Vancouver Sun

Australian PM bans hook-ups in cabinet

Deputy PM found to have fathered baby

- Rod McGuiRk

CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA • Australia’s prime minister on Thursday banned government ministers from having sex with staff as his deputy battled for his political survival over revelation­s that he is expecting a baby with a former press secretary.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull accused Barnaby Joyce of making a “shocking error of judgment” by having an office affair which had hurt his wife, his four daughters and his new partner, who is due to give birth in April.

“He has set off a world of woe for those women and appalled all of us,” Turnbull told reporters.

“Ministers, regardless of whether they are married or single, must not engage in sexual relations with their staff,” he said, stating a new rule that his cabinet must now adhere to.

Since news of the impending birth broke last week, Turnbull has supported Joyce and declined to comment on his personal circumstan­ces out of respect for his estranged wife of 24 years and children.

Last week, Turnbull talked down the prospect of Australia following the U.S. House of Representa­tives’ lead by banning lawmakers from having sex with staff, saying legislator­s were entitled to private lives.

But with the opposition questionin­g whether Joyce had breached the government’s guidelines for ministeria­l conduct, Turnbull announced on Thursday that Joyce will not serve as acting prime minister when Turnbull travels to the United States next week.

Motions to have Joyce fired were defeated in both the Senate and House of Representa­tives on Thursday.

Turnbull had said as recently as Wednesday that Joyce would act as prime minister, which is the usual role of his deputy. But Turnbull said the government would be led in his absence by its Senate leader, Mathias Cormann, because Joyce was taking leave for a week.

Joyce has said his marriage breakdown and his current relationsh­ip with Vikki Campion are private matters. But questions have been raised about her employment in two government jobs after working in Joyce’s office and the rent-free apartment owned by a wealthy political donor where Joyce and Campion now live.

“My personal circumstan­ces have been up hill, down dale in this last week. I accept that and that is the price of a political life,” Joyce said in his first speech in Parliament discussing the relationsh­ip since the reports surfaced.

Joyce’s National party, the junior coalition partner, held a crisis meeting on Wednesday over whether he should continue as its leader.

Nationals President Larry Anthony, the party’s most senior bureaucrat and a former legislator, said it had resolved to give Joyce more time to ride out his controvers­ies.

“It’s been an extraordin­arily difficult time for the ... party and clearly for Barnaby Joyce and his family and for the government,” Anthony told reporters.

 ?? ROD MCGUIRK / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull called the fact his deputy prime minister fathered a child with a former press secretary a ‘shocking error of judgment.’
ROD MCGUIRK / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull called the fact his deputy prime minister fathered a child with a former press secretary a ‘shocking error of judgment.’

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