Shorten blasts Dutton meme

January 2, 2025

Thursday 02 January 2025
Damon Johnston and Mohammad Alfares
They Australian


 Bill Shorten has branded Victorian Labor's social media misfire against the  Dutton family as an "embarrassment" to the ALP.
 
 The former federal Labor leader and Victorian ALP veteran conceded on  Wednesday that the Facebook post attacking Peter and Kirilly Dutton was an  own goal that damaged the party. "Whoever did it has caused  embarrassment to the whole Labor Party," he told The Australian.
 
 State and federal Labor MPs and party figures are questioning how Victorian  Labor long considered the best political campaigning operation in the country  has found itself amid a crisis of its own making.
 
 Victorian Labor has come under sustained criticism from Labor and Liberal MPs  since it attacked the Duttons on Monday with a meme based on a five year-old  newspaper report.
 
 The meme carried the heading "We all know that one couple" and a  secondary line stating "Justifying dating your new partner to your  friends who don't like him" above a 2019 newspaper photo quoting Ms  Dutton saying of her husband: ''He is not a monster.''
 
 The original Queenslandbased Sunday Mail newspaper front page was headlined  "My Pete's no monster''.
 
 Victorian Labor state secretary Steve Staikos initially defended the meme on  Monday, denying it was an attack on Ms Dutton and saying it was  "supposed to be a comedic meme".
 
 Mr Staikos declined to respond to Mr Shorten's criticisms of the meme on  Wednesday but The Australian understands that in the wake of the bipartisan  storm of protest over the attack, party chiefs will review Labor's social  media strategy.
 
 Anthony Albanese ordered Victorian Labor to delete the post hours after it  was published and declared "families should be off-limits".
 
 Despite initially refusing to criticise the post and describing it as a  matter for ALP headquarters, Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan on Tuesday  evening condemned the attack.
 
 "The post has been removed, that's appropriate. Families must be  off-limits," she said in a statement.
 
 State Labor launched its personal attack on the Duttons as support for the  party in Victoria, a traditional stronghold, plunges, suggesting several  seats could be in danger at this year's federal election.
 
 Labor sources said there were a lot of serious questions being asked  internally about how the "stuff up" was allowed to happen and  concerns were emerging about the possibility it could be symptomatic of  deeper problems within Victorian Labor.
 
 "People are asking, is it a oneoff stuff-up or a sign of a deeper  malaise?" one Labor figure said.
 
 Labor and Liberal MPs have been lining up to criticise the meme, with  Albanese cabinet minister Jason Clare describing it as "stupid" and  "wrong".
 
 "I'm glad it's been taken down. A family should be offlimits. We're on  the ballot paper, not our partners," the federal Education Minister said  on Tuesday. "And that's why when the Prime Minister saw it, he demanded  it be ripped down. And I'm glad it has been."
 
 Victorian Liberal shadow ministers James Paterson, Dan Tehan and Sarah  Henderson led the charge against Victorian Labor, Senator Paterson branding  the post as "grubby gutter politics from a desperate government slipping  in the polls".
 
 "We all know Labor's plan for the election next year is negative  personal attacks on Peter Dutton; this is just a preview," Senator  Paterson said.
 
 "When you run out of ideas to tackle the cost of living and have no  second-term agenda, that's all that is left."
 
 Mr Tehan said Labor should be focused on fixing the country's problems and  the attack revealed the party had "no plan for our country" and had  "run out of ideas to fix it".
 
 Senator Henderson, the Coalition education spokeswoman, described it as a  "disgusting smear against Peter Dutton and his family which shows Labor  has given up governing, with no solutions to the cost-of-living crisis  Victorians are suffering".

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