Glady’s “horrible”, “complete psycho” Morrison texts revealed

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The blows keep coming for PM Morrison from his own side of politics, which seemingly can’t wait to be shot of him.

The infamous Glady’s Berejiklian-Liberal federal minister texts have been revealed:

There are more revelations about “Psycho” Morrison’s rape protection racket as well:

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The NSW Liberal Party was told about allegations of “very ­in­appropriate sexual” behaviour surrounding a senior member of Scott Morrison’s office more than a year ago, emails show, amid an unfair dismissal case that has thrown the spotlight on the 2019 preselection for the Sydney seat of Reid.

As revealed by The Australian, independent candidate for Reid and former Liberal Party member Natalie Baini accused the Prime Minister’s principal private secretary of behaving in a “sexually inappropriate manner” in a witness statement tendered at the Fair Work Commission as part of a case brought against Labor senator Kristina Keneally.

Ms Baini’s complaint against Yaron Finkelstein had been previously raised in emails from Ms Baini to the NSW Liberal Party in December 2020 and March 2021.

Alas, the Liberal faithful who are seeking to assassinate their own PM lost their court challenge to his candidate captain’s picks but are ready to go to the High Court:

The High Court will be asked to make the final decision on an extraordinary legal challenge to the validity of Liberal Party preselections on the eve of Prime Minister Scott Morrison calling the election, after a NSW court threw out the case on Tuesday.

Sources close to the challenger, NSW Liberal Party state executive member Matthew Camenzuli, said an application for special leave to appeal to the High Court was being prepared and would be lodged on Wednesday. However, the court is not bound to hear the appeal.

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Let’s not forget that the case was won via the wildly inappropriate use of your taxpayer dollars.

The police know who they are dealing with and have also had enough:

Thousands of Australian Federal Police (AFP) members are demanding the next commonwealth government establish a strong anti-corruption commission that equally investigates politicians and law enforcement, saying police are being unfairly blamed for gaps in the nation’s integrity system.

The Australian Federal Police Association, which represents 4,000 AFP members, has placed the establishment of a “far-reaching anti-corruption body” among its highest priorities ahead of the federal election, alongside improved support for officers suffering post-traumatic stress disorder, greater resourcing, and stronger firearms regulations.

The association says the current anti-corruption regime is unequal, holding law enforcement to a far higher standard than politicians. That’s despite politicians having “different but no less extraordinary powers as those held by members of law enforcement agencies, particularly around the awarding of significant funding of public monies”.

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Never fear, Morrison’s sleaze cults will save us:

The Australian Christian Lobby is launching a campaign that could unseat key Liberal rebels who crossed the floor to support Labor in killing off the government’s ­attempt to legislate greater protections for religious freedom.

ACL managing director Martyn Iles said the MPs who crossed the floor had tried to compromise Christian schooling and endangered the ability of faith-based educators to teach in accordance with their ethos.

Brace for more smut, lies, bullying, gaslighting and psychopathy than you can possibly handle over the next six weeks.

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About the author
David Llewellyn-Smith is Chief Strategist at the MB Fund and MB Super. David is the founding publisher and editor of MacroBusiness and was the founding publisher and global economy editor of The Diplomat, the Asia Pacific’s leading geo-politics and economics portal. He is also a former gold trader and economic commentator at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, the ABC and Business Spectator. He is the co-author of The Great Crash of 2008 with Ross Garnaut and was the editor of the second Garnaut Climate Change Review.