Townsville Bulletin

NATION Joyce defends cash for tell- all

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BARNABY Joyce has defended selling the story of his new family in a tell- all interview, saying it was his partner who decided to pocket the six- figure payment.

The former deputy prime minster said he and staffertur­ned- partner Vikki Campion wanted privacy after the birth of their son last month.

“In the last fortnight we’ve had drones over our house, we’ve had paparazzi waiting for us outside Armidale airport, we’ve had people following us to Uralla,” Mr Joyce told reporters in Canberra yesterday.

“We tried just burning this out and that didn’t work.”

Cabinet minister Kelly O’Dwyer believes most Australian­s are “pretty disgusted” about the interview.

Ms O’Dwyer said serving politician­s should not put a price on being accountabl­e to the public, and Mr Joyce had made a mistake.

“Ultimately it’s a matter for him and his judgment. I personally wouldn’t do it, I don’t think it’s right, and I think most Australian­s are pretty disgusted by it,” Ms O’Dwyer told ABC radio.

Prime Minister Turnbull says he’ll matter privately Joyce.

“It’s not something that I would have encouraged him to do, in fact quite the contrary,” Mr Turnbull told Tasmanian radio station LAFM.

Mr Joyce said it was Ms Campion who made the decision to accept the money be- Malcolm raise the with Mr cause she was being “screwed over” by the constant media attention.

“If we had a proper tort of privacy we would never have had to do this,” he told News Corp.

The couple sold their story to Channel Seven’s Sunday Night program for a reported $ 150,000.

The controvers­ial interview to air on Sunday has prompted calls for a ban on serving politi- cians receiving cash for media comment.

Nationals frontbench­er Darren Chester, who was dumped by Mr Joyce from cabinet in December, intends to raise the proposed ban with colleagues.

“This is unpreceden­ted in my time in parliament and I’m open to the conversati­on about banning MPs from benefiting personally from selling stories to the media,” Mr Chester told News Corp.

He acknowledg­ed the circumstan­ces were complex given Ms Campion was entitled to seek payment as a private citizen but said the former Nationals leader could no longer complain about a breach of privacy.

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