logo
How Mark Latham could get EXPELLED from Parliament - and it has NOTHING to do with his grubby sex scandal

How Mark Latham could get EXPELLED from Parliament - and it has NOTHING to do with his grubby sex scandal

Daily Mail​11 hours ago
Libertarian MP John Ruddick has pledged to launch a GoFundMe campaign to raise funds for Mark Latham's $1million legal bill, after he was found to have defamed Sydney MP Alex Greenwich in a graphic and homophobic tweet.
'If Mark Latham is forced into bankruptcy, I'll start a GoFundMe,' Ruddick told Chris Smith on 2SM radio on Thursday morning.
'I'm going to ask 10,000 people to pay $100, that's a million dollars. And if there's anything left over, we'll throw a big Mark Latham party.'
Latham, now an Independent MLC, was ordered to pay $140,000 in damages and an estimated $600,000 in legal costs following a Federal Court ruling in 2024.
Any sitting MP who is declared bankrupt is required to vacate their seat under the NSW Constitution.
Ruddick praised Latham as 'a giant of the NSW Legislative Council' in the wake of an unfolding scandal over lewd text messages he sent to his former partner Nathalie Matthews, some allegedly sent from the Parliament floor.
'Half the country wanted him to be Prime Minister not that long ago,' he said.
'In state Parliament, there's a lot of technical stuff, Mark is across it all. He's making a serious, valuable contribution.'
Ruddick also praised Latham's sharp debating style, deep understanding of legislation, and ability to command attention in the chamber.
'When Mark gets up, everyone stops what they're doing. They listen,' he said.
In a separate interview with Chris Smith on 2SM on Wednesday, Latham confirmed he had sent the messages, but denied it had impacted his work.
'The big news is I had a private life,' he said.
'I had a sex life, and I've got to say it was fantastic.'
'If I'm the only person in Australia who in a work environment engaged in a bit of playful sex talk with their partner, then I'll buy everyone a lottery ticket tomorrow.'
Latham said 'basically none' of Matthews' claims were true and stressed that NSW Police had not granted her request for an AVO.
Matthews has lodged a private AVO application, which remains before the courts.
Sex worker Carly Electric (pictured) has claimed Latham and Ms Matthews contacted her 'out of nowhere' earlier this year for what she suspected was for a threesome
'Just about all the things she is complaining about, she initiated in consensual arrangements,' Latham alleged, noting their last contact was on May 27.
Ms Matthews claims the one-time federal opposition leader inflicted 'a sustained pattern' of psychological, financial and emotional abuse against her for three years.
The former federal Labor leader has categorically denied he 'abuses women' and insisted all his dealings with Ms Matthews were entirely consensual.
It is not suggested the claims of abusive behaviour are substantiated, only that allegations have been made.
Meanwhile, a sex worker has come forward with bombshell claims that Latham and his then-girlfriend contacted her for a threesome that never eventuated.
Carly Electric claimed the pair contacted her 'out of nowhere' earlier this year for what she suspected was for a threesome.
'She (Ms Matthews) just came out of nowhere and it's like they were love bombing me … each of them separately landed in my DMs,' she told the Daily Telegraph.
Latham described Ms Electric as a 'good rooter'.
'Multi-skilled. Comedian. Race lover. Keen rooter. Exactly our sort of person!' he said.
He also joked if she might want to be involved in a 'freak off', a another term used by infamous rapper Sean Diddy Coombs for a threesome.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pandas, tennis and a tour of the Great Wall: Anthony Albanese hits back at claims his China trip was 'indulgent'
Pandas, tennis and a tour of the Great Wall: Anthony Albanese hits back at claims his China trip was 'indulgent'

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Pandas, tennis and a tour of the Great Wall: Anthony Albanese hits back at claims his China trip was 'indulgent'

