logo
Sussan Ley hits back at Liberal Party elder who suggested women had become 'so assertive'

Sussan Ley hits back at Liberal Party elder who suggested women had become 'so assertive'

Daily Mail​05-06-2025

Sussan Ley has encouraged 'assertive women' to join the Liberal Party after a former party executive complained about female assertiveness.
The Opposition Leader condemned comments made by Former federal president Alan Stockdale, 80, who reportedly claimed women had become 'so assertive' the party might need to consider measures to support men.
'The women in this party are so assertive now that we may needs some special rules for men to get them preselected,' he told a meeting of the NSW Liberal Womens' Council on Tuesday, the Daily Telegraph reported.
Ley said there was 'nothing wrong with being an assertive woman'.
'The Liberal Party must reflect, respect and represent modern Australia and that means recognising the strength, merit and leadership of the women in our ranks,' she said in a statment.
It came after Prime Minister Anthony Albanese suggested the Liberal Party need to 'have a good look at themselves and their structures'.
Mr Stockdale, who was Treasurer of Victoria in the government of Jeff Kennett, later told the Telegraph he had made 'a lighthearted but poorly chosen remark'.
But that didn't stop senior Nationals senator Bridget McKenzie and former Labor premier for Queensland Anna Palaszczuk from joining forces to condemn his remarks.
'Honestly, Alan, read the room,' Senator McKenzie told Nine's Today show on Thursday.
'It was a shocking comment - I think it's time for Alan to head back to the Melbourne Club, have a stiff whisky and chat with the old boys about what went wrong.'
Ms Palaszczuk said she could not believe it.
'You've finally got one step forward for the Liberal Party with Sussan Ley being elected (federal leader), and it's three steps backwards with these comments,' she told Today.
'These are not appropriate in this day and age and, honestly, the Liberal Party needs a good hard look at themselves, especially the men.'
Senator McKenzie said she was on a 'unity ticket' with Ms Palaszczuk over Mr Stockdale's remarks.
During the federal election campaign, the Liberal Party announced a policy requiring Commonwealth public servants to stop working from home.
It was blamed for alienating women voters, many of whom use working from home to balance their jobs with child care and other duties, helping Labor romp home to an electoral landslide.
Deputy Opposition leader Ted O'Brien also questioned Mr Stockdale's comments, appealing to strong women to join the Liberals.
'To any of the assertive women out there, the Liberal Party is your party,' he told ABC's News Breakfast on Thursday.
'We need more women engaging with our party, running for our party.
'I'm proud to have Sussan Ley as our leader.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NSW upper house president seeks advice from Bret Walker over possible political staffer arrests
NSW upper house president seeks advice from Bret Walker over possible political staffer arrests

The Guardian

time4 hours ago

  • The Guardian

NSW upper house president seeks advice from Bret Walker over possible political staffer arrests

The president of the New South Wales upper house has sought advice from high-profile barrister Bret Walker SC over whether he can seek arrest warrants for government staffers who failed to give evidence to an inquiry examining the Sydney caravan 'fake terrorism plot', Guardian Australia understands. Ben Franklin is expected to reveal on Tuesday whether he intends to seek arrest warrants from the NSW supreme court for five staffers who were summoned to appear before the inquiry on Friday, but did not attend. Three are from the office of the premier, Chris Minns, and two work for the police minister, Yasmin Catley. According to sources with knowledge of the situation, Franklin has sought advice from leading senior counsel Walker, who represented George Pell in his appeal to the high court and former attorney general Christian Porter in his defamation case against the ABC. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email Under the Parliamentary Evidence Act, if the president is satisfied that the five staffers failed to appear without just cause or reasonable excuse, the matter will be referred to a judge of the supreme court. If the judge agrees, then warrants would be issued, the staffers arrested and brought before the committee to give evidence. The standoff between the premier's office and an upper house inquiry into Minns' handling of the Dural caravan incident has inflamed simmering tensions between the premier and the upper house. There is a long-standing precedent that members of the legislative assembly cannot be compelled to appear before the upper house and vice versa, but the question of whether staff from a minister's office can be compelled is heavily contested. 'They are staff employed by the executive. If the legislative council can't scrutinise employees of executive government, of a minister's office, we might as well go to the beach,' independent upper house MP, Mark Latham, said. Constitutional law expert Prof Anne Twomey, from Sydney University, suggested that the right to refuse to appear may also extend to ministerial staff. Twomey pointed to the principle that members can't be compelled by the other house and the well-established principle of ministerial responsibility, with questions in parliament providing an avenue for other MPs to seek information of ministers. The inquiry – launched with the support of the Coalition, the Greens and crossbench MLCs – is examining the handling of information about the caravan plot amid concerns whether parliament was 'misled' before controversial laws aimed at curbing antisemitism were rushed through parliament. In January, after it was announced that the caravan had been found in Dural laden with explosives, Minns said it had the potential to be a 'mass casualty event'. But in March, the Australian federal police revealed they believed it was a 'con job' by organised crime figures seeking to divert police resources and influence prosecutions. The inquiry was told that the briefings on the matter were 'pens down' meetings and no notes were taken. They have since sought to summons staff to determine who knew what and when. More staff from the NSW premier's office are facing summonses and the threat of arrest if they do not agree to appear at a second upper house inquiry, intensifying the standoff between the NSW upper house and the Minns government. A second committee is currently considering responses to requests that premier's staff appear to answer questions about the $37.6m Local Small Community Allocations program. Minns' chief of staff, James Cullen, has agreed to appear, but others more intimately involved with the grants program are believed to have raised concerns about appearing. The little-known grants program has come under scrutiny. Although it gave equal allocations of $400,000 to each of the 93 NSW electorates, its detractors allege Labor candidates were asked to nominate how it would be spent, effectively turning it into a pork barrelling exercise to benefit Labor. The upper house has already expressed its anger about the slow pace of the government in producing documents about this program to the upper house. It took the rare step in late May of censuring the leader of the government in the upper house, Penny Sharpe, over the tardy production of documents.

Involvement in US strikes on Iran could make Australia a target, experts warn as government tight-lipped on Pine Gap
Involvement in US strikes on Iran could make Australia a target, experts warn as government tight-lipped on Pine Gap

The Guardian

time5 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Involvement in US strikes on Iran could make Australia a target, experts warn as government tight-lipped on Pine Gap

