Tides are turning all over the place. Women have shredded the man-friendly Liberal Party, relegating its bizarre brand of toxic masculinity to what should be a long term in opposition and maybe even electoral oblivion.
Is it coincidental that another front in the gender war, the one being fought in our defamation courts, has also turned decidedly against the previously ascendant males? Short answer: no. Observed from altitude, these shifts are part of a wider trend.
It had been widely thought, after Geoffrey Rush’s huge victory in his defamation case against The Daily Telegraph, that Australia’s plaintiff-leaning defamation laws had killed off — or at least crippled — the Me Too movement here. More significantly, a bunch of men read into that case’s outcome a promise that was never really there: that in defamation litigation lies vindication, happily laced with buckets of money.
Thus it became a default response, when one’s number came up as the next “target” of a Me Too accusation, to sue. Accordingly, we were promised the spectacle of the defamation trials of the century, as Christian Porter launched proceedings against the ABC and journalist Louise Milligan, and Craig McLachlan did likewise to the ABC, Nine and one of his alleged victims, Christie Whelan Browne.
Neither case, as it turns out, could quite have shaded Ben Roberts-Smith’s epic war of attrition, which is still going and may never end. We’ll never know now, of course, because neither case will proceed. Porter discontinued his last year, in return for some legal costs and no apology, and McLachlan sensationally blew up his own case last week just before the defence was about to roll out its long list of witnesses of truth. For each man, or whoever was funding him, it was an expensive exercise in futility and a perfect case study of the Streisand Effect.
We can also add former defence minister Peter Dutton to the list, following his loss in Shane Bazzi’s appeal against the lower court finding that Bazzi had defamed Dutton by calling him a “rape apologist”. No vindication there either, but another very large bill.
The law has not relevantly changed, and the courts have not shifted their view. Australia’s defamation law remains ridiculously repressive of free speech and maintains its chilling effect on public interest journalism and the ability of survivors to speak their truths. However, achieving silence by the threat of a defamation suit is very different from actually winning it.
As I said to Jess Hill when she interviewed me for her Quarterly Essay “The Reckoning”, pursuing defamation is a high-risk strategy for any alleged perpetrator, because they alone know how many victims are out there. Going after the first one who speaks out, especially suing them personally, may achieve the purpose of silencing all the others; or it may not.
I have nothing to say about the allegations against Porter or McLachlan; I don’t know if they’re true. The fact that they dropped their cases means they have to live with the allegations remaining live and untested. All they achieved by commencing and then dropping their lawsuits was to amplify the damage to their own reputations. That pair of choices is on them alone.
If they saw the Rush case as a happy precedent for their own situations, then they learned precisely the wrong lessons. Rush won his case because the Telegraph lost it, the moment it went to print with its half-arsed hatchet job. It hadn’t spoken to the alleged victim (who did not want her allegation made public), it had done none of the work required to properly stack up its defence, and it sensationalised the story in ways that only a Murdoch tabloid can. It deserved to lose.
But there is no comparison between the shithouse efforts of the trashy Telegraph and the careful forensic work that goes into an investigative piece when Kate McClymont or Louise Milligan is on the job. When Porter sued, the ABC hit him with an intricately detailed defence (still largely suppressed). McLachlan was about to watch 11 female defence witnesses paraded into court to describe the sexual harassment that they allege he perpetrated on them.
That is not to say that either man would have lost his case if he hadn’t dropped it; that’s unknowable now. But it is fair to suggest that the choice he ultimately made was unsurprising. It was always going to be ugly, expensive and risky; from my perspective, the calculus never favoured suing.
Meanwhile, former Coalition MP Andrew Laming’s defamation case continues. He’s suing Nine for, in his words, painting him as a “lecherous” person and a “pervert” who took a photo of a woman’s buttocks without her knowledge for sexual gratification. Nine is defending hard, running a contextual truth defence in which it says he is a “creep” who is “unfit to be a member of Parliament”.
Well, Laming is no longer in Parliament, having retired at the election to pursue his other interests, but he still wants his reputation restored. We’ll see how that plays out for him.
What we can say for sure is that what might for a while have been thought to be an easy pathway for men accused — the defamation suit — has turned out to be what it always in reality was: a minefield. That realisation is, like the election result itself, part of the reckoning.
Michael Bradley provided legal representation to the woman known as Kate, who alleged she was raped by Christian Porter in January 1988. Porter denies the allegation.
Any recent cases of women suing for defamation?
Rhinohide threatened to do so during her me$$y family fight and were her attack dogs quoted several Crikey comments in a court submission – which did not proceed.
Maybe Michael could explain why Jo Dyer performed the second worst of all 21 Teals. Even the Teal blokes scored better than her. After leading the team (yourself included) “like a cult” to take Potter down anyway possible, you would think the electorate would be parading her on their shoulders.
Sounds like she has had her own reckoning too.
