Wednesday 11 January 2017

Third Pauline Hanson’s One Nation party hopeful rages at gay ‘bigots’

One Nation has refused to say whether Tracey Bell-Henselin – a former Rise Up Australia candidate in last year’s federal election – would be disciplined or disendorsed over her comments. Picture: Annette Dew

Anthony Templeton, Kieran Rooney, The Courier-Mail
January 11, 2017 1:03pm
http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/queensland/queensland-government/third-pauline-hansons-one-nation-party-hopeful-rages-at-gay-bigots/news-story/9d6af1c3bc77c6175fff4a7e543fcfbe

UPDATE: Senator Pauline Hanson has backed One Nation’s Glasshouse candidate, Tracey Bell-Henselin, who posted controversial remarks online claiming the gay community wanted “to destroy families”.

But Senator Hanson, during an interview in Townsville today, claimed Ms Bell-Henselin’s comments were not anti-gay and she would remain as the party’s candidate for the Sunshine Coast-based seat.

“I think you had better go and read that in full context with regards to her work ... those were not homophobic comments at all,” she said.

“That was totally taken out of context and I’m quite happy with her comments she won’t be disendorsed at all.”

EARLIER:

A third One Nation candidate could find herself in hot water after posting homophobic remarks, saying the gay and lesbian people want “to destroy families”.

The party’s candidate for the seat of Glasshouse, Tracey Bell-Henselin, posted several anti-gay comments on her personal Facebook page in recent months, and claims the LGBTI community is “the real manipulating bigot”.

“LGBTI is out to destroy families as we know (them) and have lived for generations producing babies/growing a family produced by a mother & father – creation!!!,” she wrote in one of her posts.

“But now when we stand up on the side of the law to protect our family and children we gave birth to – we are told to shut up that we (are) bigots & homophobic – labelled, cursed sworn at!!!”

Ms Bell-Henselin refused to return calls yesterday, but did send a text message saying she would only respond to The Courier-Mail’s questions if leading party figures were present.

“I will only talk to you with Pauline and James Ashby present as One Nation is a team,” she said in the message.

One Nation has refused to say whether Ms Bell-Henselin – a former Rise Up Australia candidate in last year’s federal election – would be disciplined or disendorsed over her comments.

The revelations come after One Nation’s Bundamba candidate Shan Ju Lin was axed over the weekend for homophobic posts. The party’s former Currumbin candidate Andy Semple was disendorsed last month after he posted an offensive Tweet joking about the LGBTI community.

One Nation executive member and Pauline Hanson’s chief of staff James Ashby said he was unaware of Ms Bell-Henselin’s homophobic social media posts until he was contacted by The Courier-Mail. Mr Ashby refused to comment but confirmed the party would look into the matter.

Acting Communities Minister Kate Jones said Ms Bell-Henselin’s comments were divisive and should not be tolerated.

“We don’t want 2017 to be dominated by Queenslanders running down other Queenslanders,” she said.

“Clearly, Pauline Hanson and her party should take action against this candidate.

Sunday 8 January 2017

Embattled Health Minister Sussan Ley apologises for apartment splurge

Annika Smethurst, National politics reporter, Herald Sun
January 8, 2017 3:37pm

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/embattled-health-minister-sussan-ley-apologises-for-apartment-splurge/news-story/2f8e51855174151cd95588a97cbcb060


EMBATTLED Health Minister Sussan Ley has apologised for an “error of judgment” and agreed to pay back money owed to the public for a taxpayer-funded trip she took to the Gold Coast where she bought a lavish apartment.

Ms Ley has also asked the Finance Department to review all her ministerial travel to the Gold Coast which the Herald Sun can reveal, cost taxpayers more than $40,000 in the past three years.

Government documents show the NSW MP took at least 18 trips to the Gold Coast, where she owns property and her partner runs a bin cleaning business, between 2013 and 2016.

The Herald Sun attempted to cross reference these trips with Ms Ley’s ministerial duties — public appearances, media events, speeches and meetings — but could not find evidence of any “official business” on nine occasions.

