Victorian Liberals accused of sacking staffer in retaliation for bullying claims
Her application refers to discussions within a WhatsApp group, which is understood to have involved Smith and other staff.
Jones claims she was stood down in retaliation for making bullying complaints against Smith and Davis, and for Davis' embarrassment over the Rinehart incident. She claims she was then sacked in retaliation for taking her case to WorkCover.
The Liberal Party declined to comment on the allegations.
The Age has seen the Fair Work application lodged against the party last week, Jones' witness statement, and the stand-down and termination letters issued to Jones. The same documents have been provided to all members of the party's 19-person administrative committee, which includes Opposition Leader Brad Battin.
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The administrative committee has separately received a request to intervene in the damaging dispute between Deeming and Pesutto by authorising the use of party funds to pay for or loan the money for legal costs owed by the former leader to his party room colleague.
Deeming last year successfully sued Pesutto for defamation before the Federal Court after he falsely implied she associated with neo-Nazis. Battin replaced Pesutto as party leader weeks after the judgment.
The court this month ordered Pesutto to pay Deeming $2.3 million in legal costs by this Friday. Deeming's lawyers have flagged their intention to pursue third parties for costs — including former premiers Jeff Kennett, Denis Napthine and Ted Baillieu and serving MPs Georgie Crozier and David Southwick — if Pesutto is left bankrupt.
This masthead has spoken to a dozen party members and staff who requested anonymity for this story.
Four Liberal sources said standing Jones down from the fundraising body on the eve of the federal election hampered campaign fundraising efforts.
The complaint against Smith and Davis emerged at a time when the party organisation and its office holders were under intense pressure to account for the party's disastrous result in last month's federal election, at which it lost two more suburban seats to Labor. Both men were contacted for comment.
The latest federal election drubbing follows successive Liberal wipe-outs at the previous two state elections.
Suggestions by supporters of Smith and Davis that Jones' complaint was part of a bigger factional play for control of the party have been rejected by four sources close to Jones.
Battin has privately canvassed a clear-out of senior positions at party headquarters to end infighting and become electorally competitive in Victoria, several sources have confirmed to The Age, although Battin has publicly disputed this.
Jones, in her Fair Work application, claims she had almost quadrupled Enterprise Victoria's membership in the two years in her role, and that annual revenue had increased about fivefold. She claims she was the target of a misinformation campaign about her performance to legitimise standing her down.
She is seeking compensation for lost income, unpaid commission and damages.
The Fair Work claim provides further details about a March 26 fundraising dinner at Zagame's House on Carlton's Lygon Street that Jones secured Rinehart for, in what was seen as a coup for the party. Davis rebranded the Enterprise Victoria event as a Victorian Liberal Party function and insisted on hosting. Jones offered him speaking notes, but according to Jones' claim, Davis replied: 'This is not my first rodeo.'
He then introduced Rinehart as a sponsor of Netball Australia, which Jones in her application describes as a 'very public and embarrassing gaffe'. Hancock Prospecting withdrew its $15 million four-year sponsorship with Netball Australia in 2022 amid a flurry of headlines after Diamonds players said they did not want to wear uniforms featuring the mining company's logo.
Jones was stood down the next day. She claims the misconduct allegations against her had never previously been raised and that the action was retaliatory.
The party, in its stand-down letter to Jones, accused her of improperly giving complimentary or discounted tickets to an earlier $2000-a-head lunch with Western Australian senator Michaelia Cash without approval, sharing confidential and financial information, and using her private email and device to transmit and store sensitive party information.
Jones disputes the characterisation of the claims and argues they were contrived.

