Townsville Bulletin

Dutton’s dodgy decisions

- DAVID SPEERS

LAST week, Peter Dutton came within three votes of becoming prime minister. It now looks like that’s the closest he’ll ever get.

Dutton is facing enemies on all sides. Some of those who backed him last week are furious.

One Cabinet minister reckons either Dutton or Mathias Cormann lied to him about the numbers and led them all over a cliff.

Those who didn’t want to dump Malcolm Turnbull are even angrier.

They hold Dutton chiefly accountabl­e for destroying the Government’s election chances.

Labor still has Dutton’s constituti­onal eligibilit­y in its sights and will try again to refer him to the High Court when parliament resumes.

And then there’s Dutton’s own department. The bureaucrat­s are the ones he should really worry about.

Or perhaps former bureaucrat­s in this case. It’s unclear who’s leaking, but someone with access to internal department­al emails from 2015 is out to cause Dutton enormous damage by exposing his actions as minister.

We now know the then immigratio­n minister overruled his department many times in 2015 to allow women into the country on tourist visas despite the Border Force concluding they were coming here to work as au pairs.

One of these was French woman Alexandra Deuwel, who had already been counselled about breaching visa conditions on previous visits to Australia, when she had worked as an au pair for the well- connected MacLachlan family in South Australia’s Barossa Valley.

When she tried to come back into Australia in November 2015 on a tourist visa, Border Force officers rightly pulled her aside.

Deuwel admitted she had arranged “free accommodat­ion for three months in return for helping with this family’s children, cooking and riding their horses”. Text messages on her mobile phone confirmed that. That sounds a lot like an employment- like arrangemen­t.

Just months earlier, Border Force stopped an Italian woman entering the country on a tourist visa.

They suspected she was here to work as an au pair for Brisbane couple Russell and Nicole Keag.

Once again, Dutton overruled his department to let her in. In both cases, there were personal connection­s.

Dutton and Russell Keag were colleagues in the Queensland police force more than 20 years ago.

The MacLachlan family were generous donors to the Liberal Party.

The minister insists those connection­s had no influence on his decisions and there’s no evidence to suggest they did, but some wonder why they can’t get similar treatment.

Former army captain Jason Scanes says Dutton won’t even meet him to discuss granting a visa to an Afghan interprete­r who served alongside Australian forces, wearing an Australian uniform, fighting the Taliban. Scanes says this interprete­r is now being hunted by the Taliban and he can’t believe the minister is instead giving priority to letting nannies into the country.

Labor will pursue those two cases, as well as a third au pair they believe was let in by Dutton on a tourist visa, at a Senate inquiry on Wednesday.

The head of the Home Affairs Department, Mike Pezzullo, is among those who have been called to give evidence. The MacLachlan and Keag families may also be asked to appear. While granting visas to a few au pairs is hardly of Watergate proportion­s, Dutton’s judgment has been called into question.

He claims to have acted on “humanitari­an” grounds in letting these women into the country as tourists. That would seem a strange definition of a “humanitari­an” act, especially from a minister who’s built a hardman reputation staring down requests to let sick refugees come to Australia for treatment.

All of this is just another headache for new PM Scott Morrison as he tries to put an end to the infighting in his ranks. Sadly for Morrison, there’s no sign of that happening yet.

Victorian MP Julia Banks exposed how toxic things remain when she announced her plans to leave at the next election, partly because of “bullying and intimidati­on” she’s experience­d from her colleagues. The Prime Minister must ensure such claims are now dealt with properly.

Others are still steaming at the behaviour of their colleagues. Just one example is the “palpable rage” one Victorian backbenche­r expressed at young Liberal senator James Patterson “who arrived five minutes ago and then runs around getting signatures to bring down the PM”, leaving MPs in Lower House seats to face the wrath of voters.

Morrison, himself, is off to a solid start: putting in place a well- balanced Cabinet, visiting drought- stricken farmers, a brief trip to Indonesia and a quick game of footy to raise awareness for organ donation.

But the hard work of settling policy divisions and personal animositie­s still has a long way to go.

At least Morrison has some breathing room on one front: he no longer has to worry about a leadership rival in Dutton.

Watch SPEERS on Sunday at 8am Foxtel channel 103 & 600 and on Sky News on WIN

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