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| Australia's Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce (R), already under fire over an affair, is now facing a sexual harassment allegation |
Australia's scandal-hit deputy leader Barnaby Joyce announced Friday he was quitting and moving to the backbench amid claims of sexual harassment and controversy over an affair with a now-pregnant former aide.
Joyce,
whose National Party rules alongside Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull's
Liberals, has been front-page news in Australia for two weeks since it emerged
he had left his wife of 24 years for his younger former media adviser, who is
now expecting their baby boy.
The
50-year-old had insisted he would ride out the storm but his position became
untenable on Friday when a sexual harassment complaint against him, which he
denies, was lodged with the party by an unnamed woman.
Joyce said
at a press conference in Armidale, his rural New South Wales seat, that he
would step down as Nationals leader and deputy prime minister at a party
meeting on Monday.
"It's
incredibly important that there be a circuit-breaker, not just for the
parliament, but more importantly, a circuit-breaker for Vikki (his lover), for
my unborn child, my daughters and for Nat (his wife)," he said.
"This
has got to stop. It's not fair on them. It's just completely and utterly
unwarranted, the sort of observation that's happened."
Joyce, who
has also been criticised for living in an apartment rent-free with now partner
Vikki Campion after splitting with his wife, was due to be the acting prime
minister this week with Turnbull meeting US President Donald Trump in
Washington.
But he
opted to take leave.
With
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop also out of the country, the role has been
assumed by Senate leader Mathias Cormann, who said ahead of Joyce's decision
that any harassment claim must be taken seriously.
"Any
allegation of sexual harassment is a very serious allegation," he told
reporters. "I understand that a formal complaint has been made, and that
that complaint is being investigated."
Joyce
called the claim "spurious and defamatory" and said he wanted it
investigated by the authorities.
"I
have asked that that be referred to the police," he said, while admitting
it had been "the straw that broke the camel's back".
"It's
quite evident that you can't go to the despatch box with issues like that
surrounding you."
Riveted
Australia
The daily
media headlines on the scandal have riveted the Australian public and sparked
debate about workplace culture amid the global #MeToo movement against sexual
harassment.
But it has
also highlighted the perilous state of the coalition government, which just a
few months ago survived a crisis over lawmakers' dual citizenship that
threatened its wafer-thin parliamentary majority.
Last week a
furious Turnbull, who relies on the smaller National Party to govern, savaged
Joyce for "a shocking error of judgement", leading his deputy to fire
back that the prime minister was "inept".
In a
statement from Washington, Turnbull Friday thanked Joyce for being "a
fierce advocate for rural and regional Australia", while insisting the
Nationals-Liberal coalition was "undiminished" by the scandal.
But Labor
opposition leader Bill Shorten called it "fundamentally damaged" and
accused Turnbull of "an atrocious lack of judgement".
"The
fact that this scandal has dragged on for 16 days has been damaging to the
government, but more importantly, the country," he said.
Joyce's
decision to quit came with colleagues reportedly growing increasingly
frustrated with his handling of the love-child scandal.
Joyce had
opted to give several media interviews this week, at a time when he was
expected to be on leave and out of the spotlight, prompting two of the party's
backbenchers to publicly call on him to resign.
Junior
Nationals minister David Gillespie has indicated he would be a candidate for
the vacancy, while reports said Veterans Affairs Minister Michael McCormack had
significant backing.
The new
Nationals leader will automatically become deputy prime minister, under a
coalition agreement between the two major parties of the centre-right.

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