logo
Latham hears of tweet fallout via video link

Latham hears of tweet fallout via video link

Mark Latham had to beam into a courtroom via videolink because of a knee injury as a tribunal was told fellow MP Alex Greenwich's office received a 'barrage' of hateful and threatening messages in the wake of a graphic tweet by the ex-Labor leader.
The former Labor leader has faced days of controversy following allegations he abused his former partner, Nathalie Matthews, and sent her sexual messages from the parliament chamber.
The member of the NSW upper house has strenuously denied Ms Matthews' allegations, which are untested and contained in an application for an apprehended violence order (AVO) filed in the local court.
He not been charged with any criminal offence.
Mr Latham's injury was revealed in the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal on Tuesday.
Greenwich, an independent Sydney MP, has brought NCAT proceedings against the maverick MP, alleging he was subjected to homosexual vilification and workplace sexual harassment over a graphic tweet by Mr Latham.
Mr Latham, through his solicitor Zali Burrows, is contesting the case.
Mr Latham did not appear before the tribunal in Sydney on Tuesday, with Ms Burrows telling the court that he had a fractured knee and could not travel.
Instead he beamed into the courtroom via video link.
The NCAT case is centred on a tweet by Latham, as well as comments made by the former One Nation MP in newspaper and radio interviews.
The same tweet was the subject of Federal Court defamation proceedings in which Latham was ordered to pay $140,000 to Greenwich.
Federal Court Justice David O'Callaghan ruled in favour of Greenwich during the defamation proceedings, finding that the tweet conveyed the meaning that Greenwich 'engaged in disgusting sexual activities' and that it was defamatory.
He also rejected Latham's defence of honest opinion and qualified common law privilege.
Greenwich has now launched NCAT proceedings against Latham and his counsel has argued that each of the statements amounted to unlawful homosexual vilification and sexual harassment and that Latham breached the Anti-Discrimination Act.
Alexander Graham, who works in Mr Greenwich's office as an electorate officer, told the tribunal the office was inundated with messages in the wake of the Latham tweet.
Under cross examination from Ms Burrows, he was asked if Greenwich's office received negative communications at other times, including during the anti-abortion bill debate.
Mr Graham said while Greenwich's office did receive letters and emails from people disagreeing with the amendments there wasn't anything 'directly disparaging of Alex'.
He told the court the only time he could recall police being called was as a result of the fallout from the Latham tweet.
The tribunal heard that some of the abusive calls came from private numbers.
'The abusive phone calls from private numbers, you cannot ascertain they were from genuine haters,' Ms Burrows asked.
Greenwich's barrister Prue Bindon objected to the question.
Mr Graham later told the tribunal the office received a 'barrage' of hateful letters, emails and phone calls.
He said some were written with letters which had been cut from magazines and newspapers.
'There were ones that directly threatened Alex … talking about throwing homosexuals off the bluff,' Mr Graham said.
He described some of the communications as 'bizarre' and 'threatening' and that Greenwich's staff began using gloves to open mail.
Ms Bindon previously told the tribunal the elements of homophobic vilification alleged in the case hinge on the public act, claiming Latham's comments had incited hatred, contempt or severe ridicule.
She said the sexual harassment allegations were in relation to unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature in circumstances where a reasonable person would've anticipated it to cause humiliation or intimidation.
Ms Bindon also previously said she anticipated the defence would claim Greenwich's reputation was to some extent not damaged.
The matter will return to court next month.
The hearing followed Labor deciding to keep his portrait in the Labor's Parliament House party room with a note saying he was 'banned for life' from the party in 2017.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

HECS debt relief nears as Labor eyes further uni reform
HECS debt relief nears as Labor eyes further uni reform

