Tim Wilson's ‘fake tradie' ends up with permanent gig
Sounds like a great hire, and we are hoping against hope that the high-vis and hard hat make a guest appearance around the corridors of power.
Chairman Kim is Australia all over
ABC chair Kim Williams has been busy. Very busy.
Since ascending to the job last year, Williams has become the kind of bloke who'd talk to a brick wall. His very serious thoughts have graced numerous writers' festivals, annual orations, Friends of the ABC wine and cheese nights, and speeches at the National Press Club, the Melbourne Press Club, the State Library of Victoria, the General Sir John Monash Oration, the Lowy Institute Media Lecture, and the DG8 Summit, as well as many a media article.
On top of that, he's had to whip the public broadcaster into shape and press the flesh at its bureaux around the country.
All that moving and shaking comes with a hefty travel bill. According to documents released under freedom of information, taxpayers stumped up $55,087 for Williams' travel expenses between last March, when he started the job, and May.
The bulk of that, $48,338.50, came from airfares, while $6749 was spent on car travel.
'The ABC chair receives remuneration and expenses for their service on the ABC board, including allowances for travel,' a spokeswoman for Aunty told us.
'Rates are set by the Remuneration Tribunal and are reviewed each year.'
Williams takes home a salary of a little over $200,000, a rather modest return for a senior public servant. And his expenses, as far as we are aware, don't include thousands spent on luxury car hire like his predecessor Ita Buttrose, who billed the public for luxury car hire, including for trips to Beppi's in Darlinghurst.
Perhaps that might make a line in Buttrose's new memoir, Unapologetically Ita – set to drop in October – which we are awaiting with bated breath.
Aunty exec has worked all Four Corners
Sticking with the ABC, and it's a big CBD hello to Freya Campbell, who started last week as director of communications. She has replaced Nick Leys, who, as this column first reported, left to work for Lord Mayor of Melbourne Nick Reece, where he joins another Aunty alumnus in Chaser funnyman turned speechwriter Andrew Hansen.
Campbell comes to Aunty after a long media career that has taken her to all corners of the earth – even the University of NSW, where she trod the boards as executive director of strategic communications.
Loading
She was also assistant general manager of marketing and comms at Austrade, managing a team responsible for communications across 80 locations in 48 markets.
The Austrade job included a secondment in the office of then-Indonesian president Joko Widodo advising the country on its 'inaugural nation brand'. Whatever that means.
Years before that, she had a stint in Abu Dhabi's Department of Tourism and Culture as director of marketing, 'positioning the emirate of Abu Dhabi in a global setting'.
All of which should make dealing with the national ranks of ABC watchers, such as your good columnists, a doddle. Somehow we doubt it.
Can't let go
Spotted: Next week, it's back to big school for Australia's federal members and senators, with parliament sitting for the first time since Anthony Albanese 's crushing election victory in May.
And while the Coalition ranks are now greatly diminished, at least one departing MP is still hanging around. CBD's spies spotted former Nationals senator Perrin Davey, who lost her seat in the May massacre, at Aussies cafe in Parliament this week (where else?).
She was briefly joined by shadow foreign affairs minister Michaelia Cash, from whom we've heard surprisingly little given the state of the world.
We wondered whether Davey had quickly landed a new job among the inmates of Parliament House. Turns out, it was simply an opportunistic catch-up with Cashie.
As for what the former senator does next, Davey was an actor in a past life, even appearing as an extra in The Matrix, so CBD is hoping she makes a return to the big screen.
Hashtags

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

Sky News AU
16 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Former ABC employee slams broadcast for ‘agenda-driven' reporting
Former ABC employee Elahn Zetlin publicly criticises the national broadcaster's editorial direction with claims he felt forced to leave due to persistent bias and a lack of accountability. 'It wasn't good enough … the way they were reporting on the conflict and also who they were giving a platform to locally to give comment about real issues that affected the broader Jewish community,' Mr Zetlin told Sky News Host Sharri Markson. 'The language used, the way of pushing an agenda… it was really black and white reporting. 'The concerns that I raised … it felt to me that it just dismissed, justified, swept under the carpet.'

Sydney Morning Herald
20 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
High Court battle looms for state Labor's work-from-home push
A High Court showdown is looming over a Victorian plan to legislate a right to work from home, as legal experts warn the Allan government's move would unconstitutionally encroach on federal industrial relations powers. Premier Jacinta Allan has maintained that the government could enshrine a right for public and private sector employees to work from home two days a week via state anti-discrimination laws, but lawyers warn the move directly challenges federal workplace law. 'The advice we have is that when it comes to the federal workplace arrangements, there is the Fair Work Act and there is explicit provision in the Fair Work Act for state-based anti-discrimination laws to continue to apply,' Allan told ABC radio on Monday. 'The Fair Work Act provides us with the floor, and what we're choosing to do here in Victoria is build on that floor to protect working from home as a right.' Allan's comments put her at odds with lawyers and other legal experts who have cast deep doubt on the government's ability to legislate the right to work from home as most workplace laws are under the jurisdiction of the federal government. In Victoria, the state has even fewer powers because of a 1996 Kennett government deal that handed powers to regulate employment conditions to the Commonwealth. Loading This means that unlike other states, Victoria does not even have the ability to create workplace laws for its own public sector employees. Stephen Smith, principal at ACTUS Workplace Lawyers, said Victorian legislation to enact a broad right to work from home would be a major constitutional issue.

The Age
20 hours ago
- The Age
High Court battle looms for state Labor's work-from-home push
A High Court showdown is looming over a Victorian plan to legislate a right to work from home, as legal experts warn the Allan government's move would unconstitutionally encroach on federal industrial relations powers. Premier Jacinta Allan has maintained that the government could enshrine a right for public and private sector employees to work from home two days a week via state anti-discrimination laws, but lawyers warn the move directly challenges federal workplace law. 'The advice we have is that when it comes to the federal workplace arrangements, there is the Fair Work Act and there is explicit provision in the Fair Work Act for state-based anti-discrimination laws to continue to apply,' Allan told ABC radio on Monday. 'The Fair Work Act provides us with the floor, and what we're choosing to do here in Victoria is build on that floor to protect working from home as a right.' Allan's comments put her at odds with lawyers and other legal experts who have cast deep doubt on the government's ability to legislate the right to work from home as most workplace laws are under the jurisdiction of the federal government. In Victoria, the state has even fewer powers because of a 1996 Kennett government deal that handed powers to regulate employment conditions to the Commonwealth. Loading This means that unlike other states, Victoria does not even have the ability to create workplace laws for its own public sector employees. Stephen Smith, principal at ACTUS Workplace Lawyers, said Victorian legislation to enact a broad right to work from home would be a major constitutional issue.