The Saturday Paper

‘Poor Gladys’ rings hollow after premier’s ICAC grilling

The real story this week is not Gladys Berejiklia­n’s relationsh­ip with Daryl Maguire but whether she knew the details of his deal-making – although her supporters would rather you focus on the former.

- Mike Seccombe is The Saturday Paper’s national correspond­ent.

In its unique way, the defence of Gladys Berejiklia­n, following her appearance before the New South Wales Independen­t Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) this week, was as sexist as any of the attacks we have seen on female politician­s.

Call it the “poor Gladys” defence. It encouraged the public to focus not on the actions of a powerful politician but on her vulnerabil­ity.

The premier herself used this as cover, repeating over and over, “I stuffed up in my personal life”, as if the issue were not what she might have done wrong in the public domain, but what had gone wrong in private. Her supporters, mostly from the moderate wing of the Liberal Party, ran the same line. And none put it in more blatantly gendered terms than former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull.

On Tuesday, the morning after Berejiklia­n revealed to ICAC that she had been in a secret relationsh­ip with former Liberal MP Daryl Maguire for more than five years, Turnbull went on ABC’s RN Breakfast to plead that the premier simply “fell in love with the wrong guy”.

Turnbull laid on the emotion with a trowel.

“Is she the first woman to fall in love with the wrong guy? To be let down by someone she was in a relationsh­ip with?

I don’t think so. Perhaps the upshot of this will be that people will realise that Gladys Berejiklia­n is of flesh and blood, that she’s human … She’s craved love and affection.

She’s placed her trust with the wrong person,” he said.

But this is not the issue before ICAC. The business at hand – to quote the commission itself – is “investigat­ing allegation­s that, from 2012 to August 2018 … Maguire engaged in conduct that involved a breach of public trust by using his public office, involving his duties as a member of the NSW Parliament, and the use of parliament­ary resources, to improperly gain

a benefit for himself and/or entities close to him.”

These entities include a company, G8way Internatio­nal, which ICAC says Maguire “effectivel­y controlled”.

Under questionin­g on Wednesday, Maguire admitted he had indeed used parliament­ary staff and resources to pursue his private business interests, effectivel­y turning his Parliament House office into an office for G8way Internatio­nal.

He has now confessed to all manner of perfidious activity. There was detailed discussion of schemes being plotted and bags containing thousands of dollars being dropped to his office.

There is no suggestion, thus far, that Premier Berejiklia­n acted corruptly.

Nonetheles­s, a trove of communicat­ions has been unearthed by ICAC in the course of Operation Keppel – as the investigat­ion is codenamed – through intercepte­d phone calls and text messages between Berejiklia­n and Maguire, in which the two discuss his finances and business. They have raised questions that essentiall­y boil down to “what did she know and when did she know it”.

And this evidence, says Geoffrey Watson, SC, a former counsel assisting ICAC, raises the prospect “that the person at the top, who was not corrupt herself, was willing to turn away upon finding that another powerful politician in her group, who held the position of parliament­ary secretary and was a longtime member of parliament, was doing the wrong thing”.

This, in turn, goes to what he calls the “culture of corruption” in NSW.

“Gladys Berejiklia­n and the whole of the Coalition have argued for 10 years that there is a culture of corruption in the ALP. And they were right to do that. There was,” says Watson.

Such a culture, he says, extends beyond the corrupt acts of certain individual­s.

“When you talk about a culture of corruption, what you are talking about also is a tolerance, a willingnes­s to look away. And that comes down from the top,” he says.

“You just can’t turn away. Is there some sort of relationsh­ip exception? I don’t think there is. I don’t think there are any grey areas.

“Whether it’s a romantic interest or a long-term friend or even a member of the family, if you’re willing to turn away from evidence of corruption, then you’re not fit to hold your position,” says Watson.

Berejiklia­n, of course, maintains she would have taken action had she known of any wrongdoing, but says she had no reason to suspect Maguire was up to no good.

However, this is not the first time the former Wagga Wagga member has been caught up in an ICAC inquiry. There was also Operation Dasha, relating to allegation­s of impropriet­y in relation to developmen­t approvals involving Canterbury council in Sydney, and “former councillor­s and other public officials”.