The Advertiser

timean hour ago

  • The Advertiser

HECS debt relief nears as Labor eyes further uni reform

Students and graduates will soon receive a cut to higher education debts but advocates say the government must do more to make university fees fairer. Legislation was introduced to parliament on Wednesday to slash HECS debts by 20 per cent and increase income thresholds before minimum repayments kick in. It is expected to be passed with the support of the opposition in the coming weeks. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese credited the bill as a key reason behind Labor's victory in the May election. "Because it resonated with those young Australians in particular, who are looking for intergenerational equity measures, which is what this is, saving some three million Australians an average of $5500 each," he said during question time. Federal Education Minister Jason Clare said the policy will make the system fairer. "It means you start paying off your uni degree when uni starts to pay off for you," he said while introducing the bill to the House of Representatives earlier on Wednesday. People earning between $60,000 and $180,000 will save hundreds of dollars each year under the changes. Someone on $70,000 will save the most on minimum repayments - $1300 a year - due to an increase to the thresholds for when the debts must be paid. The bill is set to sail through both houses of parliament, with Opposition Leader Sussan Ley telling Sky News: "We will be constructive where we can." Bruce Chapman, the architect of the HECS scheme, said the relief would make the system fairer by giving those on lower salaries more money in their pockets. But the top priority should be reviewing the price of each degree because humanities students finish with the highest level of debt and end up being the lowest-paid graduates. "All the prices are wrong," Professor Chapman told AAP. Mr Clare said further reforms were being looked at after the failure of the former Liberal government's job-ready program. The program aimed to fill skills shortages by making it cheaper to take courses such as teaching, nursing and psychology, while doubling the cost of popular degrees including law, communications, business, humanities and the arts. "If the intention there was to reduce the number of people doing arts degrees, it hasn't worked," Mr Clare said. "People study the courses they're interested in, that they want to do, that they love." The universities' accord final report branded the program "deeply unfair" because it punished students who followed their interests. It recommended that fees reflect future earning potential as part of 47 recommendations to reform the sector. The universities sector welcomed the HECS bill but called on the government to repeal the jobs-ready graduates scheme. "Scrapping the job-ready graduates package to make student fees fairer and expanding the Commonwealth prac payment could help shift the dial on participation, which is what the country needs," Universities Australia chief executive Luke Sheehy said. Other aspects about how HECS debts were paid off also needed to be addressed, Prof Chapman said. HECS repayments are taken from a person's pay if they earn above an income threshold. But the money isn't immediately taken off the total debt and is instead deducted as a lump sum at the end of the financial year after indexation has been applied. The university accord recommended the arrangement be changed to make the system fairer. The Australian Tertiary Education Commission has been established in an interim capacity to implement long-term university reform and will review the HECS system over the next 12 months. Mr Clare will introduce further legislation to make the commission a permanent body. Students and graduates will soon receive a cut to higher education debts but advocates say the government must do more to make university fees fairer. Legislation was introduced to parliament on Wednesday to slash HECS debts by 20 per cent and increase income thresholds before minimum repayments kick in. It is expected to be passed with the support of the opposition in the coming weeks. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese credited the bill as a key reason behind Labor's victory in the May election. "Because it resonated with those young Australians in particular, who are looking for intergenerational equity measures, which is what this is, saving some three million Australians an average of $5500 each," he said during question time. Federal Education Minister Jason Clare said the policy will make the system fairer. "It means you start paying off your uni degree when uni starts to pay off for you," he said while introducing the bill to the House of Representatives earlier on Wednesday. People earning between $60,000 and $180,000 will save hundreds of dollars each year under the changes. Someone on $70,000 will save the most on minimum repayments - $1300 a year - due to an increase to the thresholds for when the debts must be paid. The bill is set to sail through both houses of parliament, with Opposition Leader Sussan Ley telling Sky News: "We will be constructive where we can." Bruce Chapman, the architect of the HECS scheme, said the relief would make the system fairer by giving those on lower salaries more money in their pockets. But the top priority should be reviewing the price of each degree because humanities students finish with the highest level of debt and end up being the lowest-paid graduates. "All the prices are wrong," Professor Chapman told AAP. Mr Clare said further reforms were being looked at after the failure of the former Liberal government's job-ready program. The program aimed to fill skills shortages by making it cheaper to take courses such as teaching, nursing and psychology, while doubling the cost of popular degrees including law, communications, business, humanities and the arts. "If the intention there was to reduce the number of people doing arts degrees, it hasn't worked," Mr Clare said. "People study the courses they're interested in, that they want to do, that they love." The universities' accord final report branded the program "deeply unfair" because it punished students who followed their interests. It recommended that fees reflect future earning potential as part of 47 recommendations to reform the sector. The universities sector welcomed the HECS bill but called on the government to repeal the jobs-ready graduates scheme. "Scrapping the job-ready graduates package to make student fees fairer and expanding the Commonwealth prac payment could help shift the dial on participation, which is what the country needs," Universities Australia chief executive Luke Sheehy said. Other aspects about how HECS debts were paid off also needed to be addressed, Prof Chapman said. HECS repayments are taken from a person's pay if they earn above an income threshold. But the money isn't immediately taken off the total debt and is instead deducted as a lump sum at the end of the financial year after indexation has been applied. The university accord recommended the arrangement be changed to make the system fairer. The Australian Tertiary Education Commission has been established in an interim capacity to implement long-term university reform and will review the HECS system over the next 12 months. Mr Clare will introduce further legislation to make the commission a permanent body. Students and graduates will soon receive a cut to higher education debts but advocates say the government must do more to make university fees fairer. Legislation was introduced to parliament on Wednesday to slash HECS debts by 20 per cent and increase income thresholds before minimum repayments kick in. It is expected to be passed with the support of the opposition in the coming weeks. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese credited the bill as a key reason behind Labor's victory in the May election. "Because it resonated with those young Australians in particular, who are looking for intergenerational equity measures, which is what this is, saving some three million Australians an average of $5500 each," he said during question time. Federal Education Minister Jason Clare said the policy will make the system fairer. "It means you start paying off your uni degree when uni starts to pay off for you," he said while introducing the bill to the House of Representatives earlier on Wednesday. People earning between $60,000 and $180,000 will save hundreds of dollars each year under the changes. Someone on $70,000 will save the most on minimum repayments - $1300 a year - due to an increase to the thresholds for when the debts must be paid. The bill is set to sail through both houses of parliament, with Opposition Leader Sussan Ley telling Sky News: "We will be constructive where we can." Bruce Chapman, the architect of the HECS scheme, said the relief would make the system fairer by giving those on lower salaries more money in their pockets. But the top priority should be reviewing the price of each degree because humanities students finish with the highest level of debt and end up being the lowest-paid graduates. "All the prices are wrong," Professor Chapman told AAP. Mr Clare said further reforms were being looked at after the failure of the former Liberal government's job-ready program. The program aimed to fill skills shortages by making it cheaper to take courses such as teaching, nursing and psychology, while doubling the cost of popular degrees including law, communications, business, humanities and the arts. "If the intention there was to reduce the number of people doing arts degrees, it hasn't worked," Mr Clare said. "People study the courses they're interested in, that they want to do, that they love." The universities' accord final report branded the program "deeply unfair" because it punished students who followed their interests. It recommended that fees reflect future earning potential as part of 47 recommendations to reform the sector. The universities sector welcomed the HECS bill but called on the government to repeal the jobs-ready graduates scheme. "Scrapping the job-ready graduates package to make student fees fairer and expanding the Commonwealth prac payment could help shift the dial on participation, which is what the country needs," Universities Australia chief executive Luke Sheehy said. Other aspects about how HECS debts were paid off also needed to be addressed, Prof Chapman said. HECS repayments are taken from a person's pay if they earn above an income threshold. But the money isn't immediately taken off the total debt and is instead deducted as a lump sum at the end of the financial year after indexation has been applied. The university accord recommended the arrangement be changed to make the system fairer. The Australian Tertiary Education Commission has been established in an interim capacity to implement long-term university reform and will review the HECS system over the next 12 months. Mr Clare will introduce further legislation to make the commission a permanent body. Students and graduates will soon receive a cut to higher education debts but advocates say the government must do more to make university fees fairer. Legislation was introduced to parliament on Wednesday to slash HECS debts by 20 per cent and increase income thresholds before minimum repayments kick in. It is expected to be passed with the support of the opposition in the coming weeks. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese credited the bill as a key reason behind Labor's victory in the May election. "Because it resonated with those young Australians in particular, who are looking for intergenerational equity measures, which is what this is, saving some three million Australians an average of $5500 each," he said during question time. Federal Education Minister Jason Clare said the policy will make the system fairer. "It means you start paying off your uni degree when uni starts to pay off for you," he said while introducing the bill to the House of Representatives earlier on Wednesday. People earning between $60,000 and $180,000 will save hundreds of dollars each year under the changes. Someone on $70,000 will save the most on minimum repayments - $1300 a year - due to an increase to the thresholds for when the debts must be paid. The bill is set to sail through both houses of parliament, with Opposition Leader Sussan Ley telling Sky News: "We will be constructive where we can." Bruce Chapman, the architect of the HECS scheme, said the relief would make the system fairer by giving those on lower salaries more money in their pockets. But the top priority should be reviewing the price of each degree because humanities students finish with the highest level of debt and end up being the lowest-paid graduates. "All the prices are wrong," Professor Chapman told AAP. Mr Clare said further reforms were being looked at after the failure of the former Liberal government's job-ready program. The program aimed to fill skills shortages by making it cheaper to take courses such as teaching, nursing and psychology, while doubling the cost of popular degrees including law, communications, business, humanities and the arts. "If the intention there was to reduce the number of people doing arts degrees, it hasn't worked," Mr Clare said. "People study the courses they're interested in, that they want to do, that they love." The universities' accord final report branded the program "deeply unfair" because it punished students who followed their interests. It recommended that fees reflect future earning potential as part of 47 recommendations to reform the sector. The universities sector welcomed the HECS bill but called on the government to repeal the jobs-ready graduates scheme. "Scrapping the job-ready graduates package to make student fees fairer and expanding the Commonwealth prac payment could help shift the dial on participation, which is what the country needs," Universities Australia chief executive Luke Sheehy said. Other aspects about how HECS debts were paid off also needed to be addressed, Prof Chapman said. HECS repayments are taken from a person's pay if they earn above an income threshold. But the money isn't immediately taken off the total debt and is instead deducted as a lump sum at the end of the financial year after indexation has been applied. The university accord recommended the arrangement be changed to make the system fairer. The Australian Tertiary Education Commission has been established in an interim capacity to implement long-term university reform and will review the HECS system over the next 12 months. Mr Clare will introduce further legislation to make the commission a permanent body.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store