
EXCLUSIVE Single image sums up Peter Dutton's approach to life post politics after his humiliating election defeat
He served the people of Dickson for almost a quarter of a century but any trace of Peter Dutton has been quietly airbrushed from his electoral office.
The former Opposition Leader suffered the ultimate indignity on election night when he was ousted from his seat in Brisbane 's outer-northern suburbs, which he had held since 2001, by Labor's Ali France.
But, most observers agree, Dutton exited the political stage with dignity and grace.
He told Anthony Albanese how proud his late mother would be of his thumping majority and he congratulated France, a constant thorn in his side who finally succeeded in beating him at the third time of asking.
This magnanimity was again on display when he returned to Canberra last week and told reporters he wanted to see a smooth and supportive transition of power.
'The best model I've seen is where leaders, former, make a graceful exit from politics and maintain their graceful silence, so that'll be my model,' he said.
In keeping with this spirit, Dutton's staff have quietly scrubbed all mention of him from his parliamentary office in Strathpine.
Pictures taken this week show 'Peter Dutton MP' has been removed, leaving a space for Ali France to stick her name above 'Federal MP for Dickson' and below Australia's Coat of Arms.
The blue Liberal signage has also been entirely removed, no doubt waiting to be replaced by the red of Labor.
The office appeared to be stripped bare inside, with doors shuttered awaiting the new occupant.
It was a similarly quiet scene at Dutton's sprawling 68hectare family farm in Dayboro, around 20km inland from Brisbane's northern suburbs.
One might assume the freshly-unemployed 54-year-old would be overseas enjoying a well-earned break with his wife Kirilly and their three children after a gruelling five-week campaign.
But he has reportedly been spotted dining out at one of Melbourne's finest Italian restaurants.
'His iconic scalp was spotted at Citta Di Stasio on Wednesday night, dining with a friend,' the AFR's Rear WIndow column reported.
'The up-market Spring Street establishment is a favourite of business and political types to wheel and deal.'
Could Dutton be sizing up a well-paid advisory role?
Perhaps he could follow in the footsteps of his former boss Scott Morrison and take up a lucrative role in the defence industry.
He did signal as much in his concession speech, telling the party faithful his time as Defence Minister was the 'highlight of my career'.
But one well-placed source isn't convinced.
'Honestly, I'm not sure he cares,' they said.
'He's got enough money not to work, plus his pension.'
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The Guardian
32 minutes ago
- The Guardian
‘We've got to become an aggressively populist party': Chris Murphy on the task facing Democrats
Pete Buttigieg. Ruben Gallego. JD Vance. All are young politicians who sport facial hair, perhaps in the belief that it confers gravitas. One headline writer even suggested: '2028 Might Be The Year Of The Beard For Presidential Hopefuls.' Cue Chris Murphy, a Democratic senator who recently joined the ranks of the bearded. The 51-year-old's is flecked with white, perhaps implying a warrior weathered by battle. Murphy is one of the most outspoken voices in the Democratic opposition to Donald Trump. In an interview with the Guardian, the senator has thoughts to share not only about the president but the future direction of his own party. He calls on Democrats to embrace populism, urges his colleagues to 'take risks' and makes clear that he is not yet even thinking about 2028. 'We've got to look ourselves in the mirror and ask, how can we claim that we're the party of poor people if poor people aren't voting for us?' says Murphy, sitting in an office at a Washington thinktank about half a mile from the White House. 'There's a lot of conservative poor people out there who think that our party is way too judgmental. We've got to become a bigger tent party when it comes to a lot of social and cultural and hot button issues and then we've got to become an aggressively populist party.' Democrats have been soul searching since November, when they saw a further erosion of support among the working class. Trump won 56% of voters without a college degree, compared with 42% who chose Kamala Harris, a decline from 2020 when Trump and Joe Biden were about even. Biden delivered an economic agenda that was bigger in scope and scale than many expected, with input from the progressive senator Bernie Sanders and impetus from the crisis of the Covid-19 pandemic. But Murphy, senator for Connecticut, argues that it failed to give people a sense of empowerment. 'We did some good things for poor people in the last Congress but they were largely seen as handouts: the child tax credit, student loan repayment, enhanced Obamacare subsidies – good policy, but it ended up feeling very unfulfilling to people to have the government write them a cheque to paper over the fact that work doesn't pay. 'Our focus needs to be on making work pay, giving power to people. That's what they want to feel: people want to feel powerful. They don't want to feel like you have to subsidise them. 