Annastacia Palaszczuk sidesteps questions over whether Scott Morrison is a bully

Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk has refused to be drawn on whether she considers Scott Morrison to be a bully as the Prime Minister dodges allegations of racism.

Mr Morrison’s 2007 preselection in the seat of Cook has come under scrutiny after two separate signed statutory declarations from 2016 emerged that suggested he used his opponent Michael Towke’s Lebanese background against him.

Mr Morrison has emphatically denied the allegations aired by The Saturday Paper and The Sydney Morning Herald that he warned Liberal Party members in 2007 that the party could lose Cook because people would think Mr Towke was a Muslim.

Mr Morrison has also denied saying that Mr Towke could not be trusted because of his Lebanese background.

It’s the latest explosive attack on Mr Morrison’s character following outgoing Liberal senator Concetta Fierravanti-Wells labelling him an “autocrat” and “bully” who is “unfit to be prime minister.

PRIME MINISTER
Annastacia Palaszczuk refused to say what she thought of Scott Morrison. NCA NewsWire / Dan Peled Credit: News Corp Australia

Ms Palaszczuk, who appeared in Brisbane alongside federal Labor leader Anthony Albanese on Monday morning, was asked to weigh in.

When asked whether in her experience with dealing with Mr Morrison through national cabinet she had found him to be a “bully”, Ms Palaszczuk responded: “I’m not going to discuss national cabinet deliberations.”

A follow-up question was fielded from another journalist, who asked what her honest opinions were of the Prime Minister.

“I am not commenting on those matters at all,” Ms Palaszczuk responded.

“I am here today to … talk about workers. And I think at the end of the day, what Queenslanders want and the nation wants is a vision for the future. They want leadership.”

NSW Liberal Party candidate Michael Towke at State Parliament House, Sydney.
Michael Towke says he was told by two people that Mr Morrison urged people not to vote for him based on his Lebanese background. Credit: News Corp Australia

Earlier, Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce slammed the allegations as a “political hit” and defended Mr Morrison.

“The Lebanese community have come out and backed the Prime Minister,” Mr Joyce told Channel 7.

“They see this as it is. When you get these accusations right on the eve of an election, they can wrap them up in political hits but it’s not a true reflection of what is the case.

“If this is the honest view, then they couldxjmtzyw have litigated this years ago.

“If you’re going to call someone a racist and they’re not, you’re using racism as a weapon.”

ABUSE APOLOGY
Scott Morrison has denied the allegations and described it as ‘bitter and malicious’. His deputy, Barnaby Joyce, has called into question the airing of the allegations. NCA NewsWire/Gary Ramage Credit: News Corp Australia

Both publications aired the story on Saturday and reported that Mr Towke had been told by the two people who signed the statutory declarations that Mr Morrison was “adamant and explicit” that in the wake of the Cronulla riots a candidate of Lebanese heritage “could not hold the seat of Cook”.

Mr Morrison on Sunday dismissed the allegations as “bitter and malicious slurs” and has insisted his party is unified ahead of the upcoming election.

“These slurs … are deeply offensive and I reject them,” Mr Morrison said on Sunday.

“It comes at an interesting time that these vicious personal attacks come on the eve of an election. I’ll let people work out their own findings on what’s motivating that.”

Mr Joyce also urged people to “look at the timing” of the story coming to light.

“If the timing is just before an election, then the purpose is obviously for political effect – that has to come into consideration.

“If an allegation has been publicly ventilated before an election, you know why people do that – they do that to politically hurt you.”