Anthony Albanese has hit back at the Coalition over claims of 'indulgence' during his China trip, saying his rivals don't understand the importance of respect in diplomacy. The prime minister's itinerary has included retracing the steps of Gough Whitlam on the Great Wall of China, attending a tennis tournament and visiting a panda research centre in the southwestern city of Chengdu. Back home, the optics of visiting popular tourist sites attracted sniping from the Opposition. Coalition frontbencher James Paterson suggested the prime minister was enjoying himself too much. 'I do wonder whether a Gough Whitlam history tour on the Great Wall of China, whether a visit to Chengdu to pose with some pandas, and whether a hit of tennis is strictly necessary as part of a six-day visit to China, when there is so much else at stake in our other international relationships around the world,' he told Sky News on Thursday. 'And frankly, I have to say that some of this is starting to look a little bit indulgent.' Mr Albanese has himself been eager to draw links between his tour and those of former Labor prime ministers Whitlam and Bob Hawke, who also visited the giant pandas in 1986. What those and his visits achieved was building respect between Australia and China, which would in turn result in better economic and diplomatic outcomes, the PM said. 'Those pictures go to 27 million people, potentially, in Australia. They go to over a billion people in China,' Mr Albanese told reporters in Chengdu. 'And those billion people represent people who are increasingly rising up the income ladder and are potential tourists and therefore job creators in Australia. 'If James Patterson doesn't understand that, then he doesn't understand much. 'The Great Wall of China symbolises the extraordinary history and culture here in China, and showing a bit of respect to people never cost anything. You know what it does, it gives you a reward.' Mr Albanese's trip has been shorter on concrete outcomes than in previous years, when his resumption of dialogue with China saw $20 billion worth of Chinese trade sanctions lifted from Australian exports. But the welcome has been warmer and coverage from Chinese state media more effusive than at any time since before the breakdown in Sino-Australian relations in 2020. A few agreements to boost trade and tourism links have been reached. But the increased dialogue and co-operation in areas from green steel to medical technology were part of a gradual improvement in relations that would advance Australia's national interests, Mr Albanese said. 'You don't go from a position of where we were into absolute agreement on everything. That's not the goal.' Despite the improving mood, China and Australia still have many issues they disagree on. In meetings with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang, Mr Albanese raised concerns over China not providing advance notice of naval live-fire drills off Australia that forced commercial flights to divert. Meanwhile, Mr Li has voiced his dismay over Australia's stringent restrictions on foreign investment from China, imploring the Australian government not to treat Chinese firms unfairly. 'We have different political systems, but it has been constructive and has been an important step in the developing of our relationship,' Mr Albanese said.

Woman in THAT viral 'bathroom' video with Wayne Carey goes public and unleashes on the women who filmed her
Woman in THAT viral 'bathroom' video with Wayne Carey goes public and unleashes on the women who filmed her

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Woman in THAT viral 'bathroom' video with Wayne Carey goes public and unleashes on the women who filmed her

The woman filmed at a Melbourne bar with AFL star Wayne Carey in a now-viral video has gone public to describe her immense distress at the release of the footage. Kate Aston, 38, a Melbourne marketing and communications executive, has described the dissemination of the clip as 'a deliberate act of bullying'. Aston posted a lengthy statement to Instagram Stories on Thursday, revealing that she had initially chosen to remain silent to protect her professional reputation and her mental health, but has come forward to hold those who released the video to account - and set the record straight. 'Overnight, from footage of me simply exiting a toilet at a bar, I've had my life turned upside down,' she wrote. 'What has happened to me could happen to anyone, and no one should have to go through what I have been put through – the damage, the speculation, the impact on my livelihood, all from the malicious actions of a small few.' From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Aston says that she fears the impact the video will have on her future, her career - and even her personal relationships. 'At a time when I am navigating my next career move and visibility matters, the personal and professional toll has been immense,' she said. 'Who would want to employ me, date me, be associated with me? What's left now that this has all happened to me?' The executive indicated she would be taking legal action over the matter. 'Whilst it's only been a matter of days since this incident unfolded, there has been immeasurable damage to my reputation, and my ability to lead a normal life has been adversely affected,' she said. 'These women and others who've provided hateful commentary have put into jeopardy my reputation, and so I've been left with no choice but to try to protect it. 'Two women not known to me have turned my life upside down and I have to set the record straight.' Aston believes her future finances have also been impacted by the release of the video. 'From a professional perspective, my ability has been put into question which has had immediate financial repercussions, one that is costing me every day with the effects likely to be long-term and irreversible,' she wrote. 'Whilst I appear strong, those closest to me know that my suffering over recent days has been colossal.' The executive says that she is speaking out not only for herself, but in the hopes of standing up for 'every woman that has been targeted'. 'I have been put in this situation simply because of the cyber-bullying actions of other people,' she said. 'There needs to be some sort of accountability for their actions.' 'In addition, it is my hope by shining light on this incident and taking legal action, a new precedent will be set, one that discourages this type of behaviour from continuing into the future.' On Wednesday, footy great Wayne confessed that he is the man shown in a viral video that allegedly featured a man and woman emerging from a bathroom in a trendy Melbourne bar. The North Melbourne premiership winner said he has contacted Victoria Police in an effort to have the people who filmed and distributed the video held accountable for their actions. The footage, which was taken at the Toorak Cellars bar in Armadale in the city's inner south-east, shows Carey and the unnamed woman walking into view around 20 seconds apart. A female voice is heard saying 'we've got you on camera' as the woman walks past, before asking 'What's he doing in there?' and remarking, 'She looks embarrassed.' Carey and the woman depicted in the clip have lashed out over the video, with the ex-AFL star branding it 's**t shaming' and cyberbullying, and both parties insisting there was no 'tryst' in the toilets. 'Annoyed is the wrong word, I've gone through about 10 different emotions in the last three days,' he said on Sam Newman's You Cannot Be Serious podcast. 'I've gone through disbelief, sadness, I've gone through anger. 'This woman has been thrown into this just because I could kick a footy. 'And you've got two vile, disturbing, probably p**sed women who want to do this to another woman.' He continued: 'That's all they were doing, they were s**t-shaming another woman. 'If two men had done that they would be raked over hot coals, it would be the biggest story going around. 'But because it's two women doing it to another woman … you don't know what's going on, this other woman has had all sorts of stuff going in her life, I've since found out. 'You talk about vile and disgusting, what they've done and who they have affected by a few sh**s and giggles drinking their chardonnay, sitting up there, doing whatever. 'Once again, I'm not going to name them because that would be as pathetic as what they are. I'll let the law take care of it.'

