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Wikipedia

Christian Porter

Charles Christian Porter (born 11 July 1970) is an Australian former politician and lawyer who served as the 37th Attorney-General of Australia from 2017 to 2021 in the Turnbull government and the subsequent Morrison government. He was a Member of Parliament (MP) for the Division of Pearce from 2013 to 2022 and a member of the Liberal Party of Australia. Porter also served as Leader of the House and Minister for Industrial Relations from 2019 to 2021, and Minister for Industry, Science and Technology in 2021 following his resignation as attorney-general.

Christian Porter
Porter in 2015
Attorney-General of Australia
In office
20 December 2017 – 30 March 2021
Prime MinisterMalcolm Turnbull
Scott Morrison
Preceded byGeorge Brandis
Succeeded byMichaelia Cash
Minister for Industry, Science and Technology
In office
30 March 2021 – 19 September 2021
Serving with Scott Morrison
Prime MinisterScott Morrison
Preceded byKaren Andrews
Succeeded byMelissa Price (Science and Technology)
Angus Taylor (Industry)
Leader of the House
In office
26 May 2019 – 30 March 2021
Prime MinisterScott Morrison
DeputyDarren Chester
Preceded byChristopher Pyne
Succeeded byPeter Dutton
Minister for Industrial Relations
In office
29 May 2019 – 30 March 2021
Prime MinisterScott Morrison
Preceded byKelly O'Dwyer
Succeeded byMichaelia Cash
Minister for Social Services
In office
21 September 2015 – 20 December 2017
Prime MinisterMalcolm Turnbull
Preceded byScott Morrison
Succeeded byDan Tehan
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Pearce
In office
7 September 2013 – 11 April 2022
Preceded byJudi Moylan
Succeeded byTracey Roberts
Parliament of Western Australia
Treasurer of Western Australia
In office
14 December 2010 – 12 June 2012
PremierColin Barnett
Preceded byColin Barnett
Succeeded byColin Barnett
Attorney-General of Western Australia
In office
23 September 2008 – 12 June 2012
PremierColin Barnett
Preceded byJim McGinty
Succeeded byMichael Mischin
Minister for Corrective Services
In office
23 September 2008 – 14 December 2010
PremierColin Barnett
Preceded byMargaret Quirk
Succeeded byTerry Redman
Member of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly
for Bateman
In office
6 September 2008 – 9 March 2013
Preceded byDistrict created
Succeeded byMatt Taylor
Personal details
Born
Charles Christian Porter

(1970-07-11) 11 July 1970 (age 53)[1]
Perth, Western Australia,
Australia
Political partyLiberal
Spouses
  • Lucy Gunn (divorced)
Jennifer Negus
(m. 2008; sep. 2020)
[2]
Karen Espiner
(m. 2022)
[3]
Children2
Parent
RelativesCharles Robert Porter (grandfather)
Alma materHale School
University of Western Australia (BEc, BA (Hons), LLB)[4]
London School of Economics (MSc)[4]
ProfessionPolitician, lawyer
Websitechristianporter.com.au

From Perth, Porter attended Hale School, the University of Western Australia and later the London School of Economics, and practised law at Clayton Utz and taught law at the University of Western Australia before his election to parliament. He is the son of the 1956 Olympic silver medallist, Charles "Chilla" Porter and the grandson of Queensland Liberal politician, Charles Porter, who was a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly from 1966 to 1980.[5][6]

Before his election to the federal House of Representatives, Porter had served in the Parliament of Western Australia. He first entered the Legislative Assembly after winning the seat of Murdoch in a 2008 by-election following the death of the sitting member, Trevor Sprigg, and he was subsequently elected to the new seat of Bateman at the 2008 general election. After the Liberals formed government, Porter was appointed Attorney-General in the Barnett Ministry. In December 2010, he was also appointed Treasurer and held both portfolios until June 2012, when he resigned from the ministry to contest the 2013 federal election.

Before assuming his current position, Porter was Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime Minister in the Abbott government from December 2014 to September 2015,[7][8] and then Minister for Social Services in the Turnbull government from September 2015 to December 2017. In March 2021 a historical rape allegation against Porter became public in the midst of the 2021 Australian Parliament House sexual misconduct allegations. Porter denied the claim and launched a defamation case against the ABC. The case was later dropped, with the ABC agreeing to pay all of Porter's mediation costs and appending an editor's note to the original article. Porter resigned from the front bench in September 2021, after media reports revealed that he was a beneficiary of a blind trust relating to his legal action against the ABC.[9] Following much controversy and media scrutiny, in December of that year, Porter announced his retirement from politics.[10][11]

Background and early career edit

Porter's father was Charles "Chilla" Porter, who won the men's high jump silver medal at the 1956 Summer Olympics and was director of Western Australia's Liberal Party during the 1970s and 1980s.[6] Chilla's father, Charles Robert Porter, was a Queensland Liberal state MP between 1966 and 1980 and served in the ministry of Joh Bjelke-Petersen.[6]

Porter was educated at Hale School, and was selected for Australia's national schools debating team.[12] From 1988 he attended the University of Western Australia where he graduated Bachelor of Economics and Bachelor of Arts with first-class honours in politics, before completing a Bachelor of Laws degree. Porter later studied at the London School of Economics for a Master of Science in political theory, from which he graduated with distinction at the top of his class.[13]

