Hunting the Famous will be available on Amazon and at all other major online retailers shortly.
This is an extract.
This is an extract.
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Paul Keating |
Hawke’s successor Paul Keating was an entirely different
kettle of fish to Bob.
After a prolonged battle for the leadership the two Labor
leaders rarely spoke for a number of years.
Keating, who came to power in 1991, could never see why a
lower form of life like Bob Hawke should be top dog when clearly the position
belonged to him.
Keating was one of those people where all the mastery is in
the fight. They don’t know what to do when they get there.
He was famous for sneering lines like: “You’re nothing but a
shiver looking for a spine to run up.”
There might be Keating Square and Keating whatever else out
in the working class western Sydney seat of Blaxland from whence he came but
Keating himself, preening around in two thousand dollar Italian suits, couldn’t
wait to get out of there.
A disciple of multiculturalism partly perhaps because migrants
tend to vote Labor en masse, at the very first opportunity Keating escaped from
Blaxland to the wealthy white Sydney enclaves of the Eastern suburbs, where his
slim form and scathing wit were much admired.
And he could listen to his beloved Mahler without being
called a wanker.
While Keating himself never completed High School, leaving at
age 16, he had a masterful gift of the gab and held the country’s academics
enthralled for years.
At press conferences which should have been preserved for the
press some of these said academics would pipe up in squeaky voices with lines
like: “Mr Keating, Mr Keating, I’m an academic at Sydney University and I just
wanted to say how much I adore everything you do.”
Give us a break.
The rest of us are working.
Idiotically, Keating would go out of his way to insult the
Fourth Estate during his speeches and press conferences.
He never worked out that the media were the conduit to the
general public and he would be applauded or hung by them; but never ignored.
Keating might have had a wife and four children but we always
thought he was gay, and were happy to believe the rumors.
Particularly after his divorce.
Would an ordinary Australian male rip out the floor of a
bathroom because the tiles were a quarter of an inch off?
What other Australian male had such well-manicured hands?
We knew a lot about Keating’s private life because we all
loved his gracious, charming wife Anita and had spent many long days staked
outside her house in the heart of up-market Woollahra when the divorce was
announced.
On one such day, feeling sorry for us as we stood shivering
in the relentless rain just before Christmas, Anita invited us all in.
She knew perfectly well that at least in my case I already
knew the house well. During the long and exacting renovation to its original
glory we had often talked our way past the carpenter, plumber, electrician,
tiler or whoever to get a shot of progress. A lot of them were naïve enough to
let us.
Asking the mother of Keating’s four children about her errant
husband and his various alleged bedroom escapades or the reason for the divorce
was not something any of us wanted to do. And Anita was not the sort of person
to kiss and tell, or take out her grievances in public.
Hard of heart but even harder of hearing, there were days
when we just ignored the news desks repeated requests to go and door knock her;
huddling miserably inside the company cars as it poured rain day after endless
day.
A lot of the photographers were either close to Anita, held
her in high esteem or in some cases had even worked with her on various
projects after she started going to Arts College.
None of us wanted to hurt her.
A lot of us were happy to hurt Keating, the artful dodger,
the great pretender.
But the paper always refused to take a picture of Keating and
his alleged boyfriend, although we believed we knew exactly how to do it.
That’s an invasion of someone’s private life, the News Desk
protested. We couldn’t do that!
Sure.
These high moral standards are cloaks of convenience which
last for just as long as it suits whoever holds the editorial reigns of the day.
Everyone knew how prickly and litigious Keating was; and how
much a picture of him and his purported lover would have driven him to attack.
And Keating, who admittedly brought some color and movement
to public life, giving some stirring speeches while cutting a stylish figure
across the political stage, remained a hero to some people for years after he
left office; and thus a protected species.
He wasn’t a hero to the many journalists he had abused,
bullied and attempted to intimidate.
My last encounter was pretty much par for the course.
Keating was giving a lecture on governance in one of the
conference rooms at Sydney University to an assembly of local government mayors
from around the state.
He preened on about how a $90,000 a year salary just wasn’t
enough for a local council worker to stand up to the temptations of a developer
waving millions.
And he would be happy to talk to anyone who had questions
afterwards. He would talk to the media last, he said, because that’s what he
thought of us, as beneath contempt.
The rest of the state’s mayors were on a cosy little junket
to Sydney; the media had multiple jobs and tight deadlines to deal with. Not
that Keating cared.
A little bit like Prince Charles, Keating was often given the
opportunity to go on about one of his favourite hobby horses, urban
architecture and in his case the glories of Paris and the ugliness of
Australian cities.
It was, in a sense, a return to form.
His speech included lines like: “Developers are just brigands
who build things”.
I wrote a piece which began with the observation that Keating
had lost none of his bile.
The paper compounded my sins by running an editorial
expanding on the theme that Keating needed to move on with his life, develop
some humility and stop throwing barbs at everyone he regarded as his
intellectual inferior, which was just about everybody.
We all thought it pretty funny that Paul Keating would wake
up each morning with only one thought in his head: the man he hated most in the
world, conservative leader John Howard, was running the country, the job that
Keating regarded as rightfully his.
Keating could not understand why the mauling masses had failed
to appreciate his brilliance.
He was incensed both by my story and the editorial.
Several days after their publication he rang at about five
pm.
Anyone who knows anything about journalism and newspapers
knows you do not ring a reporter at five pm.
At that time, every working journalist is on a deadline for
the next day’s paper. Yesterday’s story might as well be a lifetime away.
Production takes precedent over all other considerations.
We were told to file by six or the paper would take wire copy
or spike the story; didn’t matter what it was or how much time, money and
effort had gone into procuring it.
With a national newspaper like The Australian, published at
multiple points across a vast country, every minute over the production schedule
cost tens of thousands of dollars.
A soft, sibilant, whispery voice came down the line.
“Paul Keating here,” he said.
“Oh Paul, hi,” I answered, surprised, my head immersed in an
entirely different place.
“Why did you write such a terrible story about me?”
“It wasn’t a terrible story,” I replied. “It was just a
straight news story.”
“It wasn’t a straight story. There were many things
incorrect. Let me take you through the points…”
“Paul, you’re notorious for abusing journalists,” I cut in on
what sounded like was building to a 20 minute diatribe. “I don’t have time and
I don’t have to put up with it. I’m not paid enough.”
I slammed the phone down and went on about my work.
My then micro-managing Chief of Staff, all of two meters
away, looked at me quizzically and asked: “Who was that?”
“Paul Keating, he’s always abusing somebody,” I shrugged and
then deliberately ignored my boss as well.
I had outlived a number of Chiefs of Staff; some good, some
bad, some utterly indifferent. This particular one was at the lower end of the
scale. I did my best to destroy his sanity. He did not oblige.
After some frustrations he had given up trying to run the
minutiae of my working life, but he wasn’t used to journalists slamming the
phone down on former Prime Ministers.
Keating, even more incensed now and with time on his hands,
besieged the news desk for days to come, demanding to speak to the Editor in Chief.
Every editor in the country knew what Keating was like; and
this one had no desire to deal with him.
The Australian’s Editor in Chief Chris Mitchell dodged
Keating for several days before his secretary finally admitted he was actually
in his office and put Keating through.
To mollify him, the boss gave Keating the opportunity to say
what he wanted in a piece on the Opinion pages.
Everyone who read it had the same reaction: “What?”
The point Keating most wanted to make was that he hadn’t said
the council system in Australia was corrupt; what he had said was that it was closely
based on the corrupt borough system of the United Kingdom and as a result had
many of the same flaws.
The opinion piece began, in classic Keating style, with a
high handed insult.
The man who simply could not understand why he was no longer
Prime Minister suggested that the only mistake he had made in attending the
conference at Sydney University was not to have prepared a press release in
advance, so that even the most simple minded of journalists could understand
what he was saying.
OK Paul you’ve made your point. What was it you wanted to say
exactly?
“You’re nothing but a shiver looking for a spine to run up.”
Hold the world in contempt and it will hold you in contempt
straight back.
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