Those trips alone cost taxpayers more than $20,000.

But a spokesman for Ms Ley said that the Minister travels extensively across Australia and undertakes “extensive meetings with doctors, patients and other organisations that are not media or public events”.

He said just because there is no statement, such as a media release or speech on the public record, it doesn’t mean there is no justification for the travel to the meeting.

Health Minister Sussan Ley is under fire for buying a $795,000 Gold Coast unit in this Main Beach tower. Picture: AAP

In a statement, Ms Ley said she spoke to Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull who agreed that claiming costs during a 2015 trip when she purchased a property “does not meet the high standards he expects of Ministers”.


“I apologise for the error of judgment”, she said.

As a shadow minister in March 2013, Ms Ley spent four nights on the Gold Coast at a cost of $3352. The following month Ms Ley again flew to the Gold Coast from Albury with a family member billing taxpayers for taxis, car hire and chauffeur driven cars totalling $3594.

A month later, Ms Ley again returned to the Gold Coast for “official business” on May 30 with a family member claiming $2907 in flights and travel allowance costs.

Other questionable Gold Coast trips include a four night stay in July 2014 when taxpayers paid $4388 in travel costs for her and a family member and a weekend stay in September 2014 totalling more than $2000.

Health Minister Sussan Ley responds during Question Time. Picture: Ray Strange.

The latest revelations come just days after the Herald Sun revealed Ms Ley bought a $795,000 apartment at Main Beach during a taxpayer-funded work trip in 2015.


Ms Ley said she made the impromptu property purchase while at Main Beach for confidential health discussions with stakeholders who she is refusing to name.

Opposition Health spokeswoman Catherine King again called for her resignation saying there was no credible explanation for taxpayer-funded trip to the Gold Coast on weekends and holidays.

“These revelations make it crystal clear that Malcolm Turnbull must sack Sussan Ley,” Ms King said.

“As a Minister and Shadow Minister, Ley has charged taxpayers tens of thousands of dollars for trips to the Gold Coast — where she owns a home and her partner owns a business.”

“Ley has violated every tenet of Malcolm Turnbull’s own ministerial standards. Either she must walk or Mr Turnbull must push her.”

annika.smethurst@news.com.au

@annikasmethurst

Saturday 7 January 2017

One Nation chaos: website static and staff quitting

Former One Nation national secretary and administration boss Saraya Beric yesterday. Picture: Lyndon Mechielsen
The Australian 12:00AM January 6, 2017
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/one-nation-chaos-website-static-and-staff-quitting/news-story/c68c8617e275b841d59293559130d11f


James Walker
Associate Editor Brisbane
@Jamie_WalkerOz

Pauline Hanson’s One Nation party has been unable to update the body of its website since October last year when a key figure in the organisation, Saraya Beric, was pushed out, stunning even diehard One Nation loyalists.

The young Brisbane woman turned her hand from playing the violin for a living to running Senator Hanson’s online and social media strategy during last year’s federal election campaign. She worked 16-hour days to manage the party’s Albion headquarters on a shoestring. Loyalty? It runs only one way in One Nation, Ms Beric complained yesterday, speaking publicly of her disillusionment with Ms Hanson.

The dysfunction behind the scenes has also hit the office of NSW senator Brian Burston, whose former personal assistant Diana Allen unloaded to The Australian yesterday. Party co-founder David Ettridge and former president and national treasurer Ian Nelson continue to take potshots at Senator Hanson and her high-profile lieutenant, James Ashby.

This was capped by the altercation on Tuesday outside a Perth court in which former One Nation senator Rod Culleton claims to have been assaulted by ex-state Liberal parliamentarian Anthony Fels, who wants to contest a seat in the March 11 West Australian election for One Nation. Police are investigating the incident that left Senator Culleton nursing bruises and a sprained wrist.

The One Nation website has not been updated since August 15 because, Ms Beric said, the offices of the three remaining senators did not pass on news to party headquarters. Only two of the 36 candidates introduced recently by Senator Hanson for a Queensland election expected this year have their profiles up.