Prior to entering Parliament, Porter worked predominantly as a lawyer, starting as a commercial litigator at Clayton Utz before moving to public practice. He spent a year as an advisor to the Federal Minister for Justice and then began working for the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions as a senior state prosecutor. Before his election in 2008, Porter was working as a lecturer at Curtin University and the University of Western Australia as well as retaining, part-time, his position as senior prosecutor at the DPP.[14]

State politics edit

Porter was first elected to the Parliament of Western Australia in the now defunct seat of Murdoch in the February 2008 by-election following the death of the standing member Trevor Sprigg.[1][15]

At the September 2008 election, Porter contested and won the newly created seat of Bateman following the abolition of the seat of Murdoch in the 2007 redistribution. He was appointed Attorney-General and Minister for Corrective Services after the election,[16] having held the equivalent shadow portfolios prior to the election.[17]

In 2009, Porter proposed Western Australia follow the other states by introducing legislation that would prevent members of outlaw motorcycle gangs associating with each other.[18]

On 14 December 2010, Porter was sworn in as Treasurer of Western Australia. He retained the portfolio of Attorney-General,[19] while the Corrective Services portfolio was transferred to Terry Redman.[20]

In 2011, Porter fought against a court decision to award a sexual assault victim compensation of A$40,000 as she was smoking amphetamines with her attacker when the offences occurred. Following a decision by a district court judge, Porter took the matter to the Supreme Court where the judge granted his application to go the Court of Appeal.[21] The court agreed with Porter and quashed the payout in 2012.[22]

Porter oversaw the planned introduction of the harshest organised crime laws in Australia in 2011 which would see stronger penalties for organised crime gang members, particularly outlaw motorcycle gangs, for all manner of crimes including associating with one another. The bill that Porter planned to introduce, the Criminal Organisation Control Bill 2011, would see outlaw motorcycle gangs defined as Declared Criminal Organisations. The Australian Lawyers Alliance described the proposal as "a desperate attempt at popularity" by the state government.[23] The laws were first read in the Legislative Assembly in November 2011[24] and debated multiple times until March 2012 when it passed onto the Legislative Council.[25] The bill was then passed in November 2012.[26]

On 12 June 2012, he announced he was stepping down from his ministerial portfolios to contest the seat of Pearce at the 2013 Australian federal election.[27]

Federal politics edit

At the 2013 election, Porter was elected to federal parliament with an 8% margin. He became parliamentary secretary to the Prime Minister on 23 December 2014 and held that position until 21 September 2015. He was a part of the speaker's panel from 18 November 2013 to 9 February 2015.[15]

Porter is a member of the National Right faction of the Liberal Party.[28]

Prior to 2021, Porter had been considered a potential future prime minister;[29][30] in 2017 bookmakers installed Porter as a $5 chance to become the next prime minister from Western Australia (third-favourite behind Julie Bishop and Tim Hammond).[31]

Minister for Social Services (2015–2017) edit

On 20 September 2015, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull announced that Porter would replace Scott Morrison as Social Services Minister as part of a Cabinet overhaul.[32]

In 2016, Centrelink, operating under Porter's senior oversight as Social Services Minister, became involved in the Robodebt recovery controversy. Despite heightened media interest and complaints, after meeting with the Department of Human Services,[33] Porter stated that the program was working "incredibly well".[34] The program was later subject to two Senate committee inquiries,[35][36] and several calls for a Royal Commission into the program, to understand its failures,[36] and deliver justice to its victims.[37]

In May 2020, Porter (now in the position of Attorney-General rather than Social Services Minister) conceded that the Robodebt recovery scheme had "no legal basis" and was "unlawful" but refused to apologise for it.[38]

One of Porter's roles was to manage the Cashless Welfare Card, and increased its use in various communities. He spoke of his pride in the outcomes of the policy.[39] However, the card has been linked to increased hardship for many of its users[40] and its efficacy has been heavily disputed.[41][42][43] Thee trial was extended into Ceduna and the East Kimberley region of Western Australia in 2017 following an independent evaluation conducted by ORIMA Research who concluded that the trial had been successful "in reducing alcohol consumption, illegal drug use and gambling" and it had established a "a clear ‘proof-of-concept’”.[44]

During his time in this ministry, Porter was instrumental in the formation of the Coalition policy of performing drug tests on welfare recipients, which was criticised by experts, since there was no evidence anywhere in the world of a similar project working.[45] ABC fact checkers called the policy "wishful thinking" that it would help people get off welfare.[46] This section of the legislation was eventually dropped to allow the passage of the remaining elements of the bill, which contained large budget cuts to the welfare system.[47][48]

Porter was criticised for skipping the final sittings of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in order to attend a cricket match with John Howard.[49]

Attorney-General (2017–2021) edit

In a December 2017 reshuffle of the Turnbull ministry, Porter became Attorney-General in place of George Brandis. He relinquished the social services portfolio to Dan Tehan.

After the reshuffle, some of the national security powers and responsibilities previously held by the Attorney-General were transferred to the new position of Minister for Home Affairs, which was given to Peter Dutton.[50] This was seen as a positive by many in the legal community who said that the role of Attorney-General had become too focused on security and that the role should be realigned to its old purpose of defending the rule of law. It was also suggested that many areas of the law were in crisis because of the security focus, such as family law and incarceration levels of Indigenous Australians.[51]

At the commencement of his role as Attorney-General, Porter called on religious institutions to implement the recommendations of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.[52]

Following the raids on the journalists of the ABC and Newscorp, Porter would not rule out prosecuting journalists for publishing public interest stories, although he said he would be "seriously disinclined" to go ahead with a prosecution.[53] In the case of Newscorp journalist Annika Smethurst, Porter asked the court not to destroy the evidence collected from the raid on her house, so that it could be used in a future court case. Porter and the Federal Police said the restrictive privacy when it comes to security matters, "may justify very large incursions on the freedom" of individuals.[54]

In November 2019, Porter as Attorney-General extended the religious freedom bill from faith-based schools and organisations to religious hospitals and aged-care providers. The bill states that the aforementioned institutions would have legal protection to employ staff according to their religious beliefs.[55]

Other actions he has taken in his role have included calling on social media platforms to be seen as publishers,[56] attempts to block environmental groups from calling on boycotts of companies connected to the coal industry,[57] repealing the medevac laws, restricting union activity,[57] and attempting to have GetUp! registered as an arm of the Labor party.[58]

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Porter worked with Sally McManus of the ACTU to develop amendments to the Fair Work Act. Porter hailed the negotiations as a success, with McManus stating that; "We had been concerned that several employer groups had been advocating for a widespread removal of workers' rights akin to WorkChoices".[59]

In December 2020, Porter introduced a bill to merge the Family Court of Australia with the Federal Circuit Court of Australia, citing administrative efficiencies.[60]

Minister for Industry, Science and Technology (March – September 2021) edit

In March 2021, following the allegations against Porter, the cabinet was shuffled and he was moved to the position of Minister for Industry, Science and Technology.[61] Scott Morrison said this was a compromise due to advice from the solicitor-general regarding whether Porter could remain Attorney General while taking legal action against the ABC.[61] Porter resigned from cabinet on 19 September 2021 after concerns that he had accepted anonymous donations via a blind trust to cover his legal expenses.[62]

Retirement edit

Porter denied his imminent retirement in November 2021,[63] but then announced in a press release on 1 December 2021 that he would not contest the 2022 federal election and would instead retire from politics, opting to spend more time with his family.[64][65]

Post-political career edit

In February 2022, Porter announced that he would be returning to the legal profession and hinted that he will be writing a book after he left Parliament. He also set up a trust to operate two companies he has formed. The companies, Henley Stirling Lawyers Pty Ltd and Henley Stirling Consultants Pty Ltd, have Porter listed as the sole director.[66]

In July 2022 Porter was acting for underworld figure Mick Gatto in a defamation case against the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.[67] In the same month Porter lost his own appeal in the Federal Court where the court decided that Sue Chrysanthou would not be able to act for Porter in his own defamation case against the ABC. Porter was ordered to pay A$430,000 in costs.[68]

On 28 March 2023, Porter was engaged by Zeph Investments, Clive Palmer's Singapore-based company, to represent them in a lawsuit against the Commonwealth of Australia for AUD$296 billion over the alleged loss of contractual entitlement, “moral damages” and “sovereign risk”, in relation to an iron ore project for which Palmer's company, Mineralogy, had already lost a lawsuit.[69][70]

Personal life edit

Porter was listed as a contender for Cleo magazine's eligible bachelor of the year in 1999.[52][71]

He has described himself as "not particularly religious".[72]

In the mid 2000s, Porter married Lucy Gunn, but they divorced. In 2008, Porter married Jennifer Negus, a former colleague[2] and a granddaughter of former independent senator Syd Negus.[73] He took paternity leave after his wife gave birth to their first child the day after being sworn in as the social services minister.[74][75] They later had a second child, but announced their separation in January 2020.[76][2] Porter got engaged to lawyer Karen Espiner in 2022.[77] Porter and Espineer married over the 2022-2023 summer at Byron Bay.[3]

In November 2020, it was alleged on Four Corners that, although married, Porter had kissed and cuddled a colleague's political staffer in a public setting.[12] Porter denied the allegation and said that the staffer in question had also denied to Four Corners that the event occurred, but that the denial was not mentioned in the report.[78][79][80] He again denied the allegation on the Perth radio station 6PR.[81]

In the program, former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull stated that Porter's alleged behaviour had caused concern in the party room, although that was disputed by Porter.[12] Not long after he said he had raised the alleged incident with Porter, Turnbull promoted Porter to the position of attorney-general. Porter attributed the criticisms made by Turnbull to a falling-out between the two men during the 2018 Liberal Party of Australia leadership spills, the event which ended Turnbull's prime ministership.[82]

Rape allegation edit

In late February 2021, Australian media reported an alleged rape of a 16-year-old girl in 1988. It was alleged that the male offender was now (as of 2021) a federal cabinet minister. She had written a long statement for her solicitor in 2019, and had contacted several politicians and police. She died by suicide in 2020 and her statement was sent anonymously in February 2021 to the prime minister and several other members of parliament.[83][84][85] On 2 March 2021, the police announced there was "insufficient admissible evidence" to secure a prosecution.[86] Porter announced on 3 March 2021 that he was the person named in the allegations.[87] He confirmed he met the woman in Sydney when he was 17, but denied the accusation and any sexual contact with her. He also announced he would take immediate leave to look after his mental health following the accusations.[86][88][89]

On 15 March 2021, Porter launched a defamation claim against the ABC and reporter Louise Milligan, for publishing the allegation. His claim argued that although the original allegation did not name him, he was "readily identifiable" and that the article was intended to harm him.[90] Porter withdrew the defamation claim on 31 May 2021, with the ABC paying the costs of mediation and appending an editor's note to the original article stating that "The ABC did not contend that the serious accusations could be substantiated to the applicable legal standard". No findings were made and no damages were awarded to Porter.[91] On 10 June 2021, a friend of the alleged victim, film producer Jo Dyer, was awarded costs, estimated to be A$550,000, after she brought separate litigation to prevent one of Porter's defamation lawyers from representing him owing to having conflicting interests and access to confidential information about the victim and Porter.[92][93][94]

