The Weekend Post

Clean up the house? Give us a break

WOMEN ON BOTH SIDES OF THE HOUSE DON’T THINK IT WILL CHANGE

- VIKKI CAMPION VICKI CAMPION IS A COLUMNIST FOR THE DAILY TELEGRAPH

THE overwhelmi­ng response to the Jenkins report into behaviour in Commonweal­th parliament­ary workplaces has been bewilderme­nt.

Why didn’t they blow the whistle earlier if things were so bad? When we did, you made us choke on it.

When James Ashby raised sexual harassment complaints about his employer former Speaker Peter Slipper, he copped a $4.4m legal bill while Mr Slipper had his legal fees paid by the taxpayer.

And did anyone kindly report Ashby’s Hell?

No. He was smeared and attacked.

In the past when other women spoke out, they were leaked against, sacked, refused access to documents that concerned their case, even under FOI.

One was left with a $40,000 legal bill. Another was left jobless for two years after being black-listed and hounded out of the building.

She had no media resources to cope – and it was only one journalist who was honest and told her that the ministry was leaking against her.

When I spoke out about being urged to consider an abortion by staff to protect the senior leadership, “anonymous sources” slammed me for “defaming” Coalition staff, with no investigat­ion or report ever, only introducin­g a ridiculous bonk ban that protects no one.

There was no call from the then Turnbull Prime Minister’s Office about my welfare – only intense background­ing, leaking, and an onslaught of spin, lies, and outrageous claims that even the most basic documents easily proved untrue.

Yet elements of the media lapped it up, even when provided evidence to the contrary.

At the time, I was jobless, heavily pregnant, distressed, effectivel­y living out of my car and AirBnB’s booked by my brother, with a prepaid phone. It was meagre resources against an entire ministry of spin fuelling thousands of stories.

Three times, in three different homes, in two different states, I put together my baby’s cot in my third trimester, only to have to take it apart, pack and move again, because of Parliament-fuelled hounding.

Kate Jenkins provided the first avenue for staff and parliament­arians to tell their story without being cruelly shamed, scapegoate­d or made unemployab­le.

But the report doesn’t vindicate us. It made us angrier. Women on both sides of the House don’t believe it will change.

When Rachelle Miller spoke of coercive control within her relationsh­ip with her former boss Alan Tudge this week, she was described as a “disaffecte­d party”.

That Greens Senator Lydia Thorpe slut-shamed Liberal Senator Hollie Hughes on the floor of the Senate and Liberal Senator David Van was accused of growling at Senator Jacqui Lambie while the report’s findings were released, shows that the culture won’t change and females are just as much the perpetrato­rs.

And why should you care? Forget about parliament setting the standard – it never has and never will.

You should care because once you drive out the people who dedicate their lives to a cause only because they care enough about their community to make it better, who learn how to work the bureaucrac­y and manipulate the processes of the Parliament, who can think around corners to find solutions, who listen and engage with the people who others want to forget, once they no longer want to come here, what do you have left? Whether that’s getting a small town a visa to keep their doctor, helping a veteran who has ground the teeth out of his head with nightmares, or herculean effort to bring on the Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide, those are political results that you only get if you have people with empathy and the respect to listen.

Without it, you will be left with a House of narcissist­ic psychopath­s, who only took this job to make contacts for the next big job.

You don’t have a parliament that governs for you. You have a parliament doing what’s politicall­y expedient for themselves.

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