Ms Beric, 32, resigned her ­office-bearer positions as ­national and Queensland secretary on October 13 last year and was locked out of the site but with the know-how to run it. The page templates and codes to update it were “all in my head”, she said yesterday, breaking her silence about the drama inside the Hanson camp.

She emphasised that she did not “spit the dummy”, but the situation had become untenable.

She was told that her authorisation to do any other work as a fulltime contractor had been withdrawn, and she should leave what she was doing to get the party registered for the WA election.

“I am disappointed at the treatment of some people in the party,” she said. “I am disappointed that the party seems to have swayed away from its principles and values, but there are some great candidates still involved and I hope that they will stay true to themselves and the Australian people.”

Diana Allen lasted only seven weeks in Senator Burston’s office, and said she quit after claiming the chief-of-staff referred to her as a “petulant princess”.

“That’s not how you talk to a woman of 50,” she said from her Lane Cove home in Sydney.

Senator Hanson hit back yesterday at Mr Nelson and Ms Beric, saying they had “their noses out of joint” through missing out on jobs following the election. She agreed she had been a friend of 66-year-old Mr Nelson — though not a close one — and that he had approached her to rejoin the party when it was revived in 2013. “He has just turned and is basically a lonely man,” Senator Hanson said. “One Nation was basically his whole life. He has no one in his life and now that he has lost this, he has … become bitter and nasty. I’ve got no time for him.”

As for Ms Beric, who worked 16-hour days during the election for a gross salary of $800 a week, Senator Hanson said: “Saraya was vying for a job in the parliamentary office, which I told her she wasn’t capable of doing.”

Ms Beric disputed this yesterday. After Senator Hanson asked her to set aside her music career, she became “Jacky of all trades” in One Nation, managing the office in Brisbane, taking on the roles of IT fixer, candidate manager during the election as well as social media manager and office-bearer.

When Mr Nelson went into bat for her to get a raise, Mr Ashby offered to increase her pay to $50,000 a year. Mr Nelson said this was insulting; forthright ­discussions with Senator Hanson ensued.

Ms Beric said, however, that Senator Hanson never spoke to her about a new role and she had not sought one on the parliamentary staff.

She had wanted to focus on marketing and online work. “Pauline just sent James to talk to me,” Ms Beric said. “If she was told I wanted a job with her, that was not the case. She has not bothered to have a conversation with me.”

Mr Nelson said: “I was disgusted by how Saraya was treated and told them so. I couldn’t stand how the place was being run, and I’m not the only one.”

The man who replaced Ms Beric as office manager and Mr Nelson as treasurer, Senator Hanson’s brother-in-law Greg Smith, said he couldn’t say why they had severed their links with the party.

Mr Nelson handed in his membership card last August, ending a 20-year association with One Nation in which he also served as state director of the pivotal Queensland division.

“It’s the same for any business: if you lose people they have to be replaced,” Mr Smith said. “That’s just the nature of the business. People leave for many reasons.”

Ms Allen said she had worked for media companies and top corporates including Leighton Contractors, Siemens and Honeywell Group, and was appalled by the chaos in One Nation.

Taxpayers repaid Pauline Hanson’s loan to One Nation

‘I have known Pauline for two decades and I can tell you she doesn’t like using her own money,’ says former One Nation president and national treasurer Ian Nelson. Picture: Lyndon Mechielsen.
The Australian


Jamie Walker
Associate Editor
Brisbane
@Jamie_WalkerOz

One Nation used taxpayer money to repay a $191,000 loan from Pauline Hanson for last year’s ­federal election campaign that has been at the centre of internal ­tensions.

The man who signed off on the deal, former One Nation president and national treasurer Ian Nelson, said he was surprised by Senator Hanson’s generosity as it was “out of character” for her.

Senator Hanson said Mr Nelso­n had falsely accused her of accepting cash from a donor in “brown paper bags” when she had gone into her own pocket to cover the party’s election costs.

