Justin Milne emailed Guthrie in May saying: ‘We need to save the ABC, not Emma’
There are calls for the chairman of the ABC to resign following revelations he told Michelle Guthrie to fire economics editor Emma Alberici after the former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull complained about her reporting of tax policy.
The instruction to fire Alberici came in an email from Justin Milne to then managing director Guthrie in May, Fairfax Media first reported on Wednesday.
Guardian Australia has confirmed the message.
“They [the government] hate her,” Milne wrote. “We are tarred with her brush. I think it’s simple. Get rid of her. We need to save the ABC – not Emma. There is no guarantee they [the Coalition] will lose the next election.”
The comments were circulated to members of the ABC board a week before Guthrie was sacked as managing director on Monday.
In May, Fairfax reported, Turnbull sent a list of concerns to the ABC news director, Gaven Morris, about Alberici’s coverage of the government.
Reports of Milne’s intervention has brought a rapid response.
Staff have called for protest meetings to take place at lunchtime at ABC headquarters in Sydney. There will be speakers, placards saying ‘Hands off ABC’ and calls for Milne to resign pending an investigation.
Labor’s communications spokeswoman Michelle Rowland called Milne for an explanation on Wednesday and described the situation as “extraordinary”.
“The independence and integrity of the ABC is paramount,” she said in a statement. “It must remain free from political interference and withstand criticism even if, and particularly if, that criticism comes from the prime minister of the day.”
She called on the minister for communications, Mitch Fifield, to “ascertain what has happened as a matter of urgency and confirm whether or not pressure was put on the former managing director to sack an ABC journalist.”
“Mitch Fifield must explain what he knows about this and why he thinks this is appropriate,” she said.