Be interesting to see where Porter’s current ABC complaint goes, if anywhere, now that the government has changed and we’re presumably moving on into a new gender uplit sunland. If the Oz reporting on the cynicism of 4C’s selective use of Kate’s original diary is even half accurate, a lot of heads should roll at the ABC (starting with the legal department). It’s staggering – again, if the Oz reports are true – what Dyer and her busy gang (including the roped-in likes of Wong, the Turnbulls, etc) engineered. A public broadcaster contrived story that created a media lynch mob/coup that ultimately ousted the nation’s senior elected law officer. The opposite of both progressive liberal democracy, and credible investigative journalism. Quite a feat.
It presumably may all just…fade away quietly at the ABC now (I think Neighbor has retired already). But you’d think the NSW Fed Court – which ratified the defo settlement/Porter withdrawal – would be watching with some bemusement, at least. The ABC of course had to make a full disclosure of relevant materials to Porter as part of their defo response, and ultimately what they did provide underpinned settlement. We also shouldn’t forget that Dyer was awarded $430K-odd costs in a seperate but related ruling, too. If the ABC or Milligan (as co-Respondents) withheld material during that court process that clearly demonstrates the original programs/reports were in cherry-picked ‘bad faith’…well, I’m not a lawyer, am I. And as for potential damages? What’s a payout for a destroyed parliamentary career look like, you reckon? (Taxpayers say ‘Thank you, ABC’, again.) But like you say, at least Jo Dyer got herself elect-…oh.
Maybe like the ABC she too had best hope it – and Porter – all does just…quietly go away. Significant new government players like Wong and Dreyfus were also loud voices in the extra-judicial lynch mobbery, so they’ll be hoping the same, which will doubtless add carpet-sweep oomph. From Labor’s perspective the #MeToo cult has largely served its purpose now, of course.
The mournful reality (for sexual crime victims especially) is that the Porter lynch mob was never really about #MeToo, never about justice for Kate Thornton, or any other victim. It was mostly about partisan politics, legal and media opportunism, and individual narcissisms. Fine, they got rid of Porter and they got rid of the LNP government, too. I just hope the lynch mobbers are all at least satisfied with those outcomes, and will stop trashing legal due process now..
A mob does not subside once given a taste of blood – it’s the nature of the beast.
It is always those in the rear who benefit most from mass hysteria as they wait for the numbers to has culled sufficiently for such 3rd raters to emerge.
What’s the old cry of such ‘revolutionaries’ – “I must follow the mob, I’m their leader!”?
“…wait for the numbers to
hasBE culled…”Yep. Witness Exhibit 1: the dazzling speed with which MB/Marque ran like buggery away from the mob push, by asserting they’d neither seen nor even heard of the full Kate diary. I suspect if it does get messy with the current ABC complaint and perhaps even another defo cade…the Porter lynch mob will suddenly become a rather small and lonely one…mobs might well retain their appetite once it’s up, but they also tend to melt away very quickly when the mobbery becomes tough going in one place…to regroup later, somewhere else. Guess we’ll have to wait and see.
There were ‘teal blokes’?
I thought it was a Greenham Common kinda thangy – ‘not needed’.
do keep up, loki, we have been superfluous to requirements in these movements for some time now! not our world anymore, mate. best we can offer now is to keep forlornly heckling from the ‘misogynist’ fringe, while wishing the neo-matriarchs warm best luck in making a better go of the joint than we’ve manage. like it or not, they’ll quickly discover they will still need due legal process in sexual crime matters. they’ve all got sons/dads/brothers…some, even perfectly delightful consorts whom they love. or if not, who are still useful for lifting heavy things, being butchered in wars, arresting thugs, impregnation etc!
hope for us yet man! 🙂
Like elsewhere it’s not just about ‘vindication’ but ‘vindictiveness’ using the law to shut down dissenting voices, ideas and analysis.
Known as SLAPPs ‘Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation’ to intimidate, stress and even bankrupt targets e.g. writers and journalists, even if no chance of the plaintiff prevailing.
Has been reported widely by Private Eye in the UK on oligarchs et al. legal shopping and using London courts, while both the UK and EU are in the process of drafting anti-SLAPP actions, to protect freedom of speech.
has toxic masculinity given way to toxic feminity?
Have you ever seen the wall scrawlings in a women’s toilet?
Anyone who ever stepped foot inside an all girls school knows what lies below the surface ready to emerge once males arent around to play the role of chief ass whole.
I’ll love to see a gender reboot of Lord of the Flies.
Ha. Learned how to make a disclosure of interest at last have we, Rumpole? Alas…MB, your deeply-compromised trouble is that you give away your extra-judicial bias – your lynch mob instincts – in spite of yourself. With that last little ‘we won, nyah‘ dig (couldn’t resist, huh):
“That realisation is, like the election result itself, part of the reckoning.” Oh, really?