“It’s a load of bloody crap,” she said. “And … if anyone, the (Australian Electoral Commission), the federal police, want to see evidence of where the money came from, I have no problem showing them … because it has come straight out of my bank account.”

The repayment and disclosure of the loan, made by Senator Hanson in nine tranches between April 7, 2015, and June 22 last year, contributed to an angry showdown that led to Mr Nelson’s resignation from One Nation and fractured their 20-year friendship.

“It was very unusual,” Mr Nelson said. “I have known Pauline for two decades and I can tell you she doesn’t like using her own money, or risking it. It was out of character, that’s for sure.”

Senator Hanson said: “I can’t believe you talk to that shithead ... I was glad to see the back end of him.”


Last August, Senator Hanson was repaid in full the $191,000 loan she had made to the party. It proved to be one of Mr Nelson’s last acts as national treasurer, befor­e he was ousted in a power struggle with the new guard led by her key adviser James Ashby.

The money was drawn down from a $1.62 million election refund from the Australian Electoral Commission, based on the vote at the double-dissolution election that propelled Senator Hanson and three other One Nation candidates into the upper house of federal parliament.
“I was one of the first people who said ‘we have to pay her back’,” Mr Nelson said.

Financial returns filed with the Electoral Commission of Queensland by Mr Nelson’s replacement, Senator Hanson’s brother-in-law Greg Smith, show she made the first loan to the party of $1000 on April 7, 2015.

This was followed on February 29 last year by a payment of $5000, then three each of $10,000 on March 21, April 28 and May 3. On May 31, three weeks after Mr Turnbull called the election, she kicked in $120,000 with two transfers; the remainedr of the $191,000 loan went in on June 17 and 22.

Mr Smith said the loan was “completely” legitimate, and all disclosure requirements were met.

Mr Nelson expressed concern about the timing of the payments by Senator Hanson, which he said were stepped up after Melbourne property developer Bill McNee stopped donating to One Nation.

“Bill’s a lovely bloke but he’s a very private man and I think he went to water after he realised the donations had to be fully disclosed. This … would have been in March or April last year, not long before the election was called,” Mr Nelson said. “There was a meeting of the (party) executive and I said: ‘Look, I am concerned about the money we’ve got.’

“Pauline said: ‘Well, I’m going to have to put the money in. I am going to have to finance the rest of the campaign.’ ”

The AEC said federal law dealt with the disclosure of information rather than “limitations on donations or loans between parties or entities”. Parties could do what they pleased with election refunds from the AEC.

Mr McNee said he no longer made political donations.

One Nation divided: Hanson adviser leaves staff seeing red

Former One Nation president Ian Nelson. Picture: Lyndon Mechielsen
Former One Nation president Ian Nelson. Picture: Lyndon Mechielsen

Jamie Walker
Associate Editor Brisbane
@Jamie_WalkerOz

“Need to talk, sport,” Ian Nelson wrote in a blistering email sent at 3.20am on Sunday, February 28 last year, firing an early salvo in the struggle that would engulf his party, One Nation.

The target was James Ashby, the smooth, wheeling-and-dealing right hand to Pauline Hanson, who is admired and loathed in equal measure among the true ­believers who never gave up on their flame-haired heroine, when just about everyone in national politics had written her off.

Nelson is still a fan of Hanson, whom he considered a friend and ally in the 20 years he spent in One Nation’s inner circle, holding positions that ranged from president and state director of the pivotal Queensland division to national treasurer.

“Her bravery is amazing,” he tells The Weekend Australian. “Australia needs someone like Pauline Hanson to say the stuff nobody will say because of political correctness. But she doesn’t need people around her like James Ashby. He’s the anti-Christ of ­politicians.”

No one will be watching the outcome of this battle more closely than Malcolm Turnbull, who has found that Hanson’s team is one of the few things in a topsy-turvy Senate the Prime Minister can count on.

One Nation is riding the crest of a populist wave that smashed political orthodoxy across the Western world, from the decision by British voters last June to pull the pin on the EU to Donald Trump’s triumph in the US presidential race.

