Dutton calls on Thorpe to resign

October 23, 2024

Wednesday 23 October 2024
Rhiannon Down
The Australian


 Lidia Thorpe has racked up thousands of dollars in taxpayer- funded  interstate travel and nabbed a membership to the VIP Qantas Chairman's Lounge  since entering parliament, and Peter Dutton says there is a "strong  argument" for her to resign after her tirade at King Charles.
 
 As senators consider options to rebuke Senator Thorpe when parliament returns  after her profane protest in front of the king and Queen Camilla, an analysis  of the upper house independent's expenses has revealed she has accumulated at  least $1346 across 16 occasions on cancelled Comcars marked in her expenses  as "no show".
 
 Senator Thorpe, who earns an extra $25,702 for chairing a FULL REPORT P5  committee on forever chemicals on top of her base salary of $233,660, has  tried to defend her shouts of "You are not our king", "Give us  treaty" and "F..k the colony", declaring she does not  "assimilate" to "colonial structures".
 
 Dutton calls on Thorpe to resign Lidia Thorpe has racked up thousands of  dollars in taxpayer-funded interstate travel and nabbed a membership to the  VIP Qantas Chairman's Lounge since entering parliament, and Peter Dutton says  there is a "strong argument" for her to resign after her tirade at  King Charles III.
 
 As senators consider options to rebuke Senator Thorpe when parliament returns  after her profane protest in front of the king and Queen Camilla, an analysis  of the upper house independent's expenses has revealed she has accumulated at  least $1346 across 16 occasions on cancelled Comcars marked in her expenses  as "no show".
 
 Senator Thorpe, who earns an extra $25,702 for chairing a committee on  forever chemicals on top of her base salary of $233,660, has tried to defend  her shouts of "You are not our king", "Give us treaty"  and "F..k the colony", declaring she does not  "assimilate" to "colonial structures".
 
 Across eight quarterly expenditure claims from mid-2021 to mid-2024 worth  $884,646, the Victorian senator has also billed the taxpayer for travel to  Darwin, Alice Springs, Perth and Brisbane and more than a dozen books on  Indigenous issues under "office administrative costs".
 
 Senator Thorpe, who has repeatedly railed against the "colonial  state", has also declared the home she owns in the Melbourne suburb of  Preston, which has a median house price of $1.18m and $590,000 for apartments.
 
 The Opposition Leader on Tuesday criticised Senator Thorpe for a  "disrespectful" public outburst at a Great Hall reception attended  by Anthony Albanese, MPs and dignitaries, branding it a piece of  "self-promotion" that was "all about herself".
 
 "I think there's a very strong argument for somebody who doesn't believe  in the system but is willing to take a quarter of a million dollars a year  from the system, to resign in principle," Mr Dutton told Seven Network.  "If you were really truly about your cause and not just about yourself,  I think that's a decision you would make."
 
 Though many senators say they believe some action in parliament needed to be  taken against Senator Thorpe such as censure motion when the Senate sits from  November 18 opposition Senate leader Simon Birmingham said such a the  response would only increase her platform. "One problem (with that) is  Lidia Thorpe would probably revel in being censured by the Senate," he  said.
 
 "And so we've got to think carefully about how we respond to this in  ways that try to prevent such behaviour in the future, but don't give her the  oxygen she so desires for these types of antics."
 
 Though her conduct falls short of the standard required for referral to the  standing committee of privileges and members' interests because Senator  Thorpe had not obstructed the Senate, it is theoretically possible she could  be stripped of her role as PFAS committee chair after a Senate vote.
 
 The Australian understands the Coalition would seek bipartisanship before  pushing to censure Senator Thorpe, with Labor senators weighing whether it  would be worthwhile reigniting tensions stemming from the incident.
 
 Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson said the only punishment  available to senators was passing a censure motion in the Senate, though the  measure was purely "symbolic".
 
 "It doesn't carry any real weight, and I think she would probably wear  it as a badge of honour," he told 2GB radio.
 
 Senator Thorpe said her approach "might upset a few people" but she  had always "protested and resisted" on Tuesday, adding she was not  looking to be re-elected but for "justice for my people".
 
 "I will be there for another three years, everybody," she told ABC  RN. "So, you know get used to truth-telling."
 
 The king received a warmer greeting from Indigenous leaders in Sydney on  Tuesday when he visited the National Centre for Indigenous Excellence in  Redfern, where he was served kangaroo pies and toured the sports hall.
 
 Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council chair Allan Murray said he had  "mixed emotions" about meeting the king. "I think sovereignty  is the question ... we've been here a long time and we're not seeing that  recognition after the failed voice referendum.
 
 "I think we need an explanation and an answer from the king and  commonwealth government because of the failed referendum," he said.

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