On 24 June 2021, the original dossier detailing the rape allegation against Porter was made publicly available by the Federal Court of Australia.[95][96]

In September 2021, Porter revealed to Federal Parliament in an interest declaration that the defamation case was funded in part by an anonymous donor, though he did not indicate the value of the donation nor his overall legal fees.[97][98] A donation was made through a blind trust called the Legal Services Trust and Porter claimed "as a potential beneficiary I have no access to information about the conduct and funding of the trust".[97][98] Porter's receipt of this donation was criticised by the opposition saying that he should not have accepted an anonymous donation and that it is in the public interest to know who made this donation.[97] Porter also received criticism from Malcolm Turnbull, who described the situation as if Porter had said "my legal fees were paid by a guy in a mask who dropped off a chaff bag full of cash".[99] The declaration also stated that his barrister, Sue Chrysanthou, discounted her typical fees to represent him in the case.[97][98] Porter tendered his resignation from the frontbench on 19 September 2021.[100]

On 20 October 2021, the Coalition government blocked a bid from the Australian Labor Party opposition to have Porter investigated by the House privileges committee over whether he had breached parliamentary rules over his financial disclosures, despite Speaker Tony Smith having ruled that there was a prima facie case for further scrutiny.[101] The move from the government attracted significant criticism in the media.[102][103][104][105] In November 2021, a parliamentary committee announced they would ask Porter to declare the ultimate source of funds.[106]

References edit

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  88. ^ Dennett, Harley (3 March 2021). "Christian Porter denies rape allegation". The Canberra Times. Retrieved 3 March 2021.
  89. ^ Read the full press conference transcript, Christian Porter denies historical rape allegation, ABC News, 3 March 2021
  90. ^ Attorney-General Christian Porter launches defamation action against ABC, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 15 March 2021
  91. ^ "Christian Porter ends defamation action against the ABC". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 31 May 2021. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
  92. ^ Mitchell, Georgina; McPhee, Sarah; Evans, Michael (24 June 2021). "Christian Porter rape allegation dossier revealed". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 4 December 2021.
  93. ^ McGowan, Michael (11 June 2021). "Court orders Christian Porter and lawyer Sue Chrysanthou to pay substantial legal costs of Jo Dyer". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 December 2021.
  94. ^ Debelle, Penelope (6 August 2021). "Writers' Week chief to leave after 2022 festival". InDaily. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  95. ^ "Christian Porter rape allegation documents revealed". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. 24 June 2021. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
  96. ^ "Exhibit 1 - Dossier + Letter (PDF, 1.8 MB)" (PDF). Federal Court of Australia. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
  97. ^ a b c d "Mystery donors pay some of Christian Porter's legal fees". www.abc.net.au. 14 September 2021. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  98. ^ a b c Porter, Charles (13 September 2021). "Statement of Registrable Interests" (PDF). Register of Members' Interests – 46th Parliament: 17.
  99. ^ Maiden, Samantha (14 September 2021). "The mystery trust contributing to Christian Porter's legal fees". new.com.au. Retrieved 15 September 2021.
  100. ^ Maiden, Samantha; Gould, Courtney. "Christian Porter reveals 'constant abuse' in statement following his resignation". News.com.au. Archived from the original on 19 September 2021. Retrieved 19 September 2021.
  101. ^ Doran, Matthew (20 October 2021). "Government blocks bid to investigate Christian Porter over legal fee donation". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  102. ^ Bath, Gemma (21 October 2021). "'A disgraceful, shameful moment.' This week, we witnessed exactly why we need a Federal ICAC". MamaMia. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  103. ^ "Coalition's protection of Porter defies logic and belief". The Canberra Times. 21 October 2021. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  104. ^ Maley, Jacqueline (23 October 2021). "A blind trust? Certainly, the government is keeping voters blind as to Porter's secret donors". The Age. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  105. ^ Lillywhite, Serena (21 October 2021). "The government's move to block investigation of Porter donations is a nail in the coffin of integrity in politics". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  106. ^ "Christian Porter to be formally asked to explain declaration that 'blind trust' helped pay his legal fees". the Guardian. 1 November 2021. Retrieved 6 November 2021.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Christian Porter at Wikimedia Commons
  • Christian Porter v ABC Federal Court of Australia online file
  • Official website
Parliament of Australia
Preceded by Member for Pearce
2013–2022
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Minister for Industry, Innovation and Science
2021
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Industrial Relations
2019–2021
Succeeded by
Preceded by Attorney-General for Australia
2017–2021
Preceded by Minister for Social Services
2015–2017
Succeeded by
Parliament of Western Australia
Preceded by Member for Murdoch
2008
District abolished
District established Member for Bateman
2008–2013
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Attorney-General of Western Australia
2008–2012
Succeeded by
Preceded by Treasurer of Western Australia
2010–2012
Succeeded by

christian, porter, singer, voice, season, charles, born, july, 1970, australian, former, politician, lawyer, served, 37th, attorney, general, australia, from, 2017, 2021, turnbull, government, subsequent, morrison, government, member, parliament, division, pea. For the singer see The Voice U S season 4 Charles Christian Porter born 11 July 1970 is an Australian former politician and lawyer who served as the 37th Attorney General of Australia from 2017 to 2021 in the Turnbull government and the subsequent Morrison government He was a Member of Parliament MP for the Division of Pearce from 2013 to 2022 and a member of the Liberal Party of Australia Porter also served as Leader of the House and Minister for Industrial Relations from 2019 to 2021 and Minister for Industry Science and Technology in 2021 following his resignation as attorney general The HonourableChristian PorterPorter in 2015Attorney General of AustraliaIn office 20 December 2017 30 March 2021Prime MinisterMalcolm TurnbullScott MorrisonPreceded byGeorge BrandisSucceeded byMichaelia CashMinister for Industry Science and TechnologyIn office 30 March 2021 19 September 2021Serving with Scott MorrisonPrime MinisterScott MorrisonPreceded byKaren AndrewsSucceeded byMelissa Price Science and Technology Angus Taylor Industry Leader of the HouseIn office 26 May 2019 30 March 2021Prime MinisterScott MorrisonDeputyDarren ChesterPreceded byChristopher PyneSucceeded byPeter DuttonMinister for Industrial RelationsIn office 29 May 2019 30 March 2021Prime MinisterScott MorrisonPreceded byKelly O DwyerSucceeded byMichaelia CashMinister for Social ServicesIn office 21 September 2015 20 December 2017Prime MinisterMalcolm TurnbullPreceded byScott MorrisonSucceeded byDan TehanMember of the Australian Parliament for PearceIn office 7 September 2013 11 April 2022Preceded byJudi MoylanSucceeded byTracey RobertsParliament of Western AustraliaTreasurer of Western AustraliaIn office 14 December 2010 12 June 2012PremierColin BarnettPreceded byColin BarnettSucceeded byColin BarnettAttorney General of Western AustraliaIn office 23 September 2008 12 June 2012PremierColin BarnettPreceded byJim McGintySucceeded byMichael MischinMinister for Corrective ServicesIn office 23 September 2008 14 December 2010PremierColin BarnettPreceded byMargaret QuirkSucceeded byTerry RedmanMember of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly for BatemanIn office 6 September 2008 9 March 2013Preceded byDistrict createdSucceeded byMatt TaylorPersonal detailsBornCharles Christian Porter 1970 07 11 11 July 1970 age 53 1 Perth Western Australia AustraliaPolitical partyLiberalSpousesLucy Gunn divorced Jennifer Negus m 2008 sep 2020 wbr 2 Karen Espiner m 2022 wbr 3 Children2ParentChilla Porter father RelativesCharles Robert Porter grandfather Alma materHale School University of Western Australia BEc BA Hons LLB 4 London School of Economics MSc 4 ProfessionPolitician lawyerWebsitechristianporter wbr com wbr au From Perth Porter attended Hale School the University of Western Australia and later the London School of Economics and practised law at Clayton Utz and taught law at the University of Western Australia before his election to parliament He is the son of the 1956 Olympic silver medallist Charles Chilla Porter and the grandson of Queensland Liberal politician Charles Porter who was a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly from 1966 to 1980 5 6 Before his election to the federal House of Representatives Porter had served in the Parliament of Western Australia He first entered the Legislative Assembly after winning the seat of Murdoch in a 2008 by election following the death of the sitting member Trevor Sprigg and he was subsequently elected to the new seat of Bateman at the 2008 general election After the Liberals formed government Porter was appointed Attorney General in the Barnett Ministry In December 2010 he was also appointed Treasurer and held both portfolios until June 2012 when he resigned from the ministry to contest the 2013 federal election Before assuming his current position Porter was Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime Minister in the Abbott government from December 2014 to September 2015 7 8 and then Minister for Social Services in the Turnbull government from September 2015 to December 2017 In March 2021 a historical rape allegation against Porter became public in the midst of the 2021 Australian Parliament House sexual misconduct allegations Porter denied the claim and launched a defamation case against the ABC The case was later dropped with the ABC agreeing to pay all of Porter s mediation costs and appending an editor s note to the original article Porter resigned from the front bench in September 2021 after media reports revealed that he was a beneficiary of a blind trust relating to his legal action against the ABC 9 Following much controversy and media scrutiny in December of that year Porter announced his retirement from politics 10 11 Contents 1 Background and early career 2 State politics 3 Federal politics 3 1 Minister for Social Services 2015 2017 3 2 Attorney General 2017 2021 3 3 Minister for Industry Science and Technology March September 2021 3 4 Retirement 4 Post political career 5 Personal life 5 1 Rape allegation 6 References 7 External linksBackground and early career editPorter s father was Charles Chilla Porter who won the men s high jump silver medal at the 1956 Summer Olympics and was director of Western Australia s Liberal Party during the 1970s and 1980s 6 Chilla s father Charles Robert Porter was a Queensland Liberal state MP between 1966 and 1980 and served in the ministry of Joh Bjelke Petersen 6 Porter was educated at Hale School and was selected for Australia s national schools debating team 12 From 1988 he attended the University of Western Australia where he graduated Bachelor of Economics and Bachelor of Arts with first class honours in politics before completing a Bachelor of Laws degree Porter later studied at the London School of Economics for a Master of Science in political theory from which he graduated with distinction at the top of his class 13 Prior to entering Parliament Porter worked predominantly as a lawyer starting as a commercial litigator at Clayton Utz before moving to public practice He spent a year as an advisor to the Federal Minister for Justice and then began working for the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions as a senior state prosecutor Before his election in 2008 Porter was working as a lecturer at