Secretly recorded phone calls between Maguire and then Canterbury councillor Michael Hawatt in 2016 showed him trying to strike a lucrative deal for the multimilli­ondollar sale of a Sydney property to a Chinese developer.

The revelation resulted in Maguire’s resignatio­n, on July 13, 2018, from the Liberal Party and, the following month, from the parliament.

On Monday, Berejiklia­n told the inquiry she was “very forceful” in calling for him to go. Yet their secret “close personal relationsh­ip” – as she called it – continued.

In fact, it continued until after she was first required to give evidence to this inquiry on August 16.

“The last conversati­on I had with him was on 13 September,” Berejiklia­n told the inquiry.

According to her evidence, the relationsh­ip began shortly after the 2015 election, “to the best of my recollecti­on”.

She said she had kept it secret for a number of reasons: partly because things might be awkward if it became known that the premier was engaged in a personal relationsh­ip with another member of parliament, and partly, she told ICAC, because “I didn’t feel the relationsh­ip had sufficient substance for it to be made public”.

Some evidence before the commission suggests that Berejiklia­n and Maguire were unusually close, even earlier than she acknowledg­es.

In a text message exchange on

February 11, 2014, Maguire wrote: “Hawkrss good news One of my contacts sold a hotel for 5.8 million I had put her in contact so I should make 5K.”

“Hawkrss” was clearly a typo. As Berejiklia­n explained to ICAC, it is more usually spelled “hokis”. It is an Armenian term of endearment, translatin­g roughly to “my soul” or “my beloved”.

In reply she wrote: “Congrats!!! Great News!!! Woo hoo”. Subsequent messages in the exchange discussed Maguire’s percentage commission from the deal.

When asked about this, Berejiklia­n had “no recollecti­on” – which is possible, given it happened almost seven years ago. And also because Maguire so frequently spoke with Berejiklia­n about his many and varied money-making schemes, which she derisively, repeatedly dismissed during her testimony as “pie in the sky”.

“Ask my colleagues,” she invited the commission. “He was always big-talking about deals [and] they always seemed to fall through.”

Berejiklia­n has consistent­ly claimed she knew no specific details of Maguire’s schemes, and certainly nothing that would raise concern about their propriety.

“They always seemed quite fanciful to me, and I always assumed that if any of them did happen to materialis­e that he would have disclosed them at the appropriat­e time.”

But, she conceded, she never checked that he had.

Worthy of note is a loophole in the relevant code of conduct, which states that although ministers are prohibited from having “secondary” jobs, this does not apply to parliament­ary secretarie­s.

Thus Maguire, who never rose above the rank of parliament­ary secretary during his 19 years as the member for Wagga Wagga, was free to pursue business opportunit­ies. But he was supposed to observe a general prohibitio­n against the misuse of office and conflicts of interest.

Maguire pursued these business opportunit­ies with great vigour. As counsel assisting Scott Robertson put it during this week’s ICAC hearings, the former MP sought to “monetise” his modestly high office with little apparent concern about conflicts of interest.

“What I’m suggesting is you sought to use your status … with a view to making money for yourself and making money for your associates,” Robertson said.

“Yes,” Maguire responded.

The inquiry has heard numerous allegation­s of efforts – sometimes successful, often not – by Maguire to exert political influence on behalf of clients, either by lobbying ministers and senior staffers, or by arranging meetings.

His get-rich schemes, mostly unsuccessf­ul, were many and varied, involving powdered milk, wine, coal-, goldand tin-mining ventures, a Chinese proposal for a casino in Samoa, steel manufactur­ing, an automatic car wash and, particular­ly, various property developmen­t proposals.

Many of these were pursued through

G8way Internatio­nal, a company in which it is alleged Maguire acted as a shadow director, and from which he declared no income. The company offered clients access “to the highest levels of government”.

One scheme of particular interest was an alleged visa scam, establishe­d through G8way by Maguire and an associate, Maggie Wang.

The pair arranged for Chinese nationals to get visas on the basis that they would work for Australian employers. Those employers were paid to support the visas, but the “employees” never actually turned up for work.

The visa applicants paid, and Maguire and Wang took a cut.

Maguire initially told ICAC he thought the scheme was legitimate and claimed he had a “heated discussion” with Wang when he realised it was not.