'That's a higher minimum wage, stronger labour unions, fairer work rules, the deconcentration of economic power, the blowing up of the monopolies. Those are the kind of policies that are rooted in addressing the almost spiritual crisis of the country, the country that's feeling like they don't have agency over their entire lives.' Earlier, during an event at the Center for American Progress thinktank, the last question from the audience concerned young men's shift to the right and how Democrats can win them back. Murphy replied that young people fundamentally believe the Democratic party is just as corrupt as the Republican party, meaning that government reform should be a priority. Democrats should also talk in 'an unfiltered way', the senator said. He also acknowledged a social revolution over the past half-century. 'Men in this country – but in the world generally – were able to easily find identity as breadwinners and protectors, and as women entered the workforce – an undeniably good, great thing – it has robbed from many men their easy access to meaning and purpose. Over the last 10 years, the right has been in a very deliberate conversation with men about that. 'Now, their answer is dangerous and irresponsible and misogynist. It's just roll back – we'll just go back to a world in which you were in charge. But the left's message to men and young men has largely been 'get over it' – and that's not satisfactory either. We have got to be more deliberate about talking to men about what their post-feminism identity can be, and the fact that there is a difference between male identity and female identity.' Facing the Trump 2.0 onslaught, Democrats are still trying to find their feet and are hungry for leadership. In April, Cory Booker delivered a record 25-hour speech on the Senate floor, denouncing Trump's attack on democracy and the rule of law. Murphy was his wing man for much of it, returning a favour after Booker supported Murphy during his nearly 15-hour filibuster for gun control legislation in 2016. Murphy reflects: 'You can't manufacture moments of leadership. They have to come organically but they're really important. What Cory did galvanised people. What Chris Van Hollen did in his trip to El Salvador galvanised people. 'It is important for us to be willing to take risks right now. People want to see us engaged in risk taking to save the democracy. I'm more than willing to support any of my colleagues who are doing that and we should all be looking for those opportunities.' After three terms in the House of Representatives, Murphy was elected to the Senate in 2012 to succeed the retiring Joe Lieberman. He has been a leading voice on gun legislation in the aftermath of the 2012 Sandy Hook shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, and was lead Democratic negotiator for a bipartisan gun control law that Biden signed in 2022. Asked if he would consider a White House bid in 2028, Murphy says: 'My voice is meaningful because I don't have any other agenda beyond just trying to save democracy. Anybody thinking about an election in 2028 or 2026 would be foolish. We are not right now on a glide path to have a free and fair election in 2028, so all of us better put all of our energy into trying to save the democracy.' Indeed, Trump has displayed authoritarian ambitions since taking office more than four months ago. He has used executive power to target Congress, law firms, media organisations, cultural institutions and leading universities. Some of the checks and balances have proved resilient. The president has run into significant pushback from the courts, with numerous judges – including some appointed by Trump himself – blocking his agenda. But Murphy sees no room for complacency. 'The problem is the courts can't keep up. I don't think we ever contemplated this level of lawlessness. So yes, the courts are playing a role but every time a court makes a ruling, Donald Trump just acts in a different illegal way. 'They told him he couldn't extort Harvard and he just found a different way to extort Harvard. The courts are largely doing the right thing but they are not a particularly effective prophylactic when there's this amount of lawlessness happening.' As Trump seeks to divide and rule, collective action is key, Murphy insists. 'The law firms can beat Trump but they have to stick together. They can't do what they did to Paul, Weiss, poaching attorneys when one of them gets targeted. Harvard can survive but only if the other universities stand with them. I've been very impressed by what Harvard has done but all the other universities have to stand firm.' Murphy says Trump's corruption comes in two parts: domestic and international. As a member of the Senate foreign relations committee, he has observed how Trump is operating in a way that no president has before in enriching himself and his family. His sweeping tariffs, for example, are a way to coerce foreign governments such as Vietnam's to cut deals that will benefit the Trump property empire. Qatar has gifted Trump a $400m luxury Boeing 747 jumbo jet for him to use as Air Force One then reportedly transfer to his presidential library in 2029 for his personal use after he leaves office. The Trump Organization recently signed a $5.5bn golf course and property deal with a firm established by Qatar's sovereign wealth fund. Murphy warns: 'We are a kleptocracy. This is outright thievery every single day. It's extraordinary how the president's net worth has what, tripled, quadrupled since he became president? We're not talking about first-term small-scale corruption, like buying a couple of rooms at the Trump hotel. We're talking about billions of dollars worth of deals.' National security is at risk, Murphy adds. 