Curtin University and the University of Western Australia as well as retaining part time his position as senior prosecutor at the DPP 14 State politics editPorter was first elected to the Parliament of Western Australia in the now defunct seat of Murdoch in the February 2008 by election following the death of the standing member Trevor Sprigg 1 15 At the September 2008 election Porter contested and won the newly created seat of Bateman following the abolition of the seat of Murdoch in the 2007 redistribution He was appointed Attorney General and Minister for Corrective Services after the election 16 having held the equivalent shadow portfolios prior to the election 17 In 2009 Porter proposed Western Australia follow the other states by introducing legislation that would prevent members of outlaw motorcycle gangs associating with each other 18 On 14 December 2010 Porter was sworn in as Treasurer of Western Australia He retained the portfolio of Attorney General 19 while the Corrective Services portfolio was transferred to Terry Redman 20 In 2011 Porter fought against a court decision to award a sexual assault victim compensation of A 40 000 as she was smoking amphetamines with her attacker when the offences occurred Following a decision by a district court judge Porter took the matter to the Supreme Court where the judge granted his application to go the Court of Appeal 21 The court agreed with Porter and quashed the payout in 2012 22 Porter oversaw the planned introduction of the harshest organised crime laws in Australia in 2011 which would see stronger penalties for organised crime gang members particularly outlaw motorcycle gangs for all manner of crimes including associating with one another The bill that Porter planned to introduce the Criminal Organisation Control Bill 2011 would see outlaw motorcycle gangs defined as Declared Criminal Organisations The Australian Lawyers Alliance described the proposal as a desperate attempt at popularity by the state government 23 The laws were first read in the Legislative Assembly in November 2011 24 and debated multiple times until March 2012 when it passed onto the Legislative Council 25 The bill was then passed in November 2012 26 On 12 June 2012 he announced he was stepping down from his ministerial portfolios to contest the seat of Pearce at the 2013 Australian federal election 27 Federal politics editSee also Abbott government and Turnbull government At the 2013 election Porter was elected to federal parliament with an 8 margin He became parliamentary secretary to the Prime Minister on 23 December 2014 and held that position until 21 September 2015 He was a part of the speaker s panel from 18 November 2013 to 9 February 2015 15 Porter is a member of the National Right faction of the Liberal Party 28 Prior to 2021 Porter had been considered a potential future prime minister 29 30 in 2017 bookmakers installed Porter as a 5 chance to become the next prime minister from Western Australia third favourite behind Julie Bishop and Tim Hammond 31 Minister for Social Services 2015 2017 edit On 20 September 2015 Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull announced that Porter would replace Scott Morrison as Social Services Minister as part of a Cabinet overhaul 32 In 2016 Centrelink operating under Porter s senior oversight as Social Services Minister became involved in the Robodebt recovery controversy Despite heightened media interest and complaints after meeting with the Department of Human Services 33 Porter stated that the program was working incredibly well 34 The program was later subject to two Senate committee inquiries 35 36 and several calls for a Royal Commission into the program to understand its failures 36 and deliver justice to its victims 37 In May 2020 Porter now in the position of Attorney General rather than Social Services Minister conceded that the Robodebt recovery scheme had no legal basis and was unlawful but refused to apologise for it 38 One of Porter s roles was to manage the Cashless Welfare Card and increased its use in various communities He spoke of his pride in the outcomes of the policy 39 However the card has been linked to increased hardship for many of its users 40 and its efficacy has been heavily disputed 41 42 43 Thee trial was extended into Ceduna and the East Kimberley region of Western Australia in 2017 following an independent evaluation conducted by ORIMA Research who concluded that the trial had been successful in reducing alcohol consumption illegal drug use and gambling and it had established a a clear proof of concept 44 During his time in this ministry Porter was instrumental in the formation of the Coalition policy of performing drug tests on welfare recipients which was criticised by experts since there was no evidence anywhere in the world of a similar project working 45 ABC fact checkers called the policy wishful thinking that it would help people get off welfare 46 This section of the legislation was eventually dropped to allow the passage of the remaining elements of the bill which contained large budget cuts to the welfare system 47 48 Porter was criticised for skipping the final sittings of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in order to attend a cricket match with John Howard 49 Attorney General 2017 2021 edit In a December 2017 reshuffle of the Turnbull ministry Porter became Attorney General in place of George Brandis He relinquished the social services portfolio to Dan Tehan After the reshuffle some of the national security powers and responsibilities previously held by the Attorney General were transferred to the new position of Minister for Home Affairs which was given to Peter Dutton 50 This was seen as a positive by many in the legal community who said that the role of Attorney General had become too focused on security and that the role should be realigned to its old purpose of defending the rule of law It was also suggested that many areas of the law were in crisis because of the security focus such as family law and incarceration levels of Indigenous Australians 51 At the commencement of his role as Attorney General Porter called on religious institutions to implement the recommendations of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse 52 Following the raids on the journalists of the ABC and Newscorp Porter would not rule out prosecuting journalists for publishing public interest stories although he said he would be seriously disinclined to go ahead with a prosecution 53 In the case of Newscorp journalist