Trvalý odkaz Pridané používateľom Anonymný (bez overenia) dňa So, 12/07/2024 - 02:26
The existence of an exclusive hideaway for the country's movers <br>
<br>
and shakers where secret deals were done in private luxury first exploded into <br>
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the public eye back in 2007.<br>
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Back then, the fact that Qantas spent hundreds of thousands of dollars <br>
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wining and dining the nation's political elite in ultra-exclusive VIP lounges was relatively unknown.<br>
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It was a time before Alan Joyce's tenure as the CEO of Qantas had even started,<br>
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when he was boss of the comparatively lowly budget airline,<br>
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Jetstar.<br>
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And unlike Anthony Albanese's current slide in the polls leading up to an election in next year,<br>
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the prospects back in 2007 were rosy for Labor. <br>
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The election that was looming was the 'Kevin 07' landslide that would see Kevin Rudd become prime <br>
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minister and John Howard lose his own seat. <br>
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The issue which blew open the 'guilty secret' of the Chairman's Lounge <br>
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then wasn't about a prime minister's privileges, although John Howard <br>
<br>
and Kevin Rudd were certainly both members during their terms as PM. <br>
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But when broadcaster Steve Price - himself a long time Chairman's <br>
<br>
Lounge member - revealed a politically charged remark made within the club's <br>
<br>
hallowed walls, the cat was out of the bag.<br>
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The political revelation - a comment by ex-rock star turned senator <br>
<br>
Peter Garrett that Labor would change the policies it campaigned on if it won government - did not deter his party from romping in on election day.<br>
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In contrast, the scandal currently engulfing Anthony Albanese about <br>
<br>
his Chairman's Lounge membership and that of his ex-wife Carmel Tebbutt, and <br>
<br>
their son Nathan could bring down the prime minister. <br>
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The exclusive Qantas Chairman's Lounge (above) has been a well-kept secret <br>
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for years, but it exploded into the public conscience in 2007 as the result of a political furore<br>
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Broadcaster Steve Price revealed he had been a Chairman's <br>
<br>
Lounge member since 2002 during a row before the 2007 election won by Kevin Rudd which let the cat out of the bag about the VIP <br>
<br>
club<br>
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The existence of the lounge was so little known back in 2007 that in defending his disclosure of Garrett's remark, Steve Price had to explain what the private <br>
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enclave actually was.<br>
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In a first person piece he wrote: 'The Chairman's Lounge is a <br>
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separate frequent flyers lounge away from the crowded <br>
<br>
normal Qantas Club. <br>
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'As its name implies, the people given access to it are approved by the Qantas chairman, Margaret Jackson. <br>
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<u><strong>'I have been a Chairman's Lounge member since 2002.'</strong></u><br>
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In his opinion piece, Price also revealed TV entertainment reporter Richard Wilkins was also a member of lounge.<br>
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Wilkins had also been inside at the time and was his only witness <br>
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to the remark Price said Garrett had made.<br>
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Other prominent media figures, such as 60 Minutes reporters, actors <br>
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and performers, and well-known writers and sports people are said to be among the lounge's exclusive membership of around 6000.<br>
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Price went on to defend himself for reporting what <br>
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some claimed was a confidential conversation in a private place, but <br>
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which exposed him to criticism over his own membership for allegedly <br>
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promoting Qantas on his radio show.<br>
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Back in 2007, Alan Joyce (left) was boss of the comparatively lowly budget airline <br>
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Jetstar, and then Qantas CEO Geoff Dixon (right) had the power over who made the cut to the Chairman's Lounge<br>
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One observer has described the relationship bet6ween leading politicians such as PM Anthony Albanese and the former Qantas CEO Alan Joyce (above) as 'alarmingly cosy'<br>
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'Why on earth is Qantas giving a controversial shock <br>
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jock membership of its Chairman's Lounge, which is supposedly <br>
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to enable our elite politicians and business leaders some privacy from the hoi polloi?' demanded Crikey reporter Stephen Mayne at the time.<br>
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'The Chairman's Lounge is meant to be all about discretion and confidentiality,' he said, accusing <br>
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Price of breaking 'a confidence'.<br>
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The following year, before he was succeeded as Qantas CEO by Alan Joyce, <br>
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Geoff Dixon was the sole gatekeeper of entry into the <br>
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club's hushed confines.<br>
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Qantas Chairman's Lounge membership was 'so exclusive that you have to be personally invited by the airline's chieftain', Nine newspapers reported in 2008.<br>
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'A marvellous benefit of lounge membership is that the mega rich and powerful avoid having to mingle with the riffraff who will be travelling cattle class.<br>
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<b>'Having said that, members of the ultra-exclusive <br>
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club have included Pauline Hanson.</b><br>
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'Another lounge member is Brad Cooper, who is currently enjoying a prolonged exposure <br>
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to cattle-class in Kirkconnell Correctional Centre.' <br>
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(Cooper was the former HIH insurance executive jailed for eight <br>
<br>
years on fraud and bribery offences).<br>
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Membership of the elite lounge is confined to about 6000 <br>
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Australians including politicians from both sides, senior public servants, TV stars <br>
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and actors<br>
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The 'scandal' currently engulfing Anthony Albanese about his Chairman's Lounge <br>
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membership and that of his ex-wife Carmel Tebbutt, and their son Nathan could bring down the prime minister (above the PM with partner Jodie <br>
<br>
Haydon and ex-Qantas CEO Alan Joyce)<br>