'My understanding is that in exchange for the $2bn investment from the UAE, he's willing to give them the advanced semiconductors. Those semiconductors could very likely fall into Chinese hands and that has catastrophic consequences for the US AI industry. 'Of course, the Saudis want nuclear technology and enrichment capabilities and that's what they're paying him for. These aren't small issues that are being exchanged for investments in Trump and his businesses.' In protest, Murphy will soon force a Senate vote on two joint resolutions of disapproval to block multibillion-dollar weapons sales to Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. He explains: 'I'm hopeful these resolutions will give us a chance to force Republicans to think hard about whether they want to be on the record normalising this kind of corruption. It's extraordinary what they have given him a pass on. We have very few moments to force them on the record so I didn't think we could pass up the opportunity.' Trump's focus on the Middle East and its financial opportunities has left Europe out in the cold. The sense of relative peace and security of the postwar transatlantic alliance is drawing to a close, as evidenced by Trump's moral equivocation over Russia's war in Ukraine. Murphy does not attempt to sugar-coat it. 'We are not a dependable partner right now and so I don't think there's any path for US leadership to magically reappear in the next three years. That matters most for Ukraine. 'I don't mean to be unnecessarily pessimistic, but I think Donald Trump has made the decision to not just abandon Ukraine but humiliate Ukraine. To the extent Ukraine survives over the next three and a half years, that is largely going to be because our European allies do something heroic and important.'


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Former Walsall Council leader returns to top job
A former leader of Walsall Council has returned to the position, a year after he resigned from the Bird stepped down from leading the Conservative-run council in June 2024 after being suspended from the new leader was confirmed on Tuesday after councillor Garry Perry, who succeeded Bird as leader, resigned himself from the role over what he described as "a campaign of political attrition, deliberate undermining and personal hostility".Bird said the council had been through "turbulent times" in recent weeks and thanked Perry at the meeting. Bird, who represents Pheasey Park Farm, has led Walsall Council six times."We must unite as a council no matter what political party you are," he told councillors."Tonight I feel like the osprey that has returned back to its nest and I am very grateful for that."The Conservatives have a majority on Walsall Council with 37 elected councillors. Perry resigned with immediate effect on 21 May, saying the borough deserved better "than the behaviour it is currently being subjected to behind closed doors."In his statement, he added: "I have been subjected to a sustained campaign of political attrition, deliberate undermining and personal hostility — not because of failure or wrongdoing but because I refused to play the game of patronage and self-preservation." Councillors welcomed Bird back to the Aftab Nawaz, leader of the Walsall independent group, said: "The way you were removed from council was an affront to democracy in this chamber."We had people from outside deciding who would [run] this council and that is never good."Councillor Matt Ward, leader of the Labour group, asked Bird if he would investigate the "serious allegations" around bullying made by new leader said: "I will speak to Garry, I have no knowledge of where his bullying came from, it certainly wasn't from me."The Conservative Party has been approached for a response. Follow BBC Black Country on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.


Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Telegraph
Dear Tim Davie, here are 10 easy ways to get Reform voters to watch the BBC
Yikes! Panic stations at Broadcasting House as it occurs to the BBC high-ups that those ghastly, knuckle-dragging Farage fans might be more popular than in their worst nightmares. So sealed off from mainstream opinion is the BBC Bubble that, until now, the rise of Reform UK has been dismissed as some kind of unfortunate smell which can safely be dispersed if presenters just keep treating Reform spokespeople as if they are enemy spies brought in for interrogation, not democratically elected men and women who speak for millions. The corporation's lofty condescension to those uppity plebs was summed up by a BBC Politics tweet which described the newly-elected Reform UK Mayor of Greater Lincolnshire, Dame Andrea Jenkyns, as 'the former Greggs worker and Miss UK finalist'. Never mind that she'd also been a Conservative MP and minister. Mind you, give me a Greggs worker and beauty queen over the coldly supercilious Naga Munchetty any day. BBC staff are quick to complain about 'misogyny' unless the target is someone they consider to be 'far-Right' and almost certainly Brexity (Eeuw!) in which case all feminist sensitivities are off. That snobbish, snide remark about the force that is Dame Andrea provoked a huge backlash, quite rightly, and the BBC hastily removed the tweet saying, 'We acknowledge the tone of the post was wrong, and it has been taken down'. Still, they