Annika Smethurst Porter asked the court not to destroy the evidence collected from the raid on her house so that it could be used in a future court case Porter and the Federal Police said the restrictive privacy when it comes to security matters may justify very large incursions on the freedom of individuals 54 In November 2019 Porter as Attorney General extended the religious freedom bill from faith based schools and organisations to religious hospitals and aged care providers The bill states that the aforementioned institutions would have legal protection to employ staff according to their religious beliefs 55 Other actions he has taken in his role have included calling on social media platforms to be seen as publishers 56 attempts to block environmental groups from calling on boycotts of companies connected to the coal industry 57 repealing the medevac laws restricting union activity 57 and attempting to have GetUp registered as an arm of the Labor party 58 During the COVID 19 pandemic Porter worked with Sally McManus of the ACTU to develop amendments to the Fair Work Act Porter hailed the negotiations as a success with McManus stating that We had been concerned that several employer groups had been advocating for a widespread removal of workers rights akin to WorkChoices 59 In December 2020 Porter introduced a bill to merge the Family Court of Australia with the Federal Circuit Court of Australia citing administrative efficiencies 60 Minister for Industry Science and Technology March September 2021 edit In March 2021 following the allegations against Porter the cabinet was shuffled and he was moved to the position of Minister for Industry Science and Technology 61 Scott Morrison said this was a compromise due to advice from the solicitor general regarding whether Porter could remain Attorney General while taking legal action against the ABC 61 Porter resigned from cabinet on 19 September 2021 after concerns that he had accepted anonymous donations via a blind trust to cover his legal expenses 62 Retirement edit Porter denied his imminent retirement in November 2021 63 but then announced in a press release on 1 December 2021 that he would not contest the 2022 federal election and would instead retire from politics opting to spend more time with his family 64 65 Post political career editIn February 2022 Porter announced that he would be returning to the legal profession and hinted that he will be writing a book after he left Parliament He also set up a trust to operate two companies he has formed The companies Henley Stirling Lawyers Pty Ltd and Henley Stirling Consultants Pty Ltd have Porter listed as the sole director 66 In July 2022 Porter was acting for underworld figure Mick Gatto in a defamation case against the Australian Broadcasting Corporation 67 In the same month Porter lost his own appeal in the Federal Court where the court decided that Sue Chrysanthou would not be able to act for Porter in his own defamation case against the ABC Porter was ordered to pay A 430 000 in costs 68 On 28 March 2023 Porter was engaged by Zeph Investments Clive Palmer s Singapore based company to represent them in a lawsuit against the Commonwealth of Australia for AUD 296 billion over the alleged loss of contractual entitlement moral damages and sovereign risk in relation to an iron ore project for which Palmer s company Mineralogy had already lost a lawsuit 69 70 Personal life editPorter was listed as a contender for Cleo magazine s eligible bachelor of the year in 1999 52 71 He has described himself as not particularly religious 72 In the mid 2000s Porter married Lucy Gunn but they divorced In 2008 Porter married Jennifer Negus a former colleague 2 and a granddaughter of former independent senator Syd Negus 73 He took paternity leave after his wife gave birth to their first child the day after being sworn in as the social services minister 74 75 They later had a second child but announced their separation in January 2020 76 2 Porter got engaged to lawyer Karen Espiner in 2022 77 Porter and Espineer married over the 2022 2023 summer at Byron Bay 3 In November 2020 it was alleged on Four Corners that although married Porter had kissed and cuddled a colleague s political staffer in a public setting 12 Porter denied the allegation and said that the staffer in question had also denied to Four Corners that the event occurred but that the denial was not mentioned in the report 78 79 80 He again denied the allegation on the Perth radio station 6PR 81 In the program former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull stated that Porter s alleged behaviour had caused concern in the party room although that was disputed by Porter 12 Not long after he said he had raised the alleged incident with Porter Turnbull promoted Porter to the position of attorney general Porter attributed the criticisms made by Turnbull to a falling out between the two men during the 2018 Liberal Party of Australia leadership spills the event which ended Turnbull s prime ministership 82 Rape allegation edit Main article 2021 Australian Parliament House sexual misconduct allegations In late February 2021 Australian media reported an alleged rape of a 16 year old girl in 1988 It was alleged that the male offender was now as of 2021 a federal cabinet minister She had written a long statement for her solicitor in 2019 and had contacted several politicians and police She died by suicide in 2020 and her statement was sent anonymously in February 2021 to the prime minister and several other members of parliament 83 84 85 On 2 March 2021 the police announced there was insufficient admissible evidence to secure a prosecution 86 Porter announced on 3 March 2021 that he was the person named in the allegations 87 He confirmed he met the woman in Sydney when he was 17 but denied the accusation and any sexual contact with her He also announced he would take immediate leave to look after his mental health following the accusations 86 88 89 On 15 March 2021 Porter launched a defamation claim against the ABC and reporter Louise Milligan for publishing the allegation His claim argued that although the original allegation did not name him he was readily identifiable and that the article was intended to harm him 90 Porter withdrew the defamation claim on 31 May 2021 with the ABC paying the costs of mediation and appending an editor s note to the original article stating that The ABC did not contend that the serious accusations could be substantiated to the applicable legal standard No findings were