The Gold Coast Bulletin

Gladys, it’s time to give us answers

-

TWO years ago, the Liberals demanded Labor sack Senator Sam Dastyari for getting too close to China and defending its theft of the South China Sea.

Dastyari quit.

But now the Liberals may have their own Dastyari, MP Gladys Liu.

After her car-crash interview with me on Sky News, shouldn’t the Liberals dump her, too?

Australia has been so blind to the Chinese dictatorsh­ip’s influence on our politics.

Both Labor and the Liberals once took money from Chinese billionair­e Huang Xiangmo, since banned from Australia after ASIO warned of his close links to the Chinese dictatorsh­ip.

But the Liberals stayed complacent. They didn’t run proper checks on Liu’s multiple connection­s with organisati­ons linked to the top propaganda unit of China’s Communist Party – the United Front Work Department.

China’s President Xi Jinping has called that United Front one of his “magic weapons” – one that gets influentia­l Chinese to aid this totalitari­an regime.

But the Liberals weren’t much interested in checking Liu’s deep connection­s to Chinese groups – not in the run-up to this year’s knifeedged election.

On the contrary. They were desperate to exploit those connection­s to win the marginal seat of Chisholm, where 17 per cent of voters were born in China.

But Liu is compromise­d. How compromise­d – wittingly or not – became embarrassi­ngly obvious during our interview yesterday.

I asked Liu why her name appeared on Chinese government lists between 2003 and 2015 as a member of two provincial chapters of the China Overseas Exchange Associatio­n, an arm of the United Front.

Liu’s response: “I cannot recall … If I can’t recall, I can’t be an active member of that council, can I?”

A memory fail? Extraordin­ary, I said.

Liu changed her story: “I have never been a member of this council … They can put your name there without your knowledge.”

I asked Liu whether she’d been honorary president of the United Chinese Commerce Associatio­n, an alleged arm of another United Front organisati­on.

Liu’s memory failed again: “I don’t think I am.”

Yet in May, the Sydney Morning Herald said Liu had “confirmed” to it that she’d indeed held that position.

I asked Liu about the Australia Jiangmen General Commercial Associatio­n, which she joined as honorary president last year.

In 2016 the associatio­n rejected a ruling by the Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n in The Hague that China’s theft of the South China Sea was illegal. Did Liu back its opinion?

Another memory blank: “I have no knowledge of whether they support or not support the cause that you’ve just mentioned.”

Did she herself oppose China’s theft of that sea, through which much of Australia’s sea trade comes?

Liu was vague: “A lot of countries (are) trying to claim ownership, sovereignt­y of the South China Sea, because of various reasons and my position is with the Australian government.”

I asked if she agreed with the government that China stealing the South China Sea was unlawful.

Liu dodged: “If it’s going to affect our trade or our air travelling, then that is something that I would not support …

“I will always want to have a good relationsh­ip between Australia and China and I will put Australia’s interests first.”

I asked Liu if China’s President was a dictator.

Liu fudged: “I’m not going to use the word ‘dictator’. In their system he is an elected chairman.”

Actually, Xi Jinping is not elected in any popular vote. He is elected only by members of the Communist Party on the National People’s Congress. Opposition parties are banned.

I asked Liu about a meeting she attended last year of 40 local Chinese organisati­ons which called on her Liberal government to be friendlier to China.

Liu distanced herself: “I wasn’t participat­ing. I didn’t speak.”

I pointed out she had in fact told those there to send their resolution to Canberra MPs.

Liu’s memory returned: “I was invited to say something and I say yes, if you want to let your member of parliament know your position, do that.”

I had to ask: “Gladys Liu, are you in effect a spokesman for the Chinese Communist regime in Australia?”

Liu: “The simple answer is no.”

Yesterday Liu tried to tidy up, tweeting that China was indeed “not a democracy” and calling on all countries with claims to the South China Sea to act “in accordance with internatio­nal law”.

And she played the race card, saying: “I do not underestim­ate the enormity of being the first Chinese-born member of parliament.”

But questions remain and it’s not racist to ask them of Gladys Liu. Watch Andrew Bolt on The Bolt Report LIVE 7pm week nights

 ?? Picture: KYM SMITH ?? Gladys Liu delivering her maiden speech in the House of Representa­tives.
Picture: KYM SMITH Gladys Liu delivering her maiden speech in the House of Representa­tives.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia