The Weekend Post

Premier needs to take ownership

-

PREMIER Annastacia Palaszczuk must have undergone some incredibly serious dental surgery.

To be unable to speak and effectivel­y out of action for almost 24 hours, she has my sympathy.

I had dental surgery two weeks ago, and as unpleasant as it was, it took less than an hour for the anaestheti­c to wear off and for my face to return to its version of normal.

I didn’t need to squirrel myself away for the best part of a day. Maybe I was just lucky. We don’t know what two-hour procedure Ms Palaszczuk had on Wednesday but we’re to believe it was so severe she couldn’t front the media or take any questions from journalist­s over the damning Coaldrake Review released the afternoon before.

Ms Palaszczuk later said the surgery “could not be delayed”. Could it have taken place earlier, say, on Monday? No one but the Premier and her dentist can answer that.

But it was indeed a very bad look for the person at the top of the rotting food chain known as this government and its toxic public service to be missing in action until 9am Thursday.

When the Premier finally fronted the media – at a press conference and not, for a change, on the red carpet of a celebritys­tacked gala – she said that her government would “take responsibi­lity” for the poor culture within the public sector.

She comprehens­ively failed to accept that as the leader, the buck stops with her. Instead, she issued a warning to public servants that those not focused on their jobs should leave. Nice.

What the Coaldrake Review screams – even if the Premier isn’t listening and opts to downplay her role saying “we all need to take responsibi­lity and we will get this fixed” – is that a fish rots from the head. Professor Peter Coaldrake said as much on Wednesday when quizzed over the Premier’s leadership, plainly stating “the tone in any organisati­on is significan­tly set at the top”.

Ms Palaszczuk has a massive amount of work to do in countering a culture she has allowed to fester. It’s a culture that has quashed dissent, thrived on bullying, been dominated by short-term political thinking, and given inordinate power to lobbyists in highly secretive deals.

Who actually runs our state is a fact all Queensland­ers deserve to know.

And let’s not forget Professor Coaldrake was given only four months to investigat­e a system with entrenched integrity and accountabi­lity issues.

How much deeper the probe could have been with more time and resources.

His scathing 101-page report confirms the government’s culture is broken “from the top down”, which makes the Premier’s response outstandin­g in its arrogance.

While she has pledged to implement its 14 recommenda­tions – to say anything else would be political suicide – she attempted on Thursday to belittle the report as a simple “health check”.

When asked by a journalist if the report troubled her because it happened under her watch, Ms Palaszczuk shot back that she embraced it. “It doesn’t trouble me,” she said.

It should. The Premier has many serious questions to answer, including how she intends to fix the Right to Informatio­n process that tries to thwart journalist­s exposing what’s really going on. The release of informatio­n in the community

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia