No such thing as accountability in Key's fascist state. All as I predicted some week ago.
See this exchange between Green Party leader, Russell Norman and John Key to see how he gets away with avoiding answering ANY questions
See this exchange between Green Party leader, Russell Norman and John Key to see how he gets away with avoiding answering ANY questions
Dirty Politics: No evidence Judith Collins acted inappropriately - report
25
November, 2014
National
MP Judith Collins says she is "very pleased" by what she
described as a thorough inquiry, after a report into Dirty Politics
allegations found no evidence the former justice minister acted
inappropriately.
But
says she's been "let down".
Ms
Collins resigned her ministerial portfolios in the lead-up to this
year's election after an email emerged that appeared to link her to a
blog campaign to undermine former Serious Fraud Office boss Adam
Feeley.
Prime
Minister John Key initiated a government inquiry into the matter,
headed by High Court judge Justice Lester Chisholm.
The
inquiry found that while Ms Collins had provided information about Mr
Feeley to WhaleOil blogger Cameron Slater, "there was nothing
improper about the provision of this information".
Ms
Collins said it was up to the Prime Minister whether she was ever
reinstated as a Minister.
"I
feel this chapter of having to deal with these allegations is now
closed. I feel very firmly that I acted appropriately and within my
ministerial responsibilities."
Asked
about her relationship with Mr Slater now, she said Mr Slater had
made some big mistakes. She did not believe he had intended to do her
harm "and he has apologised".
"I
have been let down....That's where I'll leave it."
What
the report said
The
report said that in her interview with the inquiry, Ms Collins
claimed Slater had made up his comments about her "gunning"
for Mr Feeley.
Justice
Chisholm noted that Ms Collins believed Slater had misinterpreted her
"really bad mood" as being aimed at Mr Feeley when it was
actually frustration with Mr Slater's blog posts.
Quoting
from Ms Collins' evidence to the inquiry, Justice Chisholm wrote "Ms
Collins believed that it suited Mr Slater's story to tell his friends
"that he has great contacts and he can do whatever he likes and,
you know, he can be the added member of their team. That's the way I
see it. And he's using my name to do it."
Slater
also said he was "overegging a casual conversation" and
told the inquiry Ms Collins had not directly said she wanted Mr
Feeley to go - rather he had picked it up from "her tone."
"She
was expressing to me her feelings, I guess, and I was getting those
from her tone, that she was displeased."
Justice
Chisholm listed information he believed had passed between Slater and
Ms Collins, including on the topic of the Bridgecorp champagne bottle
matter being passed to the State Services Commission, Slater's blogs
attacking Mr Feeley and his change of stance, the media controversy
over it and political matters in light on the coming 2011 election.
However, he said it had not been inappropriate of Ms Collins to have
done so.
He
said it would have been "very surprising" if Ms Collins'
decision to refer the matter to the SSC and Slater's blogs on the
issue had not been discussed by the pair and one long phone
conversation had taken place soon after Slater's blog went up.
"The
blogs were already in the public arena and the minister was
undoubtedly entitled to raise these matters with Mr Slater,
especially when she was politically accountable for any fallout.
Whether or not she was wise to to do so is beside the point."
He
said he was unable to find any evidence she had expressed a view Mr
Feeley should be sacked.
"On
the other hand, I do not accept that Ms Collins said anything that
justified Slater's emails stating she was livid with Mr Feeley, was
gunning for him, wanted information about him, had added the staff
turnover issue to the matters to be investigated by the State
Services Commissioner, or was 'on a trawl' for information."
He
said while Ms Collins was undoubtedly "upset and disappointed"
about the champagne bottle, she had maintained a public silence after
forwarding it to the OIA and had been publicly supportive of Mr
Feeley after the SSC reported back.
Prime
MInister releases report
Today
Mr Key released the findings of the inquiry, saying he received the
report yesterday and wanted to get it out at the earliest
opportunity.
"I
am pleased the report shows no evidence that Ms Collins acted
inappropriately."
He
also said he would recommending to the Governor-General that Ms
Collins she granted use of the title "The Honourable" for
life."
The
report said two separate groups were attempting to undermine Mr
Feeley.
One
group comprised current and former staff at the SFO. The other group
was made up of Mr Slater, Hong Kong-based Cathy Odgers, and lobbyist
Carrick Graham.
"Except
for her association with Mr Slater, Ms Collins was not involved in
the activities of these groups," the report said.
The
email which was provided to Mr Key's office and led to Ms Collins'
resignation was "incompatible" with other evidence
presented to the inquiry.
"There
is no probative evidence that Ms Collins undermined or attempted to
undermine Mr Feeley. The implication that she was so involved is
untenable."