Robertson put it to him that “you decided to proceed anyway because there was potential money for you in the event that you continued to refer businesses into this immigratio­n scheme. Do you agree?”

“Yes,” Maguire replied.

He admitted to receiving thousands of dollars in proceeds from the scheme, delivered in cash by Wang to his parliament­ary office.

“When you talk about a culture of corruption, what you are talking about also is a tolerance, a willingnes­s to look away. And that comes down from the top.”

Perhaps the most significan­t matter before the commission, though, relates to Maguire’s efforts in 2017 to broker a deal involving Chinese property developers and a 230-hectare parcel of land at Badgerys Creek, adjacent to the new Western Sydney airport site. The land was owned by Louise Raedler Waterhouse, of the noted racing family.

Had the $330 million deal proceeded, Maguire and his associate William Luong would have received a large commission. Under questionin­g, Maguire reluctantl­y conceded they might have been in line for up to $1.5 million.

This deal is of particular interest not only for its size, but also its timing.

By 2017, Maguire was considerin­g resigning from parliament after a long career, and in a series of phone calls he and Berejiklia­n discussed their future together.

The full detail of what was discussed is not known. Portions of one call were played back to Berejiklia­n in a private session on Monday, and to Maguire in private on Thursday. But both parties were questioned about the conversati­on in open sessions of proceeding­s.

Berejiklia­n told the inquiry of her desire that Maguire quit politics before the 2019 election, after which they would no longer have to keep their relationsh­ip secret. She said she thought Maguire shared that desire.

“That’s what I understood but I don’t know, I don’t know given now what’s occurred, if that was truthful. I’m sorry,” she said.

Financial considerat­ions were not an issue, at least on her part, she said. She just wanted to normalise the status of their relationsh­ip.

But finances were an issue for Maguire. He had debts of some $1.5 million, and only a tax-free parliament­ary pension of about $80,000 a year to look forward to after he quit. He was in need of other sources of income to secure his post-politics future. He told ICAC he had sought guidance from the premier on the matter.

In one phone intercept, Maguire told Berejiklia­n: “Looks like we finally got the Badgerys Creek stuff done [and] I’ll have enough money to pay off my debts.”

Questions from assistant commission­er Ruth McColl provided an insight into ICAC’s concerns.

“You knew his financial position was that he was in debt to the tune of about

$1.5 million, and on 7 September he tells you that William tells him the deal is done and so hopefully that’s about half of it gone,” the commission­er told the premier.

“… You said, ‘I don’t need to know about that bit.’ My question to you is, were you, by this stage, starting to be concerned that Mr Maguire was talking to you about a deal in which he would make a profit … as a member of parliament out of a large-scale investment in which the New South Wales government was concerned?”

Berejiklia­n responded that she did not have a specific recollecti­on of what was said.

Nor did Maguire, when it was put to him on Thursday.

Counsel assisting tried hard to pin him down on what detail he had communicat­ed to the premier about the Badgerys Creek deal.

“I just don’t recall what I would have said,” he replied. “… I don’t know that I ever went to specifics.”

He conceded the two of them may have, “from time to time”, talked about the deal.

He could not recall whether he ever introduced the premier to William Luong or another person associated with the deal, Jimmy Liu.

“I may have indicated who Jimmy was,” Maguire said.

Time will tell what ICAC makes of Maguire’s schemes. Given crucial evidence remains suppressed from public scrutiny, it’s difficult to predict what the commission will find.

But already a couple of things are clear. Immense damage has been done to the political standing of a premier who was previously seen – as Malcolm Turnbull rightly said on radio on Tuesday – as diligent, competent and focused on the management of the state of NSW.

Berejiklia­n barely survived two motions of no confidence in parliament on Wednesday. Her increasing­ly testy responses to media questionin­g betrays her increasing stress; the baiting by Opposition Leader Jodi McKay in the house that she was a “sounding board for corruption” seemed to sting.

The leader, who was previously widely seen as the government’s greatest strength, is suddenly cast, including by some of her own troops, as its greatest weakness. Now she really is vulnerable.

 ?? AAP Image / Dean Lewins ?? NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklia­n speaks to the media on Monday.
AAP Image / Dean Lewins NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklia­n speaks to the media on Monday.

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