
‘No excuse': Pesutto on $2.3M loss
Former Victorian Liberal leader John Pesutto has spoken publicly about his legal battle with Moira Deeming, admitting on national television he could have handled the situation 'better'.
Mr Pesutto appeared on the ABC's Q&A on Monday night, where he was questioned by audience member Adeline about the treatment of women in the Liberal Party, specifically referencing the Deeming saga.
'Do you think the Liberal Party is haemorrhaging votes due in large part to the lack of empathy and tolerance for female dissenters within the party ranks?' she asked.
'I'm talking specifically about the witch-hunt against Moira Deeming and the lack of accountability you have demonstrated when dealing with female people in your own party.' Audience member Adeline asked Mr Pesutto about the treatment of women in the Liberal Party, specifically referencing the Deeming saga. ABC Credit: ABC
Mr Pesutto responded by defending his intentions at the time but admitted there were missteps.
'The issue over which I took action back in March 2023 … was one that was understanding that there are divided views over how we mediate between competing rights when it comes to gender identity and equality before the law,' he said.
Ms Deeming sued Mr Pesutto for defamation and won her Federal Court case in December last year.
Justice O'Callaghan found Mr Pesutto had defamed Ms Deeming in radio interviews, a press conference and in Liberal Party documents by conveying she knowingly associated, or sympathised, with neo-Nazis and white supremacists.
He awarded her $300,000 in damages.
But Mr Pesutto was handed a hefty blow on Friday when Federal Court senior judicial registrar Alison Legge ordered Mr Pesutto to pay $2,308,873 to cover Ms Deeming's legal costs.
Reflecting on the latest development, Mr Pesutto said he was trying to position the Liberal Party as a 'broadbased' movement following a series of election defeats.
'While I was acting in good faith, I do accept now and I acknowledge that I could have handled that better,' he said.
I was early in my leadership. No excuse. But I don't go by a day where I don't think about what I could have done differently or better.
'And I'm better for the reflection. Not happy with the results, but I do accept that I could have handled things a bit better.' Mr Pesutto said he was trying to position the Liberal Party as a 'broadbased' movement following a series of election defeats. ABC Credit: ABC
Mr Pesutto said his aim was always to help the party reconnect with the community.
'We keep losing. We keep losing people. And so I'm trying to bring them back to the party. I could have done that better and I accept that.'
NSW Liberal Senator Dave Sharma also weighed in and said he was 'not particularly comfortable' with public figures and politicians suing one another for defamation, warning such cases could have a 'chilling effect' on political debate.
'I think if you're hit with a cost sort of like John has been, that is life-altering and bankrupting,' Mr Sharma said.
He acknowledged the comparison made by Mr Pesutto that prompted outrage among Ms Deeming and her supporters, but said public figures typically have the platform to respond to criticism and that defamation lawsuits between politicians risk becoming battles of financial resources. Dave Sharma Liberal Senator for NSW appearing on Q and A. 19/5/2025. ABC Credit: ABC
Mr Pesutto later spoke about the legal costs, acknowledging the burden but stressing the importance of keeping things in perspective.
'It is true that I have a large legal bill confronting me,' he said, before drawing attention to the everyday hardships faced by Australians from terminal illness and addiction to homelessness and loss.
'I do not under any circumstances want anyone to think that I would ever consider my plight remotely comparable to the real problems,' he said.
'I'll work out my stuff. I'll deal with that … I will always keep doing the work but always keep perspective. I want you all to know we all should be grateful and I certainly am for what I have and I don't ever want anyone to think that I would compare myself to that'.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
10 minutes ago
- ABC News
'I am premier': Jeremy Rockliff defends not standing down from Tasmania's top job
Tasmanian Premier Jeremy Rockliff is asked by journalists why he's pursuing an election rather than standing down as Liberal leader

Sydney Morning Herald
31 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Shooting the messengers is alive and well in LA thanks to Trump
Just five months ago, in the weeks around his inauguration, Donald Trump pretty much left Los Angeles to burn. Now LA police are clearly targeting journalists in the belief they have permission to open fire as the US President reprehensibly fans the flames of violence. Since protests against federal immigration raids started last week in the heavily Latino city, the Los Angeles Press Club has documented more than 20 examples of crowd control weapons and tear gas being used on the media, including Nine correspondent Lauren Tomasi, who was hit in the leg by a rubber bullet. She and a cameraman were easily identified and were off to one side of the police when an officer turned, drew a bead and pulled the trigger. Subsequently, ABC correspondent Lauren Day and her crew were tear-gassed when police dispersed demonstrators, and an ABC camera operator was hit by a round while filming. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the attacks were unacceptable: 'We have already raised these issues with the US administration … and we think that the role of the media is particularly important.' With controversy mounting, the LAPD is reviewing the shooting of journalists by their officers. There is little reason to believe they will stop targeting the media. Books and films have long highlighted the force's corruption and cover-ups. In 1991, a video of four LAPD officers beating Rodney King made the force a byword for police brutality and led to riots, but little reform. Meanwhile, invigorated by poll support for his actions on immigration, Trump called protesters 'animals' and 'a foreign enemy'. He ordered 2000 California National Guard personnel and then 700 Marines into the streets of Los Angeles. With the downtown now under curfew, protests are starting to spread across other US cities. While immigration has sent Americans into the streets, police attacks on journalists covering the protests raise fresh concerns about press freedom. Loading LA Police actions also highlight how law enforcement is sheltering behind Trump's obsession with handicapping the media – defunding Voice of America, Radio Free Europe and Radio Free Asia, threatening major networks and virtually blackballing The Associated Press for defying his renaming of the Gulf of Mexico – that have not been servile flatterers. Free speech is protected by the First Amendment to the US Constitution. It permits the media to speak truth to power, but America under Trump has allowed journalism to be demeaned.

AU Financial Review
36 minutes ago
- AU Financial Review
Deeming sought preselection guarantee to drop Pesutto debt
Victorian Liberal MP Moira Deeming demanded the party guarantee her preselection in exchange for temporarily forgiving former leader John Pesutto's $2.3 million legal bill and avoiding a potential damaging byelection in his inner-city electorate. Pesutto is on the brink of bankruptcy unless he can find another $1.5 million to repay his colleague's court-ordered legal fees within two weeks following her successful defamation case against him. If he is declared bankrupt, he will need to resign as a member of parliament.