Nutter in chief keeps coming back

The ‘real’ Scott Morrison: former PM says Australians didn’t know who he was
Australians did not know the “real” Scott Morrison when he occupied the nation’s top political office, the former prime minister says.

By James Massola April 27, 2024
https://www.watoday.com.au/politics...s-didn-t-know-who-he-was-20240426-p5fmr3.html

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Then-prime minister Scott Morrison in 2021.Credit: Getty
Australians did not know the “real” Scott Morrison when he occupied the nation’s top political office, the former prime minister says, adding he largely kept his faith private during his four years in power.

Morrison’s new book, Plans for Your Good: A Prime Minister’s Testimony of God’s Faithfulness, which will be released next week, also reveals he took anti-depressants in 2021 while serving as prime minister to deal with waves of acute anxiety he suffered in the nation’s top political job.

The admission is the first time a prime minister or former prime minister of Australia has spoken publicly about using medication to deal with the huge demands of the job and the toll they can take on a person’s mental health.

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"I have no doubt that the halls of parliament are filled with people going through enormous mental anguish on a daily basis ... It’s not a complaint, it’s just true and I think we’ve got to sort of be transparent about that."

Scott Morrison on taking prescription medication for anxiety in 2021
In an interview with this masthead before the book’s launch, Morrison hit out at critics who accused him of proselytising while in office: “People used to accuse me of peddling my faith, which I found outrageous by the way. If I was peddling my faith you would have known. Based on what you’ve now read, I kept all of that within.
“I did not engage in any sort of evangelical mission whilst in office.”

Asked directly if Australians had not known who he really was, Morrison said: “I think that’s true ... I think at the end of the day, to my detriment, they [voters] bought a narrative peddled by others to destroy me, which was effective, but they didn’t know [me] and frankly ... maybe if I had told them, they may have reacted more strongly. Who knows?”

While Morrison previously promised the book would not be a typical political autobiography, many readers will be stunned by the depth of Morrison’s Christian faith. The book frequently quotes Bible passages, and the role of God in the former prime minister’s life is the dominant theme. Morrison is an evangelical Christian, the nation’s first evangelical prime minister and worships at Horizon Church in the Sutherland Shire.

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“I think that’s true [that people didn't know the real me] ... I think at the end of the day to my detriment, they [voters] bought a narrative peddled by others to destroy me, which was effective, but they didn’t know and frankly ... maybe if I had told them they may have reacted more strongly. Who knows?”

Scott Morrison when asked if Australians did know know the "real him" while he was prime minister.
The book also sets out Morrison’s version of events about the lead-up to the 2018 spill in which he replaced Malcolm Turnbull as prime minister and his recollection of pulling together the AUKUS deal, including a detailed explanation of how French President Emmanuel Macron was informed that the contract for French submarines was imperilled.
Time and again, Morrison discusses how God helped inform and guide him in making decisions at crucial moments, such as whether to stand for the country’s top political job, how he handled the impact of COVID-19 and even how it informed his handling of the delicate negotiations over the AUKUS submarine deal.

Nevertheless, the recently retired MP insisted he was “always quite conscious of trying to keep this balance”.
“I was very conscious that yes, I was an evangelical Christian, but the country had no national religion and nor should it. So I didn’t want to blur those lines. But equally, I didn’t want to undermine the integrity of my faith,” Morrison said.

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“You know, people used to accuse me of, you know, peddling my faith, which I found outrageous by the way. If I was peddling my faith, you would have known ... I kept all of that within.”

Scott Morrison on his Christian faith
Morrison’s revelation that he took antidepressants is contained in chapter six, which is about anxiety, and covers his government’s handling of the pandemic, the suicide of the brother of a childhood friend, the importance of R U OK?Day, his meeting with the Queen – while at the same time discussing how God set out a six-step plan for how humans should deal with their worries in St Paul the Apostle’s letter to the Philippians.

In the interview and the book, Morrison declined to say which medication he had taken and said that while he had got through the first year of the pandemic in 2020, in 2021 “that’s when the pile on really got under way”.

He writes that as the challenges of COVID, dealing with China and putting together the AUKUS deal grew, his anxiety got worse and when he finally saw a doctor, they were “amazed I had lasted as long as I had before seeking help”.
“I’m pretty high functioning in those environments and staff and colleagues will say the same. But when you’re trying to do all that, while trying to land AUKUS, we’re dealing with the Chinese ... and then I’ve got what started in February [2021, following Brittany Higgins’ rape allegations] … we had what was a pretty oppressive campaign of vilification going on daily and that was a pretty tough period,” he told this masthead.