Doofus: in the same way that Brittany Higgins can’t be formally lauded in our parliament as a ‘hero’ unless her alleged rapist is presumed guilty by it, so too, you can claim neither Porter nor Maclachlan – which you supposedly have ‘nothing to say about’ – needs a ‘reckoning’…unless you’re presuming they’re both presumed guilty. Get it? Your lumberingly disingenuous (odiously patronising) mugging to the Crikey audience knows no bounds, apparently. As for the dropped Porter defo case…well, now. Let’s see what happens with the current Porter ABC complaint first. You know, the one based on Milligan’s/Neighbor’s alleged bad faith selective/distortions of the available source material? Oh, sorry, that’s right: you didn’t know about that first 88-page version, didja? Nuthin’ to do with you or Marque, right? (Boy, you sure can run fast when you need to, MB…just when I’m thinking my disdain for you has bottomed out…). Oh well, ABC complaint-shlaint, right? Except it wasn’t just Porter and 4C viewers who had a right to documentary ‘full disclosure’, was it. The NSW Federal Court might also take a pretty dim view of Respondent submissions that don’t avail all parties of all relevant material. So…let’s do what grown-ups do, hey, and allow due process its…full due process. Before shooting off our self-interested gobs in the media, yet again. Could well be that the Porter defo action has barely begun. I’m no lawyer, so what do I know, but I suspect the taxpayer might be up for a monster pay-out yet. What do you reckon, MB? (I know you’re no lawyer either, but I’m curious anyway.)
In the end? Whatever, Michael. You go ahead and practise the law as you see. You’ve got the bit of paper. I haven’t. But we both know what you are. There’s clearly coin in #MeToo ambulance-chasing, and social cachet in faddish cause grand-standing. Fine. Lynch away & flourish. You go ahead and…change the way the law is practised. Just don’t delude yourself that trashing its basic rules, as you so relentlessly have done throughout #MeToo, is serving the interests of anyone besides yourself – and that includes victims of sexual abuse, harassment and crime. I also genuinely hope, for your sake, that neither you nor anyone close to you ever has the misfortune to have sexual crime allegations that have been made against them…handled in the way that you and Marque alone in the legal fraternity think is just fine. The slippery slope never truly reveals itself as dangerous until you’re the one hurtling out of control down it yourself, but even as a legal layman I wouldn’t wish a lynch mob on anyone.
No lawyer ever should. Much less orchestrate one.
me thinks that Jack doth protest too much
Well, gee, I bet it felt good to get that out.
no. just necessary kmart. go back and watch Mockingbird again. and pay attention this time.
better yet read the book
Like I said when all this started, once Kate’s allegations were aired by ABC in such a dirt digging way, Kate’s right to privacy (after death) went out the window.
What has since come out is that she was bipolar, her parents thought she was embellishing her story, she made sexual assault allegations against a second person later in life and as we see from the 88 page version of her testimony she was writing bizarre self contracting and implausible things that the ABC selectively choose not to publish. Those are verifiable facts.
And once again I’m not saying Porter was innocent (or guilty), im not sad to see him go, nor am I saying those with mental illnesses have no sexual rights, but society demands full disclose when a 30 year old allegation is used by the public broadcaster to take down one of our most senior politicians. It is not the ABCs role to mount the case, its role is to report without bias.
yep, spot on Straw. I’m not espesh sad to see porter go as AG either (see East Timor case exhibit 1), but the answer to getting rid of the national senior elected law officer when you don’t like the job he’s doing isn’t a lumberingly contrived rape accusation that can never be tested…except by a self-appointed righteous lynch mob.. All that does is weaken, not strengthen, our capacity to pursue justice in sexual crime cases. At least Pell’s lynch mob made the civically self-correctable mistake of handing over their bound n——r to the courts.
Kate Thornton was exploited appallingly throughout this entire sorry episode. And everything from public faith in legal due process to the ABC’s credibility to the proper allocation of resources and public attention to the most urgent sexual harassment, abuse and crime areas was weakened by it, too. Hard to forgive. Let’s hope the Teals are serious about gender equality for women other than the educated, privileged and eloquent.
Worth noting btw Straw, while we are airing our own modest gripes about Porter as AG, that he’s now back providing due legal process defence counsel in a State criminal case against three otherwise powerless ‘nobodies’ in WA. Whatever our views – on him as AG, personally, and on whether or not the 17 year-old kid he was in 1987 did rape Kate Thornton – he is a man of the Law, and laws. I thought his valedictory speech to Parly, especially the passages regarding why his lynch mob treatment is something we should all be deeply troubled about, was pretty impressive.
Yes, and his time supporting domestic violence victims before he entered politics was also noteworthy.
This is the man who thinks there is mandatory sentencing for rape in the ACT. I think we can assume anything that comes from the depth of his sweet little misogynistic heart is not really worth going through the word salad to make sense of.
He speaks with passion, you speak with vitriol. There is a difference.
Yes, VJ, fair point…from memory (can’t locate the comment now) I think I was briefly misinformed by a press misreport and the badly worded ACT Criminal Act on sexual intercourse w/o consent itself. My bad…though they should reword the Act for sentencing clarity, I think.
As to the rest of your usual riff….as I’ve assured you before, I wouldn’t for a second want you wasting your time reading my word salads. I know already where you stand on my ‘vile misogyny’, you should move on. Meanwhile I’ll try not to lose sleep over your opinion of me, and keep mine of you to myself. All the best.
NB: apols, Bradley/Marque denies knowing about the 25 page version circulated by Dyer & co, not the full 88 page Kate diary/document.