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“Oakes added the delightful touch that Abbott stormed out of his own office, taking any authority he might have had with him.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Showing the skills more of a high-school debater than a barrister, Brandis blustered in the Senate that ‘people do have a right to be bigots’.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“His lack of sympathy occasionally surfaced in other ways. Under pressure from victims of asbestos-related diseases for compensation, Abbott contended that the near-death campaigner Bernie Banton was not necessarily ‘pure of heart’. His words came in reply to a robust insult from Banton but were rightly interpreted as victim blaming.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Tony, Tony, we’re not going down that path again’ was a line cabinet ministers recalled Howard using with Abbott on more than a few occasions.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Opinion journalism doesn’t change minds; it only caters to ingrained prejudice. It can, though, create a false sense of security that a set of ideas, such as climate change scepticism, is popular when it is only the dominant view within a closed feedback loop.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Authority to Abbott was hierarchical. Those at the top exercised power and those at the bottom deferred. As we have seen, Abbott was, to his great cost, largely uninterested in the views of those beneath him. His dismissal of subordinates was partly because as he made his way through Australia’s great institutions, he tended to look to leaders for support rather than peers. This was crucial to understanding the way Abbott learned about politics, and why he ended up being a failed prime minister.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“The fact that a senior minister could make news by meeting a cross-bencher said much about the state of negotiations.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“In opposition, Abbott once gathered his staff to ask for suggestions on how the team could improve. One brave staffer mentioned Credlin’s tendency to micro-manage. Abbott wasn’t impressed and told the staffer to apologise and buy Credlin flowers. Chivalry wasn’t dead for Abbott.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“If Australia’s political culture has become especially adversarial in the last few years, Abbott himself is hardly blameless. Live by the sword.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Making a distinction between principle and policy was a useful formulation for a minister who wanted to talk about a wide range of issues without breaking Prime Minister Howard’s strict rules about ministers sticking to their portfolio areas.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Turnbull learned of the meeting being brought forward on Sunday morning before the move was made public and made some calls. He wanted to comment on moving the party-room meeting to wedge Abbott politically, so he and Lucy decided to take their dog for a walk, knowing there were journalists outside their house who would inevitably ask about Abbott’s move. They walked past reporters and Turnbull casually mentioned his disappointment with the decision. One problem: they had forgotten to take the dog.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Senator Xenophon told Abbott at the end of 2014 that he needed to be very careful, because family members of the senator who were lifelong Liberal voters were not prepared to vote for the government. Xenophon told Abbott he was saying this as a critic, not an enemy, of the Liberal Party, and warned Abbott his colleagues would turn against him. ‘I’m not going to be rolled,’ Abbott fired back. ‘It will not happen.’ He wasn’t using his ears.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“The contrast with the disposal of Rudd was becoming clearer. Grievances with Abbott had been well and truly aired, in a much more public fashion than the backgrounding against Rudd.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“There was little to the Coalition’s economic plan other than scaremongering about debt and deficit. This lack of positive policy displayed a complacency based on the Liberal Party’s genuine belief that Labor governments are bad for the economy and simply booting them from the treasury benches was sound economic management.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Abbott refused to listen to explicit warnings from colleagues that he needed to change his ways. Prince Philip’s knighthood was a dramatic sign that he intended to continue indulging his quaint social views regardless of the political cost.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Wine was flowing and the drunker everyone got the more the offices were trashed, with some junior staffers even deliberately pouring wine all over the floor and some of the furniture, commenting that it was Turnbull’s mess to clean up now.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“No one should underestimate the significance of this moment for Abbott’s colleagues, realising there wasn’t much he wouldn’t jettison to protect Credlin. He was even prepared to call them a bunch of misogynists.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“While Brandis might have come under pressure for using entitlements to fill out his bookshelf, unlike many of his colleagues, at least he was reading.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Characteristically, Bill Shorten led from behind, waiting for the social media uproar before condemning the concept of random visa checks.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Costello, no great friend of Abbott, and no doubt jealous of Abbott’s decision to fight on and prosper instead of quitting after the 2007 defeat, would become a constant critic of Hockey.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Chris Mitchell, recalls meeting with Abbott just ahead of Christmas 2014 wherein he argued that replacing Hockey with Turnbull would improve the government’s messaging and abate Turnbull’s ambitions. Abbott retorted that all it would do would be to give Turnbull another stepping stone towards the Lodge.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“In a national security speech after the February spill motion, Abbott called on immigrants ‘to be as tolerant of others as we are of them”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Abbott had never been a great listener. He had the habit of losing attention when the person talking strayed outside topics that interested him.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Abbott’s strategists had hoped that the domestic lament in front of world leaders might gain international media attention, given the comparatively modest user-pays amount, and help his case to pass the rebate legislation. If this was the plan, it failed.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“By labelling the increase a ‘deficit levy’, Abbott showed he had learned one thing from Howard, as such weasel words were one of the reasons focus groups thought Howard”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“During negotiations with independent members of the House, Abbott told Member for New England Tony Windsor that he would ‘sell his arse’ to become prime minister.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“What is Julie supposed to do?’ one MP asked sarcastically at the time. ‘Perform worse to make Tony look better by way of comparison?”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Putin was talking to the Papua New Guinean prime minister Peter O’Neill at the APEC summit in Beijing on 11 November when Abbott sidled over, downplayed the reports of shirtfronting and tried to be friendly to Putin, saying that he just needed to be seen having a conversation with him. O’Neill found it all very amusing, telling others about the odd experience.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“Julie Bishop had the good grace to joke that she was in favour of publishing talking points so she didn’t have to inanely repeat them.”
― Battleground
― Battleground
“The thumping victory in 2013 obscured the concerns of his colleagues about Abbott’s personal style, that he was a bully and a policy lightweight. These perceptions of Abbott didn’t so much underestimate the man as underestimate the time it would take the voting public to overcome their distaste for Labor and place Abbott under the microscope.”
― Battleground
― Battleground