Former Prime Minister Scott Morrison has revealed he faced mental health challenges while he was prime minister, receiving medical treatment for anxiety.

“That’s when the premiers, particularly [then-Queensland premier Annastacia] Palaszczuk started to amp up a bit. And COVID went into a different phase, 2020 was a pretty co-operative year, 2021 it changed. And Labor then, they did what was required.”

There is little discussion in the book of some of the key controversies of his prime ministership, including the vaccine roll out and his infamous “it’s not a race” comment, the controversial holiday to Hawaii during the 2019 bushfires, Robodebt, while his decision to swear himself into multiple ministries is handled in just a single sentence about continuity of government during the pandemic.

But on the AUKUS deal, Morrison declares he had been happy to stand up to French President Emmanuel Macron who, he believed, “thought I was just playing him on the contract” and would have “would have killed it [the deal]” if given enough time and notice.
“It was a terrible failure of his intelligence service, by the way, which would be very embarrassing for him to admit.” Macron, he added, “underestimated me”.

Even on the submarines deal, Morrison said God played a part in guiding his decision-making because of “the confidence that I gain from having a secure identity ... my faith gives me a sense of security and grounded-ness which means that I could take on things like that and be prepared to wear what came afterwards.”

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“I told him very clearly that the subs we were buying were going to be of no use to us and we’re looking at other options and that included nuclear. Now who he thought we were going to get them from, I don’t know? But there aren’t too many options.”
Scott Morrison on the decision to scrap the French submarine deal and sign up to the AUKUS agreement
“I think people often misunderstood my faith thinking ‘oh, he’s a Christian, therefore he believes everything’s gonna turn out for him’. No, I don’t. I just know however it turns out, I’ll be fine. Win, lose or draw, I’ll be fine.”
The French president had been clearly told that Naval Group’s submarines “were going to be of no use to us and we’re looking at other options and that included nuclear”.

In the book, Morrison refers to a WhatsApp chat group he participated in with friends who were pastors, reveals that in response to the negative impact of reaching for his smartphone every morning, he resolved to read his Bible app first every day before he grappled with the incoming reports, texts and emails he received as prime minister.

In about 18 months, he had read the bible cover-to-cover and the evangelical Christian prime minister, Australia’s first, ruminates on King Hezekiah, the Old Testament character of Daniel who braved the Lion’s den and who had a job “like a prime minister” by providing advice to Kings and how “Daniel chose to stand firm for God rather than conform to the lifestyles and beliefs of the land he was now living in”.

Morrison discusses his fondness for praying out loud, noting that people should “cry, shout, groan, scream – do whatever comes out of your heart because you are pleading for God to take this burden of worry away from you”.

While discussing his attempts with wife Jenny to conceive children through IVF sessions, he recalls walking through a forest on the outskirts of Wellington, New Zealand, in 1999 and screaming out loud Psalm 37:4 – which is about trusting in God – to express his frustration at their failure to conceive.

“If anyone was in earshot they must have thought I was a mad man,” he writes in the book. The couple conceived eight years later.
Asked if the launch of his book would mark the start of a new evangelical mission for Australia’s 30th prime minister, Morrison said “I wouldn’t say vocationally. I would certainly say that I now feel quite freed up”.

“I speak occasionally around Australia at churches and my own church and I preach there and I’m looking forward to doing more of that both in Australia and overseas,” he said.
The book is being published by religious publisher Thomas Nelson, which is based in the United States. After being launched in Sydney on May 9, a second launch will be held at the Australian Embassy in Washington DC on May 15 – alongside former prime minister Kevin Rudd and Donald Trump’s former CIA director, Mike Pompeo.
 
While discussing his attempts with wife Jenny to conceive children through IVF sessions, he recalls walking through a forest on the outskirts of Wellington, New Zealand, in 1999 and screaming out loud Psalm 37:4 – which is about trusting in God – to express his frustration at their failure to conceive.
“If anyone was in earshot they must have thought I was a mad man,” he writes in the book. The couple conceived eight years later.
Oh lawd.
 
Trump signals support for AUKUS pact in meeting with Morrison

By Farrah Tomazin May 16, 2024
https://www.smh.com.au/world/north-...in-meeting-with-morrison-20240516-p5jdzt.html

Washington: Donald Trump has given his “warm” support to the AUKUS submarine deal during a private meeting with former prime minister Scott Morrison hours after attending court for his historic hush money trial.

But as Trump fights charges of falsifying business records to cover up an affair with a porn star, Morrison has come to the former president’s defence, describing the challenges the Republican faces in the US as a “pile on.”