Holding One Nation together, though, will test Hanson’s skill and patience. The experience with protest parties in Australia is that they split more readily than tight trousers. Witness Clive Palmer’s short-lived vanity project and the first iteration of One Nation itself.

Nelson doesn’t resile from what he told the fresh-faced, whip-smart adviser in his pre-dawn tirade. He can’t stand the burn and churn around Hanson or what her master’s voice says or does in her name.

“Don’t you ever speak to anyone about a possible candidate for this party unless you discuss it with the executive,” he wrote, confronting Ashby over what he alleged to be breaches of One Nation’s party constitution.

“Do not meet with anyone unless you clear it with me first. You have been in this party for a very short time. Respect our constitution and rules of process … share with the executive … no secrets please, not in this party.”

Nelson, 66, is the longest-­serving One Nation figure to break publicly with Hanson and lift the lid on the seething cauldron of backbiting and jealousy that bubbles behind the scenes.

There have been other manifestations. The feud between Hanson, her office and former One Nation senator Rod Culleton and his staff has played out in public since she cut the chunky West Australian loose and backed the government in referring to the High Court his eligibility to have run for the Senate, after he pleaded guilty to larceny in NSW for hurling a $7.50 pair of cars keys into a ditch, to be lost. The conviction was annulled.

Ashby was then accused of throwing his mobile phone at ­Culleton’s female chief-of-staff during a fiery encounter in the senator’s Parliament House office last November.

The soap opera starring Culleton plumbed new depths this week when he was allegedly assaulted outside a court in Perth by former state Liberal parliamentarian Anthony Fels, who has put his hand up to run for One Nation at the West Australian election on March 11.

Hanson has distanced herself from Fels, but never Ashby, “her adopted son”, as she famously described him to this newspaper. The power he wields lies at the heart of the war within One ­Nation.

Nelson has been a lightning rod for the growing anger in the party’s old guard, a rallying figure for those who say Ashby has blinded Hanson to the damage he is doing to their party. This faction is now aligned with Culleton in the West, even though he has severed his ties with Hanson and for the time being sits on the crossbench as an independent.

The lady, though, is not for turning. Scathingly critical of ­Nelson — “I can’t believe you talk to that shithead,” she says at the outset of our conversation — Hanson makes it clear that Ashby commands her respect and utter loyalty.

“I rang Ian Nelson up and said, ‘how far are you going to go to try and destroy me and the party?’ And he said, ‘you are a stupid, stupid woman … you are letting that anti-Christ control you’. Right.

“The whole fact is they all wanted to control me. James doesn’t control me. We work very well together as a team. But Ian … they all thought they would be the one there guiding and telling me what to do. They have become now vindictive about James Ashby.”

If you think this is starting to sound familiar in terms of One Nation’s rollercoaster history, the answer is yes — and no. Hanson founded the party at the height of her early success in 1996, after she was elected to the House of Representatives on a fluke. (The Liberal Party had withdrawn her endorsement for the seat of Oxley, west of Brisbane, but didn’t have time to strike her name from the ballot paper.) She jumped to the neighbouring seat of Blair and lost at the 1998 GST-dominated poll called by John Howard.

One Nation then stormed back at that year’s Queensland state election, securing almost 22 per cent of the vote and 11 seats in the state parliament. The shaky edifice soon collapsed, as the motley crew of Hanson MPs bickered and backstabbed each other, and mostly quit or were forced out of politics. Some see parallels in the infighting today. Perhaps. But the key difference between then and now is Hanson herself.

All those years in the political wilderness — contesting election after election, and sometimes going achingly close to winning before last July 2 delivered — taught her a thing or two. She has surprised with how well she has performed in the Senate: in negotiations with the government, she is said to be reasonable and reliable, sticking to her side of a bargain; her contribution to debate has at times threatened to be thoughtful.

Inevitably, comparisons will be made between the influence of Ashby and the way a younger, naive Hanson was led by glib-­talking men such as David Oldfield, reputedly her lover as well as political adviser in One Nation’s early days. Give the woman some credit. If anyone has learned from their mistakes, she surely has.

