By Kishor Napier-Raman and Stephen Brook
As soon as news first surfaced of a possible royal visit in October, the jostling began for a piece of King Charles III.
Yes, there was horsey jostling between Neil Wilson, chair of the Victoria Racing Club, and Peter V’landys, chief executive of Racing NSW, to land King Charles and Queen Camilla on their respective pieces of racing turf, an issue decided when the King’s cancer diagnosis left no room in the royal program for Melbourne, or anything not deemed a worthy royal cause (e.g. the nags).
But CBD can reveal there’s been a bit of vice-regal bickering over the question of where Rex will lay his royal head each night.
As this column previously reported, the King’s private secretary Sir Clive Alderton undertook reconnaissance in June, meeting NSW Governor Margaret Beazley in Sydney.
The purpose of the visit was to discuss hosting arrangements for the monarch, who simply does not do hotels (not even the Australia Suite at the Intercontinental, beloved of US presidents). The Gothic revival turrets of the governor’s residence Government House at Mrs Macquaries Point is suitably regal, despite the party boats hooning around the harbour, we are sure you will agree.
But the royals also had a rival offer from Admiralty House, Sydney residence of Governor-General Sam Mostyn, next door to the prime minister’s official residence (and possible wedding venue) Kirribilli House.
Now CBD hears that despite the delicious potential of some ma’am to ma’am, tension between the great houses serving her excellency the Honourable Samantha Mostyn AC, Governor-General of the Commonwealth of Australia, and her excellency the Honourable Margaret Beazley AC KC, Governor of NSW has reached detente. Now we hear Admiralty House, as expected due to protocol, is honoured to host Charles and Camilla next month.
Searching with difficulty for an official response from anyone, we eventually heard back from the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet in Canberra.
The official reply to our polite queries? An on-background, not for attribution “no comment”.
NAME CALLING
Readers with the stamina to follow politics will note they are hearing more and more about “the Greens Political Party”.
Weird, as the official name of the party which holds a record four seats in the House of Representatives is simply “The Greens”. But Labor types increasingly refer to their progressive frenemies as “The Greens Political Party” – a highly researched-with-focus-groups bit of True Believer-speak intended to signify that the Greens aren’t crunchy environmentalist tree-hugging do-gooders, but a cynical political operation just like the ALP.
It’s a surefire barometer of just how cranky Labor are with the Greens. And boy are they cranky. After their 2022 election success, the Greens started getting uppity. In-your-face Griffith MP Max Chandler-Mather (or “Hyphen” as Labor types deride him) relishes getting under the government’s skin. Just last week the Greens helped to stall Labor’s housing package.
And so, unsurprisingly, references to the Greens Political Party are at an all-time high. The clumsy nomenclature has burst out of the question time bubble (where the prime minister seems to utter it daily).
Last Tuesday, speaking to a few hundred powerful CEOs at the Business Council of Australia annual dinner, Anthony Albanese had a crack at “the Greens Political Party”. Finance Minister Katy Gallagher used the term on social media platform X that day. It’s an ALP policy that Liberals like Paul Fletcher don’t mind appropriating.
Some early references we could find were uttered by Albo himself back in 2013. Makes sense. The PM has always hated the Greens, not least because for a time, they posed a plausible challenge to his Sydney inner-west electorate of Grayndler, even prompting local paper The Daily Telegraph to run a “Save Our Albo” campaign.
But CBD’s press gallery veterans pointed to a reference coming from a 2012 Christmas party invitation sent by then-Greens leader Christine Milne, who noted that it was “the Greens Political Party if you listen to Senator MacDonald”.
But the reference to the former Liberal Queensland senator Ian MacDonald famous for his rudeness is not the first hit out.
In Victoria state Labor MPs competing against the minor party in Melbourne’s inner north used the attack back in 2004.
And at a campaign event in Northcote in 2010, former premier Steve Bracks said: “The Labor Party stands on its own credentials. What the Greens Political Party does is up to them.”
Environmental campaigners brushed off the sledge. Outside the campaign launch, Bracks was greeted by a dozen Greens protesters calling for an end to brown-coal power stations and duck hunting.
Can Victorian Labor claim the points in this political origin story? Reader assistance in this matter is welcome.
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