Mr
Key said yesterday that Ms Collins would not immediately be
reappointed to the front benches if she was cleared but "it
would certainly assist in enabling her to come back".
"I've
fixed my Cabinet now and I don't have a spare spot and that's the
harshness of what goes on."
Today's
report also reveals key figures in the inquiry into Ms Collins tried
to suspend the probe, given the possibility of a criminal
investigation into the aggressive public relations strategy employed
on behalf of former Hanover Finance boss Mark Hotchin.
But
after police confirmed mid-way through the inquiry they were not
investigating a complaint by then Labour Party deputy leader David
Parker, inquiry chair Lester Chisholm ruled he was free to compel
bloggers Mr Slater and Ms Odgers, and Hotchin's former spokesman
Carrick Graham, to testify.
The
report said Mr Slater had "expressed concern about his position
if the police investigation led to the laying of charges," with
similar comments made by both Ms Odgers and Mr Graham.
Mr
Parker had written to police on September 1, days after Ms Collins'
resignation, requesting police investigate allegations of conspiring
to pervert the course of justice.
A
letter from the police provided to the inquiry on October 15 had
settled this question, with the Chisholm report noting police said
"they did not at this time intend to commence any criminal
investigation into the matters that had been raised about the former
Minister, subject to the reservation that the matter might be
reconsidered if any substantive evidence was subsequently provided."
Lobbyist
releases statement
Carrick
Graham issued a statement this afternoon, saying Mr Chisholm's report
had exonerated his client Mr Hotchin.
He
said Mr Hotchin had been the subject of numerous defamatory or
misleading media reports, and his organisation Facilitate
Communications had worked to address this.
Mr
Graham said there was never an intention to undermine Mr Feeley,
saying he brought the criticism on himself.
The
lobbyist also defended the criticism of public servants, especially
"when there is an uneven playing field in terms of media
commentary".
Dirty
Politics: Keeping Key's hands clean
ANDREA
VANCE
25
November, 2014
OPINION:
Two reports, one overriding conclusion: That a high-ranking cabinet
minister in John Key's Government and two long-serving staffers in
his office had deep links to attack-blogger Cameron Slater.
Former
Justice Minister Judith
Collins has been cleared
of undermining ex-Serious Fraud Office boss Adam Feeley. The
release of Security Intelligence Service documents to Slater was not
in collusion with the Prime Minister's office, the
intelligence watchdog found.
Prime
Minister John Key interpreted both reports as proving he was above
any of the nasty political tricks outlined in Nicky Hager's Dirty
Politics book. They do not.
The
facts are that Key's communications adviser, Jason Ede, tipped Slater
off to the existence of the documents. He had been alerted to the
sensitive briefing notes by deputy chief of staff Phil de Joux.
This previously classified information was used by the Prime
Minister's Office - through Slater's Whaleoil blog - to
smear Key's political rival Phil Goff.
It
also remains true that before the publication of
Nicky Hager's explosive book, the murky relationships
between Ede, Collins and Slater were common knowledge.
Key
was frequently questioned about them at press conferences,
when Whaleoil's attacks could clearly be tracked back to
the Beehive. Key shrugged them off. For National, Slater was a useful
Mr Hyde to Key's Dr Jekyll.
In
the second Dirty Politics report issued today, Collins is
vindicated by Justice Lester Chisholm. Her way back to
Cabinet was subsequently cleared by Key. But a stench hangs around
this report. It is hardly forensic. It did not seek out crucial
evidence - Facebook messages from Collins deleted account
(still retrievable), emails, and missing phone records. The author
appears to have shrugged off Slater's withholding of emails from
the inquiry. He didn't think it necessary to interview key
players, lawyer
Key
might feel inoculated from Dirty Politics by both reports because
they do not directly implicate him. He takes hands-off to a
disturbing extreme.
It
stretches credibility to suggest Key - and his chief of staff
Wayne Eagleson - bear no responsibility for the conduct
of de Joux and Ede.
Using
a burner phone - like a character out of Breaking Bad - and deleting
emails is not behaviour becoming of a senior adviser to the prime
minister. Neither is drafting character attacks to be run on a
notoriously vicious blog. Nor is leaking sensitive information from
intelligence briefings for use in a pre-election smear campaign.
The report reveals Ede recognised his behaviour overstepped the mark
(even in his black ops role) remarking it may land him "in the
s...".
Still,
Key continues to insist his staff acted professionally at all times.
Perhaps that is because Ede and de Joux were doing
exactly what they were paid for: the dirty work while keeping the
boss' hands clean
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