had revealed their true colours – Rayner Red and Lib Dem Yellow – and they weren't pretty. Now – oh, joy! – we are told the BBC is holding talks about how to win over Reform-voting viewers amid fears their views are 'under-represented by the broadcaster'. You don't say! I reckon many Reform supporters have already cancelled their licence fees in disgust. Still, to appeal to any that remain, senior executives including director-general Tim Davie and chair Samir Shah are said to have discussed plans to overhaul the BBC's news and drama output to tackle 'low-trust issues' among Reform voters. Deborah Turness, BBC News boss, apparently briefed the broadcaster's board on how to ensure the views of Reformers were being given enough airtime. The BBC is understood to be keen to ensure it represents all audiences and their concerns, suggesting the broadcaster may seek to boost its coverage of issues such as immigration. Well, that's a first. I can count on the fingers of one hand the occasions when the BBC has suggested that immigration is anything other than an unmitigated joy or treated anyone arguing to cut numbers as anything other than some racist pariah. I still remember the pained wince of Laura Kuenssberg when Kemi Badenoch confirmed that she did indeed believe that not all cultures are equally valid – 'cultures that believe in child marriage?' quipped the Tory leader devastatingly. A number of key BBC presenters may need to be sedated before being required to challenge their own faith in open borders and slavish loyalty to the EU. Why, you might ask, has it taken the prospect (um, threat) of a Reform government to make our supposedly national broadcaster feel it has to make sure that all viewers' experiences and backgrounds are portrayed on screen? Well, while Reform has not said it would scrap the BBC licence fee, it believes it is 'not sustainable' in its current form. Playing nice with a future prime minister Farage may stick in the craw, but the Beeb don't have much choice but to swallow hard. If the BBC is serious, here are my top 10 tips for Reform-friendly programming: 1. Bring back Jeremy Clarkson In anything. Literally anything and everything. Call The Midwife, Springwatch, sewing contests, anchoring News at Ten, chairing Question Time. Clarkson's Farm on Amazon Prime is rightly adored for its host's no-nonsense style and contempt for fashionable pieties. Peak Reform! Best of all for attracting Nigel fans, restore Top Gear with the original, irrepressible cast of petrolheads. Clarkson once said the most British saying of all was, 'Oh, for God's sake.' He speaks directly to Reform voters. 2. Broadcast all England Test matches No need to sack Gary Lineker (a Reform imperative if Mr Gaza hadn't already stepped down!), but the BBC could help restore national pride and joy by buying the rights to broadcast all England Test matches. Many Reform voters are older and may struggle to afford a Sky subscription just to watch the game they love. The national broadcaster should be broadcasting our nation's sports. 3. Make Laurence Fox Doctor Who After the woke ratings disaster of Ncuti Gatwa's Doctor Who, this cult show is on death row. Former doctor's companion Billie Piper is rumoured to be lined up to be the second female Doctor. A better idea would be to cast Piper's former husband Laurence Fox. As well as possessing the ideal hectic energy, dancing wit and sonorous delivery for the role, Fox was cancelled and lost his acting career after appearing on Question Time, where he said that Britain was not racist. It was, he insisted, the warmest, most welcoming and tolerant country on Earth. A belief which is pretty much universally shared by Reform voters. Uncancelling Fox would be proof of the BBC's new openness to views it finds uncomfortable as well as giving that endangered acting species – the posh white male – a role he would undoubtedly make his own. 4. No more diversity pandering While you're at it, drop the relentless diversity casting of BBC drama. It's patronising and silly. This may come as a shock, but there are actually some police officers in the UK who are not married to a spouse from an ethnic minority – not that you'd know it from watching every single thriller or police procedural. Viewers – both Reform voters and others – would occasionally like to see the country they live in accurately represented, not as it is viewed by a producer who lives in on-trend east London. 5. Report on what voters actually care about BBC News bulletins to feature subjects discussed down the pub not by non-binary Marxist postgraduates called Umberto in Broadcasting House, e.g. our energy bills are horrendous and net zero is clearly madness. Maybe occasionally suggest that it's 'green taxes' not the 'war in Ukraine' which is giving Britain the highest energy bills in the developed world. It's what Reform voters believe after all. 6. Call out the far-Left Every time a journalist uses the term 'far-Right' they must also use 'far-Left' (which, mysteriously, we never hear on the BBC). ie the 'far-Left' Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner. 7. 'Hamas are terrorists' To be stated every time the war with Israel is mentioned, and no equivocation. 8. 'Things That Make You Proud to be British' An ambitious new factual history series which travels back into our nation's past and discovers, astonishingly, that Britons weren't always the biggest bastards imaginable. 10. Did I mention Jeremy Clarkson?