As former Labor premier Peter Beattie notes: “Pauline Hanson has shown a great deal of discipline and political ‘smarts’ this time round, compared to 1998.” The same can’t be said for her party, obviously, and this is now a real problem for her.

Nelson is deeply aggrieved by what he sees as the unfairness of his treatment. He also points to that of 32-year-old Saraya Beric, a professional violinist who came on board in 2013 after Nelson and his friend, Jim Savage, pulled the shattered party together and persuaded Hanson to return and give it another shot as leader.

Nelson was then state director and president in Queensland and national treasurer. Beric became state and national secretary of the reborn party, badged in 2015 as Pauline Hanson’s One Nation. The young woman did just about everything else in the headquarters they set up in inner-­Brisbane Albion, after Melbourne developer Bill McNee paid the ­deposit and a year’s rent in advance. In addition to managing the office, Beric helped set up computers, operated the website, and managed candidates and marketing during the 2015 Queensland election and last year’s double- dissolution campaign. She was immensely popular.

And deeply hurt when she was effectively shown the door after One Nation’s stunning result in the Senate: Hanson and her running mate were elected on a primary vote in Queensland of almost 10 per cent, Brian Burston got there on preferences in NSW, with Culleton the bolter in the side. This made Hanson’s original gang of four the biggest team on the crossbench after the Greens.

Ashby told people there would be no jobs for the boys — or girl, for that matter. Instead, he offered Beric a 20 per cent pay rise, which would have increased the salary she was paid through her private company to $50,000. Nelson, still fuming over being cut out of preselection decisions and strategy during the election campaign, said this was insulting to Beric. Ashby pushed back.

The showdown came at an executive meeting on August 2 last year, a blustery winter’s day in Brisbane. Present were Hanson, Ashby, Beric, Nelson and two newcomers: senator-elect Malcolm Roberts and Greg Smith, Hanson’s brother-in-law. Hanson said she wanted Roberts and Smith to join the party executive, according to Nelson’s account. He protested, saying that due notice had to be given under the party rules. The pent-up tensions exploded. Nelson claimed Ashby had accused him of leaking information to the party membership and asked Hanson: “What are you doing, Pauline?” She did not reply, by Nelson’s account, as he and Ashby went at it. At one point Nelson called him a “maggot”; Ashby snapped back: “Who needs friends like you, Ian?”

Nelson stormed out, saying he was through. He stewed for a few days and fired in his resignation from his office-bearer positions and from One Nation itself. “Anybody who stands up to Ashby is gone,” Nelson says. “That’s what happened to me, that’s the way it is. It’s a full-on dictatorship at the moment. Pauline seems to think the One Nation political party is her own personal property.”

It soon became apparent why Smith had been wheeled in. He not only took over Nelson’s responsibilities as treasurer, handling the $1.62 million One Nation received as an election refund from the Australian Electoral Commission, he assumed many of Beric’s administrative duties.

“After the election I have had to put in a new administrator to run it,” Hanson says.

“We have been cleaning up the mess … really bringing the whole thing up to scratch to work as an effective office.”

Ashby declined to be interviewed for this article, but it’s fair to say he doesn’t think much of Nelson, for all his service to the party. Hanson is withering. She agrees, when pushed, that Nelson was once a friend, though not a close one. “Ian wanted a job with the party and I wouldn’t give one to him because he wasn’t reliable,” Hanson says. “Saraya was vying for a job in my parliamentary ­office, which I told her she wasn’t capable of doing. They both had their noses put out of joint.

“I’ve had a gutful of it. I am so angry about all of this … because it is unwarranted, unnecessary. I’ve worked my guts out for 18, 20 years to get us back (only) for this to happen.”

Nelson has tugged raw nerves with Hanson. He has deep links to the membership. One Nation co-founder David Ettridge — with whom Hanson was jailed, briefly, in 2003 before their joint conviction for electoral fraud was quashed — publicly rebuked Hanson for failing to show loyalty to Culleton. But to the disgruntled old guard, Ettridge could have equally been criticising the treatment of Nelson and Beric.

