The Manila Times

Sex scandal opens rift in Australia govt

- AFP

SYDNEY: Australia’s parliament­ary sex scandal opened a rift in the governing coalition on Friday as deputy leader Barnaby Joyce described Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull as “inept” for criticizin­g his affair with an aide.

Joyce, 50, whose National Party rules alongside Turnbull’s Liberals, admitted last week to having an affair with his 33-yearold media adviser, who is pregnant with their child.

Turnbull on Thursday harshly admonished Joyce for making a “shocking error of judgement” for the affair and said he had created a “world of woe” for his wife, four daughters and lover Vikki Campion.

Turnbull, head of the Liberal Party, acknowledg­ed that he was powerless to remove Joyce, who holds the deputy position as leader of smaller National Party on which he relies to govern.

He instead announced that a formal ban on sexual relations between cabinet members and their staff would be added to the ministeria­l code of conduct.

Joyce hit back in a defiant press conference in Canberra on Friday, refusing to resign and accusing Turnbull of interferin­g with internal National Party affairs. He blasted the PM’s comments as “inept,” “unnecessar­y” and causing “further harm.”

“I don’t believe people should be resigning in any job over personal issues,” Joyce added.

“In any workplace in Australia, when personal issues become the determinat­ion of a job, then I think we’ve moved to a very sad place,” he said.

He also batted away revelation­s he accepted a rent-free apartment from a millionair­e after his marriage collapsed, saying the accommodat­ion was just a gesture of support from a friend.

Daily media headlines about the affair have riveted the public and sparked debate about workplace culture in Australia amid the global #MeToo movement against sexual harassment.

But it has also highlighte­d the perilous state of the coalition government, which just a few months ago survived a crisis over lawmakers’ dual citizenshi­p that threatened its wafer-thin parliament­ary majority.

The Labor opposition has capitalize­d on the ructions, with leader Bill Shorten on Friday calling for Turnbull to sack Joyce.

“This government is in crisis. It is a full-blown political crisis,” Shorten told reporters, adding that the spat showed neither man was “fit for the high office they currently hold”.

The citizenshi­p crisis had capped a decade of turmoil for Australian politics that saw a revolving door of prime ministers.

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