PRESS RELEASE: Were Christine Holgate and Australia Post victims of a medicated prime minister?

Was Scott Morrison medicated on 22 October 2020 when he screamed: “She can go!”
That is the question the Australian Citizens Party (ACP) is demanding to know, following claims reported in The Australian today that Morrison suffered “debilitating and agonising” anxiety when he was prime minister.
Among the stressful issues Morrison was dealing with, according to Cameron Stewart’s article, were long hours dealing with the pandemic, and doing the USA’s dirty work against China.
Notably, however, Stewart and Morrison didn’t cite the burden of juggling the five ministerial portfolios Morrison had secretly sworn himself into–secretly giving himself the most power of any prime minister in history.
That omission perhaps hints at the self-serving nature of the claims, observed ACP Research Director Robert Barwick.

Christine Holgate
But the ACP is demanding to know what the consequences have been of having a medicated PM making decisions with far-reaching consequences for the whole country.
Robert Barwick cited some of the impactful decisions Morrison personally took, including his:
trashing of the trade relationship with China;
unilateral decisions in the pandemic, including overriding health advice on vaccines and establishing secrecy around the National Cabinet;
secret, personal negotiations with Boris Johnson and Mike Pompeo to form AUKUS and commit Australia to $368 billion for nuclear submarines; and
his enraged attack on Christine Holgate, which bullied her out of her job as CEO of Australia Post.
“Morrison’s unhinged attack on Christine Holgate massively destabilised Australia Post and put it back on the path to ruin,” Barwick said.
“If you want to know how bad it is, ask the post office licensees who run two-thirds of post offices as small businesses.
“They called Christine Holgate ‘the best CEO Australia Post has ever had’, because they were going bankrupt before she became CEO, but she turned around their fortunes and Australia Post’s profitability through her banking initiatives.
“However, because she opposed privatisation, and was looking at Australia Post starting a postal bank to take on the Big Four, she made enemies in the banks and among the Liberal and Labor parties.
“That’s the reason why a full two years after she awarded AP executives with relatively cheap Cartier watches for all the extra work they did to land the best deal in AP’s history–making the big banks pay $22 million a year for Bank@Post–a Labor Senator ambushed her in Senate Estimates, and then Morrison had his screaming fit in Question Time: ‘She can go!’
“The consequences have been devastating.
“The new management that replaced Holgate has gone back to running AP into the ground, looking for excuses to cut services.
“The big banks have squeezed AP on what they pay for Bank@Post, even though they are dumping many more customers onto post offices through their mass-branch closures.
“And the licensees are back to fearing for their future.”

Unfit
The Australian quotes Morrison describing his anxiety in these terms: “You dread the future and you can’t get out of bed. It can shut you down mentally and physically.”
Barwick asked: “How do Morrison’s colleagues feel about their leader not wanting to get out of bed? Shouldn’t such a person have been honest with his colleagues and handed the job over to someone who was up to it?”
For his part, former Liberal MP John Alexander simply commented to the ACP: “To be prime minister you’ve got to be fit for the job–mentally, physically, emotionally, and integrity-fit.”
“It’s clear Morrison wasn’t fit for the job”, Barwick said. “All of his decisions should be re-examined in light of this news, and the government should make restitution accordingly.”

Media Contacts:

Name: Robert Barwick Research DirectorCompany: Australian Citizens PartyEmail: Phone: 0409014265

About Australian Citizens Party

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The Australian Citizens Party is an independent, federally-registered political party, founded in 1988. It is committed to policies that promote the economic development of Australia for the benefit of all its people, not just the vested corporate interests which have too much influence over the major political parties. It takes its inspiration from the "old Labor" party stalwarts including King O'Malley, who fought to establish Australia's national bank, the Commonwealth Bank, and John Curtin and Ben Chifley, who used the Commonwealth Bank to lead the economic mobilisation that saved Australia in WWII. The ACP fought against the privatisation of the Commonwealth Bank, which has concentrated financial power in Australia in the Big Four banking oligopoly that gouges short-term profits at the expence of Australians and the nation's economic development, and is campaigning to re-establish a national bank, modelled on the old Commonwealth Bank, as a government post office bank which would guarantee face-to-face banking services, and access to cash, for all communities, and break the Big Four banking oligopoly.