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The report noted that politicians declaring membership of the lounge 'which most of their spouses got too' <br>
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in their pecuniary interests that year included Liberal MPs of the day, Philip Ruddock, Bob Baldwin and Andrew Southcott.<br>
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Labor MPs with lounge privileges included Tanya Plibersek, Bob <br>
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McMullan, and Sharon Grierson, and Martin Ferguson declared a bottle of Grange hermitage as a gift from Qantas, as did Liberal, <br>
<br>
Christopher Pyne.<br>
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Asked if all MPs got the captain's pick from Geoff Dixon, the airline's spokesperson told Nine: 'We <br>
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like to retain a bit of mystery. Membership is by invitation only and <br>
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it is reviewed periodically.'<br>
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Fast forward to today, and nearly every single federal politician in the country has accepted free membership of the controversial, invitation-only lounge with one <br>
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even describing it as an 'entitlement'. <br>
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Qantas and the Albanese government recently denied the <br>
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'very, very high-end perk' gives the airline a disproportionate level of influence over the country's politicians.<br>
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They were commenting ahead of the launch of the new book The Chairman's Lounge by former <br>
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Australian Financial Review columnist Joe Aston, <br>
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which has stirred up the controversy. <br>
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A Daily Mail Australia audit of the members' interest registers - in both Federal Parliament's House <br>
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of Representatives and the Senate - revealed almost 93 per cent of the nation's leaders have been 'gifted' membership to the lavish, all-inclusive lounge.<br>
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Mr Albanese has defended himself by saying he declared all <br>
<br>
his benefits in pecuniary interest statements. <br>
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At a press conference this week, he repeated that all of <br>
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his upgrades 'have been declared as appropriate.<br>
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What's appropriate is transparency.' <br>
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Apart from the PM, members include every one of his <br>
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22-person Cabinet, his seven-person Outer Ministry and <br>
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all 12 assistant ministers.<br>
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PM Anthony Albanese and every member of his 22-person Cabinet, his seven-person Outer Ministry and <br>
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all 12 assistant ministers are members of the exclusive Chairman's Lounge<br>
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Entry to the country's six opulent VIP clubs are suitably discreet, but once inside, the designer lounges offer free à la carte fine dining, table <br>
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service and a discreet army of dedicated lounge attendants<br>
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On the Coalition side of parliament, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton, deputy leader David Littleproud and former deputy Barnaby Joyce are also among the swathes of politicians who have <br>
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disclosed they have taken up free membership to the contentious club.<br>
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<b>Bill Shorten is a member, Tanya Plibersek is still a member and so is Teal <br>
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MP, Zali Steggall.</b><br>
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Last year it was reported that Australian Competition and Consumer Commission chairwoman Gina Cass-Gottlieb and Australian Securities and <br>
<br>
Investments Commission chairman Joe Longo and some of their <br>
<br>
deputies are members of the Chairman's Lounge despite regulating the airline. <br>
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Senior public servants in the club included Department of Prime <br>
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Minister and Cabinet secretary Glyn Davis, deputy <br>
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secretaries Nadine Williams, Liz Hefren-Webb, Rachel Bacon and ambassador to Beijing, <br>
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Scott Dewar.<br>
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Other Qantas freebies bestowed on members include numerous business class flight upgrades, model Qantas aircrafts, <br>
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frequent flyer points, and tickets to sporting and entertainment events. <br>
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Touted as 'the most exclusive club in the country', membership to the Chairman's Lounge is still veiled in secrecy.<br>
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The new book The Chairman's Lounge by former Australian Financial Review <br>
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columnist Joe Aston (above) has stirred up the controversy <br>
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Australian Competition and Consumer Commission chairwoman Gina Cass-Gottlieb and Australian Securities and Investments Commission chairman Joe Longo are members despite regulating the airline<br>
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Even the entrances to each of the country's six opulent VIP clubs - in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide, Canberra and Perth airports - <br>
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are suitably discreet.<br>
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Once inside, however, the designer lounges are noticeably luxurious, with free à la <br>
<br>
carte fine dining, table service, a decadent selection of wines and Champagne and a discreet army of dedicated <br>
<br>
lounge attendants.<br>
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<b>Virgin Airlines has its own version of the VIP enclave, the 'Beyond' lounge. </b><br>
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Only a handful of federal politicians have <br>
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relinquished their membership to the Qantas Chairman's <br>
<br>
Lounge in the wake of the furore.<br>
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The select few to take a principled stand on the issue include South Australian senator Barbara Pocock and former <br>
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Wallabies star turned ACT senator David Pocock, along with MPs Stephen Bates, <br>
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Queensland Green Elizabeth Watson-Brown, and Monique <br>
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Ryan, a Teal from Victoria.<br>
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Geoffrey Watson SC, a former counsel assisting the Independent Commission Against Corruption and a director of the Centre for Public Integrity, has implored all politicians and policymakers to follow suit.<br>
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<b>'There are certain positions in life where you cannot take Chairman's Club membership,' he said.</b><br>
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'You're taking public money for the job and you are supposed to represent the public.<br>
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Why not sit with them while you're waiting for a plane?'<br>
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<br>
QantasAnthony Albanese<br>
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The existence of an exclusive