The issues have fused. Beric now works part-time for Culleton, whose chief of staff, Margaret Menzel, the target of Ashby’s ­alleged phone throwing, is hooked into the core conservative membership of One Nation in regional Queensland. Her husband, Max Menzel, once held the state seat of Mulgrave, south of Cairns, for the then Queensland Nationals and is a past president of Bob Katter’s Australian Party, which has a similar support base to Hanson’s.

One Nation won the seat in 1998, then almost immediately lost it back to the ALP. The current member, under-performing Treasurer Curtis Pitt, will be targeted by both One Nation and the LNP at the next state election and could struggle to hold on, despite a buffer of almost 13 per cent.

Hanson’s first order of business, though, is the WA election. The Culleton saga won’t help, especially if his alleged assailant, Fels, is charged by police over Tuesday’s altercation. One ­Nation has limited infrastructure in the West — apart from its estranged senator’s set-up. This is very much a family affair: Culleton’s brother-in-law was second on the ticket last July, his wife ­Ioanna No. 3.

No matter, Hanson insists. For now, the party is run from a party member’s home, but she has told them to get a hurry on and lease a campaign office. “Culleton is having no impact … I think people see him as taking up wasted space,” she says. “Culleton’s office was never, ever used for anything to do with party business … that’s wrong, it shouldn’t be done.”

Hanson is standing by Ashby and the new guard of advisers who have come on board since the federal election. “Everything is coming along extremely well,” she says, back to work after a break over Christmas. “I am delegating to people who I feel can handle the responsibility and do the job.”

She makes no apologies for how she dealt with Nelson and Beric; that’s not the Hanson way. And the 3am email Nelson fired off to Ashby is not the only one circulating in the tit for tat of One Nation’s squabbles. The Weekend Australian was forwarded a reply Nelson sent to a message from Bruce Bell on April 27 last year in which Bell raised concern about Culleton’s suitability as a candidate. Bell is a former business associate of the senator who is pursuing him over his eligibility to be in parliament, in legal action that has become entangled with a restraining order taken out by Ioanna Culleton against Bell and a second man, Frank Bertola.

“May I ask respectfully for your evidence regarding R. Culleton please because we need to vet our candidate thoroughly simply to protect Paulines (sic) good name,” Nelson emailed Bell. “Thank you for large document attached, read half but already scaring the pants off me!”

A figure close to Hanson says the purported dossier on Culleton was not passed on to the leader or her office by Nelson, an important omission on his part. Nelson said yesterday: “Why the hell would I? It had nothing to do with them. I knew they were plotting to get rid of Rod, and you know the rules. Keep your enemy close … I wanted to know what Bell had.”

Nelson was talking to a mate the other day about Hanson, going through all that had happened in their bitter falling out. He had “worked like buggery” to bring her back to the party, get her voted in only for her to side with people who told her he was conspiring against her.

“Why would I do that?” he asks, shaking his head. “That’s what is really disappointing to me. She can’t be that stupid. And then this old, loyal friend said to me, ‘you know what she’s like, mate, she burns people … that’s what she has done all along’. And I said, ‘I thought I was different’.”
Pauline Hanson arriving for a press conference with her chief adviser James Ashby.
Pauline Hanson arriving for a press conference with her chief adviser James Ashby.

Queensland builder Susan Menso accuses CFMEU and government department of bullying


Melanie Petrinec, The Courier-Mail
January 6, 2017 10:00pm

ONE of Queensland’s top ­female builders – who is facing two safety-related prosecutions – is accusing the CFMEU and a State Government department of bullying and harassment as she threatens to take her multimillion-dollar empire offshore.

Susan Menso, who says she built $20 million worth of Brisbane projects this past year, is fighting the Construction Forestry Mining and Energy Union in the Federal Circuit Court after it lodged a claim ­alleging she would not allow officials to investigate an allegedly unsafe worksite.