Melbourne daycare worker accused of shocking abuse against children had been sacked from previous job - as calls grow for national childcare register
Melbourne daycare worker accused of shocking abuse against children had been sacked from previous job - as calls grow for national childcare register

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Melbourne daycare worker accused of shocking abuse against children had been sacked from previous job - as calls grow for national childcare register

It's been revealed that a childcare worker accused of abusing infants was sacked from one facility, as a former royal commissioner castigated authorities for dragging their feet on record-keeping. Joshua Dale Brown, 26, has been charged with more than 70 sex offences against eight alleged victims aged under two at a childcare centre in Melbourne. Authorities have previously said there were no known complaints against him, however, childcare giant Nido Early Learning has confirmed Brown was sacked while on probation after completing 18 shifts at a centre in Werribee, in Melbourne's west. The incident happened before he started working at G8-owned Creative Garden centre, at Point Cook in Melbourne's southwest, where he is accused of abusing children between April 2022 and January 2023. A Nido Early Learning spokesperson said Brown was terminated over 'unsatisfactory attention' given to an internal incident report related to one child's behaviour towards another child. 'The action did not relate to any behaviour by the individual towards a child,' they said. 'We have zero tolerance for the non-compliance to our internal policies, no matter how trivial they sound to external parties.' Brown was also subject to two misconduct investigations while he was working at G8, both of which found the non-sexual claims involving children were substantiated. He was suspended and then resigned after the second investigation. Both incidents came after the alleged abuse for which he has been charged. The parents of about 2000 children who crossed paths with Brown have been told to get them tested for infectious diseases. His work history was updated this week to include four new centres. Investigators have blamed delays on gathering information on his employment on a lack of centralised records, revealing they had to get search warrants to obtain handwritten records, shift rosters and other critical data. Federal and state jurisdictions have promised to fast-track a national register for childcare workers, after it was discovered Brown had worked at 24 facilities since 2017. New laws to strip dodgy childcare centres of federal funding and other changes will be introduced by the government when parliament resumes, however the Victorian coalition is concerned that may not be enough to prevent abuse. 'The government must ensure its proposed legislation improves safety and removes the risk of this ever happening again,' early learning spokesperson Zoe McKenzie said. Poor record keeping and information sharing in sectors dealing with children were key issues highlighted in the 2017 Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. The commission's recommendations included improving teacher and worker registrations, improving the quality of institutional record keeping, the ability to exchange information between facilities and for states and territories to keep better track of workers employed in their jurisdictions. While all nine governments in Australia accepted the recommendations, it's been difficult to get them to act, former royal commissioner Robert Fitzgerald said. 'Ten years on from our recommendations around information sharing and record keeping, the job has not yet been done and it has not been done because the nine governments of Australia have not committed the willpower to get it done in a timely manner,' Mr Fitzgerald told AAP. He accused some states and territories of being particularly slow in implementing significant recommendations. 'These are all manageable. These are all achievable and my disappointment is that progress has been made, but the job should have been done,' Mr Fitzgerald said. The former commissioner said every gap left in safeguarding the sector meant children were put at risk. Adequate record keeping and information sharing can inform subsequent employers of a history of concern, not necessarily convictions, and can provide authorities with an insight into any patterns of abuse. But the former commissioner warned that workers' rights can't be abandoned where complaints or criminal action have not been substantiated. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732)

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