Scott Morrison: ‘I did It All For You, Australia’

Australia’s former “Gaslighter in Chief” Scott Morrison, has today denied any wrongdoing in secretly swearing himself in as a Minister into 5 different portfolios during his time as Prime Minister.
Using the pandemic as an excuse, the former PM consulted with the Australian Governor-General as to the legality of using his executive powers to have himself take over the key portfolios of Health, Treasury, Finance, Home Affairs, and Resources, without the knowledge of 3 of the Ministers in charge of those departments, throughout 2020 and 2021.
Morrison denied that secretly subverting the powers of his ministers, to grant himself even more powers was wrong because in his mind no other PM had ever dealt with issues like the pandemic before him. However, Australian democracy survived two world wars and the Spanish Flu last century without the Prime Ministers of the time appointing themselves as secret ministers. Similarly, it was predominantly the actions of the State Premiers in Australia that contributed to the country’s somewhat successful response to the pandemic since 2020, not Scott Morrison alone.
“I can’t recall”
As early as two days ago, Morrison “couldn’t recall” whether he had sworn himself in to take control of two of the portfolios, yet today he confirmed that he had done so, in order to single-handedly save the county from the pandemic. Instead of walking into the press conference today and starting with, “Righto, you got me, I went too far,” Morrison basically gaslit his colleagues, the media, and Australians in general by stating that he would apologise for not telling his colleagues (that he didn’t trust them, so took their jobs), but wouldn’t apologise for lying to the Australian public and hiding secrets from them.
Similarly, Morrison refused to reveal whether he had accepted the extra remuneration that comes with being appointed a minister, after being sworn into these roles. This obfuscation points to the refusal of the Morrison Government to instigate a formal body to investigate corruption in federal politics in Australia, which was his broken election promise from 2019.
“It’s not my job”
For a man who famously said, “I don’t hold a hose” during one of the worst bush fire seasons Australia has ever endured, and who constantly deferred any reference to his or his government’s inability to solve multiple public issues with, “It’s not my job”, this is a new low for Morrison. The honourable thing to do here would be for Morrison to resign from politics altogether, however, using his family as a shield he is refusing to do so, but could this also be because he is aware that publicly he is damaged goods, and not many high-profile potential employers will be knocking his door down to offer him employment post-politics.
The Liberal Party’s brand is also now damaged, almost beyond repair in the short term, and this will fuel calls for the current PM to instigate a federal corruption investigative body as soon as possible. It will be interesting to see how the Murdoch media spins this latest episode from what was obviously one of the worst governments in Australia’s short history — a selfish government shrouded in secrecy, moulded by one man’s lust for power at the expense of the people he was meant to be leading. Yet Morrison would have us believe, he did it all “for us”.
DC