It is alleged Ms Menso initially refused to let CFMEU officials on to a South Brisbane boutique hotel worksite in December 2015 to inspect suspected safety breaches, including accusations there was only one toilet for eight floors, no fire extinguishers and no emergency exits.

But Ms Menso claims she has been “bullied and harassed” by the militant union and while she will fight allegations that her actions breached the Fair Work Act, the battle is taking its toll.

“I’m on blood-pressure tablets and everything now,” she said. “I’m taking my money overseas. Why would I want to be the richest person in the graveyard?”

The CFMEU claims it had a right to inspect Ms Menso’s South Brisbane project under the Fair Work Act and a WPHSQ spokesman said two safety-related prosecutions were scheduled against the builder-developer later this year, with another investigation ongoing.

It is alleged Ms Menso “stood between (the union organisers) and the entry to the site” and only let them pass after WHSQ and a policeman were called.

According to court documents, officials suspected there was only one water cooler and one toilet for eight floors, no fire extinguishers or emergency exit signs, no first aid box, no lunch room and numerous “fall from height risks”.

In an affidavit filed in her defence, Ms Menso said she was scared to let the men on to the site as she had been “pushed and bullied before by other CFMEU officers”, including official Justin Steele who was charged with assaulting her in May 2015, and denied the ­allegation. The affidavit alleges Workplace Health and Safety Queensland bullied her into withdrawing her complaint against Mr Steele, which resulted in prosecutors dropping the charges.

“I am a non-union site and have been bullied and harassed by the CFMEU and BLF (Builders’ Labourers Federation)”, Ms Menso said in her affidavit.

“After I charged him (Mr Steele) for assault, I was harassed and bullied by WPHSQ until I dropped the charges. This is also another reason why I didn’t want the two CFMEU officers (to) come on site as I was scared of being pushed/hit again.”

The department also confirmed she made a complaint about the alleged bullying and harassment and it had been “investigated in accordance with OIR (Office of Industrial Relations) procedures”.

The case will go to trial later this year.

Sunday 1 January 2017

Australian Christian Lobby van attack ‘attempted suicide bombing’

The burnt out van after it exploded at Eternity House, the Australian Christian Lobby Headquarters in Canberra. Picture: Kym Smith.
The burnt out van after it exploded at Eternity House, the Australian Christian Lobby Headquarters in Canberra. Picture: Kym Smith.
The Australian 10:33AM December 28, 2016




Reporter
Canberra

The head of the Australian Christian Lobby says the 35-year-old man who exploded a van outside the group’s Canberra headquarters had been on an “attempted suicide bombing”.

ACL managing director Lyle Shelton is at odds with ACT Policing over the “car-bomb” after authorities ruled out religious, political and ideological motives following a “very short” conversation with the van’s driver.

“I sincerely hope the police are right in their assessment but it defies logic as to how you can unequivocally come to that conclusion within hours of such a cataclysmic event,” Mr Shelton told The Australian.

“Police interviewed him for seven or eight minutes when he had massive burns to himself prior to going into a coma. That sends a message to any would-be terrorist if they wanted to do something like this all they have to do is to tell the police or hospital their only motive was to commit suicide and they’re fine.”

Mr Shelton said in a “heightened terrorism environment”, the public should have complete confidence in the investigation and the police’s determination, but in this case it had been made in “undue haste”.

The man accused of being the driver of the van, a Canberra resident and Australian national who allegedly ignited gas cylinders in the van just after 9.30pm last Wednesday, is in a stable condition at Concord Hospital after being flown from Canberra to Sydney with serious burns.

“We know three of the gas cylinders didn’t ignite but if they had … there would have been a whole lot more damage than the horrific damage that did occur,” Mr Shelton said.

“This is a very, very serious incident … What occurred at our building was not a car fire, it was a car-bomb.”


Mr Shelton said he had been told by police that the man’s “intent was to take his life” and there were no known links to the ACL.

An ACT Policing spokeswoman said it was inappropriate to comment any further as the investigation continued.
The driver of the van was not known to police before the explosion but Mr Shelton questioned how certain motives could be rejected “when other checks of his computer history had not been done”.