services Minister Anne Ruston and Liberal Senator Jane Hume, who were in attendance, remained seated.
Tame spoke next, her arm wrapped in a sling following a biking accident. She too went hard on Morrison, dropping a bombshell on the government’s attempts to silence her.
“On the 17th of August last year, not five months after being named Australian of the Year, I received a threatening phone call from a senior member of a government-funded organisation, asking for my word that I would not say anything damning about the prime minister on the evening of the next Australian of the Year Awards,” she said.
“‘You are an influential person. He will have fear,’ they said.
“‘Fear? What kind of fear?’ I asked myself. A fear for our nation’s most vulnerable? A fear for the future of our plan? And then I heard the words ‘With an election coming soon…’.
“What is the point of awarding someone for their work only to stifle them while they do it when it gets too real?”
Morrison’s review into the National Australia Day Council after she was awarded Australian of the Year was a “transparent intimidation tactic,” she said — saying politicians could either be constructive or destructive.
“I would rather go down as a disappointment to an institution than sell out as a pandering political puppet to the corrupt forces that coercively control it.”
Tame pointed to $90 billion spent on submarines, but just $1.1 billion on violence against women — with just 11 cents spent per student per year on prevention education.
“We currently have a government that is primarily concerned with short-sighted, votes-based funding, not with long-term, needs-based funding,” she said.
Liberal backbencher Bridget Archer, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse, was given a last-minute ticket to attend after being told her attendance “would be up to the prime minister”.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison said he was “too busy” to attend or even watch the women’s speeches on TV. “It’s going to be a busy week. I don’t get the opportunity to listen to all these speeches, but I’ll certainly ensure I am aware of what they’ve said,” he said.
Several former staffers and survivors, including Chelsey Potter, Rachelle Miller, Josie Coles and Julia Banks, along with former Australian Post CEO Christine Holgate, were also in attendance.
If you or someone you know is affected by sexual assault or violence, call 1800RESPECT on 1800 737 732 or visit 1800RESPECT.org.au. In an emergency, call 000.
Ms Tame and Ms Higgins, utterly disembowled Morrison, he the “man”, and he the “politician”. The stony Face of Jane Hume in the front of the audience said it all. The damage to the Liberal brand is severe. Morrison is finished.
It depends how the Murdoch state propaganda/entertainment portrays the speeches – don’t forget half of our country are brainwashed zombies devouring Murdoch trash – Morrison is still a worry, he’s not entirely finished yet unfortunately!
Lol. As above, attack an easy target and get the likes. Attack the populus, which could be anyone of us, and no one wants to hear the truth, that it’s our silence that’s the problem.
I’m sorry…er…I have to say…
I’m sorry that it’s got
so bad I have to give today
apologies for not
quite making clear that all the blame
should not come down on me
despite what others may well claim,
for surely you can see
that passive words and platitudes
are really all we need
to change unhealthy attitudes,
for I don’t want to lead.
If expectations are not met,
well, yes, that might look bad,
but don’t you worry, don’t you fret,
I’m still your daggy dad
with lots more words just so it seems
that something will be done,
so set aside those hopes and dreams
till this election’s won
by us, for you must understand
what’s most important here
is making sure that nothing’s planned
that threatens my career.
Smirko was too frightened to attend.
The stupidity involved in threatening Grace Tame really speaks to the whole mess we need to clean up.
I personally don’t think that a “Pentecostal preacher” is the person for this job, because he seems to bring his religion into everything he does.
Every time i listen to him speak I think he put his collar on the wrong way, he preaches at you & instructs you so you know what you should be thinking, blagh…
“The stupidity involved in threatening Grace Tame really speaks to the whole mess we need to clean up…”
Except, of course, that the Australia Day Council, which elevated Tame to her position of influence, but which Tame has now used that position of influence to summarily accuse of said ‘threat’ (via a prime media bully pulpit without a shred of evidence, to a chorus of lynch mob cheers)…has flatly denied any such ‘threat’. Except that, not only has Morrison denied any knowledge of any such ‘threat’, explicitly condemned it, explicitly said Tame is and should feel free to say and act as she pleases, and explicitly called on whoever did supposedly ‘threaten’ her…to apologise. Except that Minister Ruston has also – immediately – set up an investigation into said alleged ‘threat’.
Except that Tame’s increasingly unfathomable counter-response has been to dismiss all this as yet more ‘culture of silencing’. Except that she has also expressly said she’s not interested in criticising the actual person she claims made the actual threat’ against her…nope, she’s only going after ‘Scott’.
It’s all about attacking the LNP – as if we didn’t already know that. Lynch mobbery as partisan politics 101.
It’s why I – politely and without ill-feeling or ill-will towards anyone – struggle to take either Grace Tame or most of #MeToo at all seriously, on DV and sexual crime policy reform issues. I think that’s it long become subsumed to and by a tyre-kicking, narcissistic, counter-productive, reactionary, online mob hate-fest. I think that it’s not remotely ‘progressive’ now, if it ever was at all. And I think that the sooner all this media cult stuff is consigned politely to history, the sooner serious policy people – of good faith on all sides of politics and outside politics – can get on with useful work, and the less likely we as a society are to inflict an even higher emotional toll on the movement’s celebrity-cult leaders than the last few years already has. Also, that maybe Brittany Higgins and Bruce Lehrmann – and other actual cases facing lesser ‘abuse’ due processes, such as Alan Tudge and Rachelle Miller, along with thousands of other un-publicised extant cases all over Australia – will get a better, saner and more tenable shot at their fair procedural ‘day in court’ (actual or metaphorical).
These are IMO the #MeToo ‘messes’ that really need to be ‘cleaned up’, ratty: the casual trashing of tenable abuse due processes; the casual, ruinous trashing of the rules of law; the relentless starving and stalling and even regression of actual substantial advance by far too much ill-judged, narcissistic, nakedly-partisan grandstanding.
Pig’s bum he wouldn’t have been watching.
Anyone can watch it here
https://abcmedia.akamaized.net/news/video/202202/NOLs_NPC_0902_1000k.mp4
Correct – he’s a chronic liar.
His busyness which prevented him attending says clearly where his priorities lie.
Correct – he does lie.