Australian assistance in US airstrikes on Iran could make Australia a target for retaliation, nuclear experts say, as Australian government ministers decline to comment on the potential involvement of the secretive US-Australian surveillance base at Pine Gap in Sunday's bombardment. The International Coalition Against Nuclear Weapons (ICan), an Australian-founded organisation that won the 2017 Nobel peace prize, has warned Australia should not facilitate the attacks, 'directly or indirectly', and that 'by assisting the US we risk becoming a target'. Anthony Albanese was asked repeatedly on Monday about Australia's level of involvement in the strikes. 'We are upfront, but we don't talk about intelligence,' the prime minister told reporters. 'We've made very clear this was unilateral action taken by the United States.' The department of defence, and the defence minister, Richard Marles, declined to comment. The foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, said there had been no request from the US for Australia to become 'more involved' in the conflict, and that she 'wouldn't speculate' on Australia's response if such a request came. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email Last October, Australia supported the American bombardment of Houthi targets in Yemen 'through access and overflight for US aircraft in northern Australia'. That attack was seen as a warning to the Iranian regime, for which the Houthi insurgency acts as a proxy. ICan argued Australia was not a bystander to the recent US airstrikes, and that the joint US-Australian surveillance base at Pine Gap was integral to US nuclear targeting and war-fighting capabilities. Contribution to the attacks by Pine Gap could make Australia complicit and a target, Ican said. 'We call on the Australian government to immediately rule out any logistical support for these operations, including by denying permission for US B-2 stealth or B-52 bombers attacking Iran to transit or refuel in Australia, as occurred recently during a US mission to attack Yemen,' Gem Romuld, director of ICan Australia, said. 'Australia must not facilitate, assist or enable these attacks — directly or indirectly. We cannot bomb a path to peace.' Dr Margaret Beavis, Australian co-chair of Ican, said any Australian support for the US strikes would 'actively undermine the global rules-based order'. 'We risk accelerating nuclear proliferation, we risk Pine Gap becoming a target, Tindal Air base [both in the Northern Territory] becoming a target.' Senior research associate at the Nautilus Institute, Prof Richard Tanter, said it was a 'realistic assessment' that the Pine Gap joint defence facility near Alice Springs might be involved in some capacity in Sunday's bombardment of three Iranian nuclear facilities. Pine Gap, Tanter said, is a ground station for two types of intelligence satellites in geosynchronous orbits: signals intelligence satellites, and early warning infra-red satellites, some of which are stationed over the Middle-East. Data from the early warning satellites runs directly to the US through Pine Gap, without Australian intervention, Tanter said, adding that Australia was increasingly casting itself 'as an enabler of American strategic projection'. 'It is very implausible to believe that Australia has any effective control over the tasking of those satellites, particularly the level of a veto [such as]: 'We do not want you to do that'.' Former Labor senator and union leader Doug Cameron strongly criticised the government's support for the 'illegal' strikes. Speaking as national patron for Labor Against War, Cameron said if the government was committed to the rules-based order it would condemn the US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites, which some international law experts described as unlawful under the UN charter. 'We condemn the Australian government's support for the aggression that Trump is using against Iran. We believe it is illegal, and we believe it's inconsistent with the long-held Labor Party's support for the United Nations charters,' the former NSW senator told Guardian Australia. Cameron said it was 'inconceivable' the Labor government would support the Trump-ordered bombings had it not signed up to controversial Aukus security pact that he said 'subjugated' Australian foreign policy to US interests. The former left-faction heavyweight also criticised his own wing of the Labor Party for being 'mute' on the issue. 'It's about time voices for peace once again dominated the Labor Party … not this appeasement of the US and Israel,' he said. Dr Sue Wareham, Australian national president of the Medical Association for Prevention of War (MAPW), argued Australia was 'totally conflicted' in its support for the US strikes, agreeing the government was 'really trying to appease the aggressors'. MAPW, noting that the US, with over 5,000 nuclear weapons, and Israel, with approximately 90 – were attacking Iran, which has zero, said Western double standards over nuclear weapons were in 'overdrive'. Wareham said Iran's potential development of nuclear weapons was a serious global concern, but argued that 'the military [response] option rules out the diplomatic ones'. Given Pine Gap's critical role in US intelligence and targeting, it would be 'fairly naive to think that Australia is not involved to that extent [of intelligence contribution],' Wareham said. 'As to whether we're more involved, the government needs to be upfront about this, about all of its involvement with, and support, for the US military … we know that some of the American B-52s are nuclear armed, we don't know if the B-52s at Tindal are, because the US won't tell us, and the Australian government won't ask.' The US has a policy of strategic ambiguity around its B-52 fleet, a large part of which is capable of carrying a nuclear warhead, and Australia does not request that the US disclose whether it is landing nuclear-armed bombers on Australian territory.

Romanian new ruling coalition agree to swap prime ministers from April 2027
Romanian new ruling coalition agree to swap prime ministers from April 2027

Reuters

time5 hours ago

  • Reuters

Romanian new ruling coalition agree to swap prime ministers from April 2027

BUCHAREST, June 23 (Reuters) - Romania's broad ruling coalition agreed to rotate prime ministers before a 2028 parliamentary election, with Liberal Ilie Bolojan swapping with a leftist Social Democrat in April 2027, a protocol signed by political leaders showed on Monday. Bolojan will ask parliament for a vote of confidence later on Monday. His cabinet will be backed by the centre-left Social Democrats, the centre-right Liberals and the Save Romania Union, the ethnic Hungarian UDMR party and representatives of minorities.

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