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Donald Trump and Scott Morrison

“Was pleased to meet with former president Donald Trump on Tuesday night at his private residence in NY,” Morrison posted on X, with a photo of himself standing next to the presumptive Republican nominee at Trump Tower in New York.
“It was nice to catch up again, especially given the pile on he is currently dealing with in the US. Was also a good opportunity to discuss AUKUS, which received a warm reception.”

Morrison is in the US to promote his new book Plans for Your Good: A Prime Minister’s Testimony of God’s Faithfulness, which he will launch at the Australian embassy in Washington on Wednesday evening (Thursday AEDT) alongside Australia’s ambassador Kevin Rudd, former Trump senior adviser Kellyanne Conway, and former US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

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Former secretary of state Mike Pompeo.Credit: Bloomberg

The forward to the book was written by Trump’s former vice president Mike Pence who, like Morrison, is a proud Evangelical Christian.
“I know Christians around the world will be inspired by his story and his example of trusting God no matter their circumstances,” said Pence, who has refused to endorse Trump’s bid for presidency due to the January 6 Capitol riot of 2021.

After 16 years in politics, the former prime minister left Australia’s parliament earlier this year to join a defence company with Pompeo, and also plans to use his American visit for various business meetings.

News of Trump’s apparent support for AUKUS is likely to assuage concerns about what might happen to the contentious submarine deal if the former president returns to office.
Trump is currently polling ahead of Joe Biden in most battleground states, but the pair today agreed to two debates - the first on June 27 hosted by CNN and the second on September 10 hosted by ABC - which could change the contours of the 2024 campaign.
Trump is known for being sceptical of global security alliances, particularly if he thinks other nations are not paying their fair share, and has repeatedly said he does not want America embroiled in “endless wars”.

The future of the US-Australia alliance was also briefly thrown into doubt in March after the incendiary Republican launched a brutal attack on Rudd, who previously described the former president as “nuts”, a “traitor to the West” and “the most destructive president in history”.

“He won’t be there long if that’s the case,” Trump said, when presented with those comments in an interview with former Brexit party leader Nigel Farage on Britain’s right-leaning GB News.
“I don’t know much about him. I heard he was a little bit nasty. I hear he’s not the brightest bulb,” he added.

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Former Prime Minister Scott Morrison at a virtual joint press conference unveiling AUKUS with then British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and US President Joe Biden.Credit: AAP

However, Morrison said that during his meeting with Trump, “the former president showed his true appreciation of the value he places on the Australia-US alliance and the shared role of supporting what our friend, (former Japanese Prime Minister) Shinzo Abe called a free and open Indo-Pacific.”

The AUKUS pact was announced by Morrison alongside Biden and then UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson in 2021 as part of a broader strategy to counter China’s economic and military advances in the Indo-Pacific.

Under the deal, the US has agreed to sell at least three Virginia-class boats to Australia to fill a “capability gap” before specially designed nuclear-powered submarines are operational from the 2040s.
However, the pact has come under question in recent months, after the US Navy revealed it removed an attack submarine from its 2025 spending plan, in a tacit recognition that American shipbuilding yards are struggling with the pace of producing and maintaining the national fleet.

Morrison met with Trump shortly after the former president’s hush money trial adjourned for the day, following hours of testimony by former attorney Michael Cohen about a $US130,000 payment he made to bury news of an affair with porn star Stormy Daniels ahead of the 2016 election.

According to Cohen, the payment was made at Trump’s direction and part of a broader scheme to suppress damaging stories that could have derailed his chances of becoming president.

But while some have praised the meeting as a positive sign for the Australia-US alliance, others on social media were far more critical.
“Not the company I would keep,” wrote one user.
“Read the room,” said another.
 
Opinion
Sorry for the pile-on, ScoMo and Trump, but by Jesus, you send women a warped view of religion

Julia Baird Journalist, broadcaster, historian and author May 17, 2024
https://www.smh.com.au/world/north-...-warped-view-of-religion-20240516-p5je62.html

It was the gilt that struck me first. Shiny gold doors inlaid with an ornate pattern, glinting in the background of a photo of a beaming Donald Trump with a grinning Scott Morrison. Gold, money, success. Or, the appearance of money, the appearance of success.

An image of an ostentatious, moneyed Manhattan, far, far from Sydney’s Sutherland Shire, that our former prime minister appeared thrilled to be briefly part of. Proudly posting the photo on X, he said he was “pleased” to meet Trump at his “private residence”, the penthouse in Trump Tower: “It was nice to catch up again, especially given the pile-on he is currently dealing with in the US.”

Now, let’s just briefly put aside using the term “pile-on” for four indictments amounting to 88 felony charges, and a criminal trial that aired allegations of hush money paid to a porn star, one who claims she spanked Trump’s bottom with a rolled-up magazine – to talk about these optics.
Two men, in suits. Two men of scant self-doubt who believe God chose them to lead their countries. Two men courting American evangelicals.

Our former PM is in the US on tour for his new book, titled Plans For Your Good: A Prime Minister’s Testimony of God’s Faithfulness, one that appears to be aimed at inserting himself into the American evangelical scene. Former vice president Mike Pence, who wrote the foreword, said: “Christians around the world will be inspired by his story and his example of trusting God no matter the circumstances.”

Morrison’s decision to publicise a meeting with Trump in this way serves as a reminder of how many white evangelicals support a man known for his mendacity, grandiosity and insistence that the last US election was stolen, a man a jury found to have raped a woman, a man who boasted about grabbing “pussies” whenever he felt like it, and who has sledged veterans, people with disabilities, Mexicans, Muslims and a Fox News host who had “blood coming out of her wherever”. How do we explain this to our daughters?

The photo of Trump and Morrison was a neat depiction of the brotherhood of Christian nationalism, and a reminder of why so many people outside the church associate Christianity with conservatism and a pursuit of power, even now with men like Trump whose alleged lovers tell courts they don’t like wearing condoms when they cheat on their wives, but proudly, strategically take credit for the Supreme Court’s dismantling of women’s reproductive rights. Who hurl slurs at opponents, condemn foreigners and turn backs on migrants. Who don’t appear to have, say, read the Bible, the whole “do unto others as they would do unto you” and look-after-the poor-and-the-vulnerable stuff.

I was especially struck by that image this week when the grandson of lifelong Baptist Jimmy Carter informed us that the 99-year-old former president was “coming to the end”. Carter has long been touted as an average president who fumbled the 1979 hostage crisis but as an excellent ex-president; whatever his flaws, or the merits of his politics, he was a man who united, a humanitarian who supported the civil rights movements and connected faith to compassion, decency and goodness.

Carter’s moderate beliefs seem almost archaic today, as swaths of American evangelicals have become more fundamentalist. After he left office, he stood up to his conservative fellow Christians with significant courage. In a 2009 essay, ‘Losing my religion for equality’, the former peanut farmer publicly condemned the Southern Baptist Convention, of which he had been a member for 65 years, and a key part of the white evangelical voting bloc. Carter told the SBC: “Women and girls have been discriminated against for too long in a twisted interpretation of the word of God.”

He said he had made the “painful and difficult” decision to sever ties with the SBC after its leaders, “quoting a few carefully selected Bible verses and claiming that Eve was created second to Adam and was responsible for original sin, ordained that women must be ‘subservient’ to their husbands and prohibited from serving as deacons, pastors or chaplains in the military service”. He continued: “The truth is that male religious leaders have had – and still have – an option to interpret holy teachings either to exalt or subjugate women. They have, for their own selfish ends, overwhelmingly chosen the latter. Their continuing choice provides the foundation or justification for much of the pervasive persecution and abuse of women throughout the world.”

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Former president Jimmy Carter, now 99, celebrating his 85th birthday at the reopening of the Jimmy Carter Library and Museum in 2009.Credit: David Whitley/The Carter Centre

The 2009 essay went viral again in 2015. The SBC is still fighting about women, keeping them out of leadership.
In the 1970s, Christian voters supported Carter – at least at first; now they support Trump. More than three-quarters of white evangelicals backed Trump in 2016, and again in 2020, and about half believe he is a leader appointed by God. A leader not known for deep respect for women.

A host of thinkers have tried to figure out why evangelicals cling so firmly to Trump, especially during this recent criminal trial. Supporters paint him as a martyr being crucified by public opinion and a beleaguered Christian crusader. At the same time, others are puzzling over why there has been such a steady stream of people leaving the church, with a steep decline in church membership – including in the SBC – and why women have so little trust in religious institutions run by men.

Research just published by Macquarie University found one in three women voters in Australia have “no trust at all” in religious leaders, and that this proportion jumped to one in two among women aged 18 to 29. And, interestingly: among religious women, the study found about 10 per cent have “no trust at all” in organised religion and religious leaders – and about 50 per cent had “not very much trust”. This is the fault of the leaders.

There are so many good, decent people in churches, caring for others, trying to make a decent fist out of life, trying not to fall apart, trying to find meaning. By all accounts, Jimmy Carter was one of them. If he had been able to convince his peers to treat women as equals, we might see more glimpses of a world in which insulting and controlling them is not seen as somehow compatible with a religion intended to be about love.
 
While ScoMo had his shortcomings, the backing of Trump recently will harm his reputation almost beyond repair. It makes ScoMo look devoid of Morals and Ethics.
 
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