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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Wednesday, 19 September 2018
Turnbull was warned Rupert Murdoch was trying to remove him as prime minister
Malcolm Turnbull, left, was warned by media mogul Kerry Stokes that
Rupert Murdoch, right, was intent on removing him as prime minister.
Composite: Mick Tsikas/Julio Cortez/AAP/AP
The former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull
was warned in a phone call from the media mogul Kerry Stokes that
Rupert Murdoch and his media company News Corp were intent on removing
him from power, Guardian Australia understands.
According to sources close to Turnbull, the former prime minister
says Stokes relayed in a conversation in mid-August that he had been in
contact with Murdoch and had discussed a News Corp push for a leadership
change. The Australian Financial Review
and the ABC have also reported that Murdoch had told Stokes, chairman
of the Seven Network, that Turnbull needed to be replaced as prime
minister.
Stokes is said to have replied that the likely result of such a
campaign would be to deliver government to Labor and Bill Shorten.
Murdoch, according to both reports, brushed aside Stokes’s concerns, saying Labor would only be in office for three years.
The Guardian sought comment from Stokes and News Corp.
In a statement to the ABC, also provided to the Guardian, Stokes
said: “I have never been involved in leadership events nor autopsies of
them like the one you have published.
“Furthermore, the characterisation and supposed details of the private conversations you have assigned to me are wrong.”
He did not address the central contention of both reports that
Murdoch had wanted a change of leadership and that Stokes had warned
Turnbull about this.
Stokes
acknowledged that the ABC had been attempting to speak to him before it
went to air with its version of events. But he said the ABC had relied
on “spin from parties attempting to rewrite history”.
A spokesperson for News Corp said they were unable to comment on the contents of Murdoch’s calls.
However, the Australian columnist Chris Kenny accused the ABC of
undergraduate journalism “that is a jaundiced concoction of rumours and
factual errors purporting to suggest that Malcolm Turnbull lost the
prime ministership because of a media campaign led by this newspaper”.
He said the editorials in the Australian had been supportive of
Turnbull or neutral on the question of who should lead the party right
up until the challenge.
Guardian Australia understands that Turnbull, who is believed to
habitually take notes of his conversations, was so alarmed by the call
from Stokes and what he perceived to be a gathering News Corp campaign
against him that he later made a separate approach to Murdoch himself.
That call came after his near-death experience in the party
room on 21 August, when he survived a first attempt to remove him as
prime minister 48-35. But the general view was it was too narrow a win
and a second challenge in the near future was inevitable.
According to sources close to Turnbull, a desperate prime minister
tried to explain to Murdoch that the only result of changing leaders
would be to deliver government to Labor.
He pointed out he had shifted on the national energy guarantee policy
so hated by many News Corp commentators and Tony Abbott and he had
delivered, in part, on tax cuts.
It did no good. Murdoch fobbed him off, promising to speak to his son
Lachlan about it. According to the ABC report, Murdoch also said he did
not know what Boris was up to – a reference to the Australian’s
editor-in-chief, Paul Whittaker.
Murdoch had arrived in Australia 10 days earlier and Turnbull
believes News Corp, the most powerful media organisation in Australia,
became more hostile towards his him from that time.
“There was no doubt there was a marked shift in the tone and content
of the News Corp publications once Rupert arrived,” said one of
Turnbull’s former staff. “And there was no doubt in our minds that News
was backing Dutton.”
As is tradition when the Murdochs come to town, there had been a
function with editors, at Lachlan Murdoch’s Bellevue Hill mansion, a few
days after Rupert Murdoch arrived.
That same day the Daily Telegraph had warned of “a toxic brawl” over
energy policy. On Sky the night-time commentators Peta Credlin and
Andrew Bolt ramped up their negative assessments of the national energy
guarantee and of Turnbull himself.
The next day, Sharri Markson in the Telegraph had the inside running
on the forthcoming leadership challenge and was the first to report on
the likely challenge by Peter Dutton.
The Channel Nine journalist Chris Uhlmann went on air on the Today
show, the day after the first challenge, to accuse News Corp and Sky News of waging war on Turnbull, accusing media figures of going beyond reporting to picking up the phone and lobbying.
The 2018 leadership spill in numbers – video
Markson has defended News Corp’s reporting as straight, objective
news reporting and described Uhlmann’s broadside as a “disgusting and
outrageous attack”.
The attacks on Turnbull were also taken up by the 2GB shock jocks
Alan Jones and Ray Hadley, who amplified the attacks on their network of
stations. At one stage, Hadley read out an email from an anonymous MP
in support of a leadership change but, through a slip of the tongue, appeared to indicate on air that the text was in fact from Dutton. He later denied it was from Dutton.
By week’s end the deed was done. But the candidate Turnbull believed
News to be backing, Dutton, had failed to win the numbers, giving Scott
Morrison a chance to come through the middle. The ABC noted that
Stokes’s West Australian had editorialised in favour of a compromise,
and had advocated for Morrison and Bishop.
As he gave his final speech, Turnbull referred to an “insurgency” inside his party aided by outside forces in the media.
The Telegraph spent the first week of Morrison’s prime ministership
praising the new prime minister for his first appearance in parliament.
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