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The Advertiser
4 hours ago
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South African president suspends police minister
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"These allegations therefore call for an urgent and comprehensive investigation," Ramaphosa said in a public address, adding he would establish a judicial commission of inquiry for this purpose. Ramaphosa said he will appoint law professor Firoz Cachalia as acting minister of police. Mchunu is a senior figure in Ramaphosa's African National Congress (ANC) party, and political analysts have said he could run for a leadership position at the ANC's next elective conference in 2027. Citing digital evidence such as WhatsApp messages, Mkhwanazi's allegations included that Mchunu had disbanded a police unit tasked with investigating politically motivated killings to protect politicians, police officers and other people linked to a criminal syndicate. Mkhwanazi said more than 100 case files were taken away from the political killings task team and have not been investigated further since. The Democratic Alliance party, the ANC's main coalition partner, called for a parliamentary inquiry into the allegations against Mchunu. South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has placed police minister Senzo Mchunu on immediate leave of absence, following accusations by a top police official that he had colluded with a criminal syndicate and interfered in high-profile investigations. Mchunu denied the allegations by Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi, police commissioner of KwaZulu-Natal province, at a media briefing last Sunday. He said the accusations were baseless and in a statement issued by his spokesperson last week said he was committed to upholding the rule of law. Ramaphosa, whose rise to the highest office was built on promises to fight corruption, has been under pressure to act swiftly as political parties and citizens said the allegations called into question the integrity of the criminal justice system. Investors have for years expressed concern over rampant crime that the World Bank estimates costs South Africa an estimated 10 per cent of gross domestic product each year. "These allegations therefore call for an urgent and comprehensive investigation," Ramaphosa said in a public address, adding he would establish a judicial commission of inquiry for this purpose. Ramaphosa said he will appoint law professor Firoz Cachalia as acting minister of police. Mchunu is a senior figure in Ramaphosa's African National Congress (ANC) party, and political analysts have said he could run for a leadership position at the ANC's next elective conference in 2027. Citing digital evidence such as WhatsApp messages, Mkhwanazi's allegations included that Mchunu had disbanded a police unit tasked with investigating politically motivated killings to protect politicians, police officers and other people linked to a criminal syndicate. Mkhwanazi said more than 100 case files were taken away from the political killings task team and have not been investigated further since. The Democratic Alliance party, the ANC's main coalition partner, called for a parliamentary inquiry into the allegations against Mchunu. South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has placed police minister Senzo Mchunu on immediate leave of absence, following accusations by a top police official that he had colluded with a criminal syndicate and interfered in high-profile investigations. Mchunu denied the allegations by Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi, police commissioner of KwaZulu-Natal province, at a media briefing last Sunday. He said the accusations were baseless and in a statement issued by his spokesperson last week said he was committed to upholding the rule of law. Ramaphosa, whose rise to the highest office was built on promises to fight corruption, has been under pressure to act swiftly as political parties and citizens said the allegations called into question the integrity of the criminal justice system. Investors have for years expressed concern over rampant crime that the World Bank estimates costs South Africa an estimated 10 per cent of gross domestic product each year. "These allegations therefore call for an urgent and comprehensive investigation," Ramaphosa said in a public address, adding he would establish a judicial commission of inquiry for this purpose. Ramaphosa said he will appoint law professor Firoz Cachalia as acting minister of police. Mchunu is a senior figure in Ramaphosa's African National Congress (ANC) party, and political analysts have said he could run for a leadership position at the ANC's next elective conference in 2027. Citing digital evidence such as WhatsApp messages, Mkhwanazi's allegations included that Mchunu had disbanded a police unit tasked with investigating politically motivated killings to protect politicians, police officers and other people linked to a criminal syndicate. Mkhwanazi said more than 100 case files were taken away from the political killings task team and have not been investigated further since. The Democratic Alliance party, the ANC's main coalition partner, called for a parliamentary inquiry into the allegations against Mchunu. South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has placed police minister Senzo Mchunu on immediate leave of absence, following accusations by a top police official that he had colluded with a criminal syndicate and interfered in high-profile investigations. Mchunu denied the allegations by Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi, police commissioner of KwaZulu-Natal province, at a media briefing last Sunday. He said the accusations were baseless and in a statement issued by his spokesperson last week said he was committed to upholding the rule of law. Ramaphosa, whose rise to the highest office was built on promises to fight corruption, has been under pressure to act swiftly as political parties and citizens said the allegations called into question the integrity of the criminal justice system. Investors have for years expressed concern over rampant crime that the World Bank estimates costs South Africa an estimated 10 per cent of gross domestic product each year. "These allegations therefore call for an urgent and comprehensive investigation," Ramaphosa said in a public address, adding he would establish a judicial commission of inquiry for this purpose. Ramaphosa said he will appoint law professor Firoz Cachalia as acting minister of police. Mchunu is a senior figure in Ramaphosa's African National Congress (ANC) party, and political analysts have said he could run for a leadership position at the ANC's next elective conference in 2027. Citing digital evidence such as WhatsApp messages, Mkhwanazi's allegations included that Mchunu had disbanded a police unit tasked with investigating politically motivated killings to protect politicians, police officers and other people linked to a criminal syndicate. Mkhwanazi said more than 100 case files were taken away from the political killings task team and have not been investigated further since. The Democratic Alliance party, the ANC's main coalition partner, called for a parliamentary inquiry into the allegations against Mchunu.


Perth Now
4 hours ago
- Perth Now
South African president suspends police minister
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has placed police minister Senzo Mchunu on immediate leave of absence, following accusations by a top police official that he had colluded with a criminal syndicate and interfered in high-profile investigations. Mchunu denied the allegations by Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi, police commissioner of KwaZulu-Natal province, at a media briefing last Sunday. He said the accusations were baseless and in a statement issued by his spokesperson last week said he was committed to upholding the rule of law. Ramaphosa, whose rise to the highest office was built on promises to fight corruption, has been under pressure to act swiftly as political parties and citizens said the allegations called into question the integrity of the criminal justice system. Investors have for years expressed concern over rampant crime that the World Bank estimates costs South Africa an estimated 10 per cent of gross domestic product each year. "These allegations therefore call for an urgent and comprehensive investigation," Ramaphosa said in a public address, adding he would establish a judicial commission of inquiry for this purpose. Ramaphosa said he will appoint law professor Firoz Cachalia as acting minister of police. Mchunu is a senior figure in Ramaphosa's African National Congress (ANC) party, and political analysts have said he could run for a leadership position at the ANC's next elective conference in 2027. Citing digital evidence such as WhatsApp messages, Mkhwanazi's allegations included that Mchunu had disbanded a police unit tasked with investigating politically motivated killings to protect politicians, police officers and other people linked to a criminal syndicate. Mkhwanazi said more than 100 case files were taken away from the political killings task team and have not been investigated further since. The Democratic Alliance party, the ANC's main coalition partner, called for a parliamentary inquiry into the allegations against Mchunu.

News.com.au
7 hours ago
- News.com.au
Who is the worst Australian Prime Minister of the 21st century?
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Thankfully, the taskmasters at have asked me to lay out the most glaring weaknesses of these beglassed men (yes, Abbott and Turnbull did wear glasses at various times), plus Julia Gillard. An easier job, I think, than listing their strengths. So, you may read the summaries below with the knowledge that your narrator is a cantankerous boor with a serial lack of respect for virtually all politicians. And then you may ignore every word he writes, and vote accordingly. John Howard: 1996-2007 As someone who progressed through multiple years of high school-level cricket with the beamer as his accidental stock ball, I profess some respect for John Howard, and his unique interpretation of short-pitched bowling. No risk of a beamer there. Is it good? No. Does it betray any latent talent? No. Will it provoke anger, rather than pity, from the umpire? Also no. This last part is its strongest feature. Mr Howard is the longest-serving prime minister on this list, having won four elections, and it is fair to say he displayed the most political skill. There's a reason Mr Howard is still wheeled out for every election campaign, almost 20 years into retirement. Two indisputable achievements: the introduction of the GST, and the gun buyback scheme, implemented in the wake of the Port Arthur Massacre. Both ideas faced immense opposition. And Mr Howard's determination to persist with them solidified his reputation as a politician of principle, rather than convenience. There were also weaknesses. Mr Howard and his treasurer, Peter Costello, left Australia's federal government with a structural deficit from which it is still struggling to recover. His closeness with American President George W. Bush got Australia mired in Iraq. And the prime minister's staunch social conservatism sometimes left him out of step with the mainstream of Australian society. For example, Mr Howard remained stubbornly resistant to the idea of apologising to the Stolen Generations – something his successor would do shortly after he left office, having lost his own seat. Kevin Rudd: 2007-2010, 2013-a bit later in 2013 And here we have that successor. Mr Rudd ran the triumphant Kevin07 election campaign, which convinced a critical mass of Australians, at least temporarily, that he was a fine and normal human being. He then shepherded Australia through the Global Financial Crisis, and delivered a formal apology to the Stolen Generations in parliament. His tenure ended aprubtly in 2010, for famously ill-defined reasons that hobbled his replacement, Julia Gillard, as she sought to assert her own authority over the office. The heart of the matter was Mr Rudd's toxic relationship with many of his colleagues, who resented what they described as controlling, micromanaging behaviour. After years spent surreptitiously, or often quite blatantly, undermining Ms Gillard, whose unpopularity spurred Labor's MPs to act, Mr Rudd returned to the prime ministership and presided over the government's defeat to Tony Abbott. Mr Rudd is still around. He's currently serving as our ambassador to the United States, a job which requires him to navigate sensitive diplomacy with the Trump administration. It's all the more awkward because he was, previously, a quite fierce critic of President Trump. Julia Gillard: 2010-2013 Ms Gillard was forever haunted by the manner in which she became prime minister, and her struggle to justify it to the public. In the hours after she displaced Mr Rudd – or knifed him, if you prefer emotive language – Ms Gillard described the government as a 'good' one that had 'lost its way'. It never quite managed to find its way again. There are, however, achievements to her name, such as the introduction of the National Disability Insurance Scheme. Ultimately, a single sentence uttered before the 2010 election severed Ms Gillard's relationship with much of the public. Having promised explicitly that 'there will be no carbon tax under a government I lead', she then introduced one, having made a deal with the Greens to scrape into minority government. The breach in trust fuelled then-opposition leader Tony Abbott, who proceeded to win power in 2013, after Ms Gillard had already been pushed aside by Mr Rudd. Ms Gillard did contribute one of the most famous moments in recent Australian political history with her searing anti-misogyny speech on the floor of the House. Tony Abbott: 2013-2015 Mr Abbott was, by all assessments, an extraordinarily effective opposition leader. His time as prime minister didn't go nearly as well. The root of Mr Abbott's problems was his government's first budget in 2014, which sought to make sweeping cuts to public spending, including some that violated his election promises. Among the pledges he did honour was the most famous one: to 'stop the boats', and thus stop the stream of people risking their lives on boats to seek asylum in Australia. There was a particularly awkward moment, in 2015, when Mr Abbott decided to award Prince Philip a knighthood, having revived Australia's honours system. The move was widely seen as out of touch, and Mr Abbott himself later admitted it had been 'an injudicious appointment'. Malcolm Turnbull: 2015-2018 Mr Turnbull almost quit politics after his catastrophically unsuccessful stint as opposition leader during the Rudd government. But he lingered for long enough to serve as a minister in the Abbott government, and then as prime minister, having brought Mr Abbott down. The chief accusation against Mr Turnbull is that he was a do-nothing prime minister, forever too cautious to propose significant reforms, and too constrained by his party's right wing to implement his preferred agenda, particularly on the issue of climate change. He would point to a policy like Snowy Hydro 2.0 as a counterweight to that argument. Mr Turnbull ultimately left the job in particularly acrimonious circumstances after a week of high drama, which saw Peter Dutton challenge him for the leadership, only for Scott Morrison to skate through the middle and claim the prize. Scott Morrison: 2018-2022 Mr Morrison was in charge during the most consequential crisis the world had faced since the GFC. He guided Australia through the Covid pandemic, working closely with the states. Whether he struck the right balance, in that endeavour, is a matter of opinion. Politically speaking, he secured the permanent adoration of Liberal supporters by winning an election against the odds in 2019. But controversies eventually took their toll, particularly Mr Morrison's decision to fly to Hawaii with his family while Australia was fighting horrendous bushfires. His glib remark in one interview, saying 'I don't hold a hose, mate,' quickly became infamous. Anthony Albanese: 2022-present The one prime minister on this list whose political career has yet to reach a painful end. Emphasis, there, on the 'yet'. The greatest failure, during Mr Albanese's first term, was his unsuccessful campaign to establish an Indigenous Voice to Parliament, which was rejected by the Australian people at a referendum. Now he is dealing with global turmoil, with wars in Ukraine and Gaza supplemented by a recalcitrant second Trump administration, which is determined to impose sanctions of varying severity upon the rest of the world. How will it end? Not well, if the rest of this list is any guide.