made and no damages were awarded to Porter 91 On 10 June 2021 a friend of the alleged victim film producer Jo Dyer was awarded costs estimated to be A 550 000 after she brought separate litigation to prevent one of Porter s defamation lawyers from representing him owing to having conflicting interests and access to confidential information about the victim and Porter 92 93 94 On 24 June 2021 the original dossier detailing the rape allegation against Porter was made publicly available by the Federal Court of Australia 95 96 In September 2021 Porter revealed to Federal Parliament in an interest declaration that the defamation case was funded in part by an anonymous donor though he did not indicate the value of the donation nor his overall legal fees 97 98 A donation was made through a blind trust called the Legal Services Trust and Porter claimed as a potential beneficiary I have no access to information about the conduct and funding of the trust 97 98 Porter s receipt of this donation was criticised by the opposition saying that he should not have accepted an anonymous donation and that it is in the public interest to know who made this donation 97 Porter also received criticism from Malcolm Turnbull who described the situation as if Porter had said my legal fees were paid by a guy in a mask who dropped off a chaff bag full of cash 99 The declaration also stated that his barrister Sue Chrysanthou discounted her typical fees to represent him in the case 97 98 Porter tendered his resignation from the frontbench on 19 September 2021 100 On 20 October 2021 the Coalition government blocked a bid from the Australian Labor Party opposition to have Porter investigated by the House privileges committee over whether he had breached parliamentary rules over his financial disclosures despite Speaker Tony Smith having ruled that there was a prima facie case for further scrutiny 101 The move from the government attracted significant criticism in the media 102 103 104 105 In November 2021 a parliamentary committee announced they would ask Porter to declare the ultimate source of funds 106 References edit a b Hon Charles Christian Christian Porter MLA BEc BA Hons LLB MSc Member List Parliament of Western Australia a b c Scarr Lanai 25 January 2020 Power Couple Split The West Australian p 1 Retrieved 31 May 2020 a b Christian Porter marries his Byron Bae Sydney Morning Herald 10 February 2023 Retrieved 10 February 2023 a b Hon Christopher Porter MP Senators and Members of the Parliament of Australia Retrieved 7 November 2021 First Speech Hon Christian Porter MP Parliament of Australia Archived from the original on 13 February 2014 Retrieved 7 November 2015 a b c Poprzeczny Joseph 7 July 2012 Promising WA MP s Canberra bid News Weekly Archived from the original on 17 February 2016 Retrieved 13 February 2016 Taylor Lenore 21 December 2014 Tony Abbott cabinet reshuffle moves Scott Morrison out of immigration Guardian Australia Retrieved 21 December 2014 Tony Abbott s revamped Ministry sworn in at Government House news com au News Corp Australia 23 December 2014 Archived from the original on 14 September 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2014 Christian Porter resigns from ministry www abc net au 19 September 2021 Retrieved 19 September 2021 Probyn Andrew Evans Jake 1 December 2021 Christian Porter quits politics ending career of a Liberal once touted as a future PM as Greg Hunt also plans exit ABC News Retrieved 1 December 2021 Harris Rob Clun Rachel 1 December 2021 No regrets Christian Porter to quit Parliament at next election The Age Retrieved 1 December 2021 a b c Inside the Canberra Bubble Australian Broadcasting Corporation 9 November 2020 retrieved 9 November 2020 Burrell Andrew 23 April 2016 From Cleo to Canberra Christian Porter is an MP to watch The Australian Archived from the original on 30 May 2016 Christian Porter MP christianporter com au Liberal Party of Australia a b Hon Christian Porter MP aph gov au Commonwealth Parliament Retrieved 23 May 2022 Attorneys General of Western Australia PDF Parliamentary Library of Western Australia Retrieved 19 September 2021 Tullberg Julie 23 February 2008 SMH Online News Porter claims win in Murdoch by election The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 12 June 2008 Daniel Emerson 16 December 2009 Porter rubbishes bikie fears The West Australian Seven West Media Retrieved 22 March 2022 Biography for PORTER the Hon Charles Christian Christian Parlinfo 2022 Retrieved 13 August 2022 Hon Donald Terrence Terry Redman Parliament of Western Australia Retrieved 13 August 2022 Amanda Banks 4 February 2011 Porter fights payment to sex victim The West Australian Retrieved 22 March 2022 Christian Jones 9 February 2012 Drug use foils rape compensation claim The West Australian Retrieved 22 March 2022 Aleisha Orr 13 November 2011 Bikie gangs to face tough new laws WA Today Nine Digital Network Retrieved 23 March 2022 Criminal Organisations Control Bill 2011 PDF Extract from Hansard 23 November 2011 Retrieved 14 August 2022 Criminal Organisations Control Bill 2011 third reading PDF Extract from Hansard 23 November 2011 Retrieved 14 August 2022 Bikie anti association laws passed The West Australian Seven West Media 14 November 2022 WA Treasurer quits state politics for federal stage ABC News 12 June 2012 Retrieved 25 November 2019 Massola James 20 March 2021 Who s who in the Liberals left right and centre factions The Sydney Morning Herald Fairfax Media Retrieved 1 February 2022 Probyn Andrew Evans Jake December 2021 Christian Porter quits politics ending career of a Liberal once touted as a future PM as Greg Hunt also plans exit ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 19 May 2023 Harris Rob Clun Rachel Hastie Hamish December 2021 No regrets Christian Porter to quit Parliament at next election The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 19 May 2023 Tim Hammond the first term MP tipped to be Prime Minister Clarke political reporter Melissa Conifer Dan 20 September 2015 Turnbull dumps ministers to make way for Cabinet renewal ABC News Retrieved 25 November 2019 Community Affairs References Committee Parliament of Australia 18 May 2017 p 46 Retrieved 14 August 2017 McIlroy Tom 3 January 2017 Centrelink s automated debt recovery system working incredibly well Minister Christian Porter The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 14 August 2017 Doran Matthew 8 March 2017 Centrelink debt recovery program to be investigated at Senate committee today ABC News Retrieved 14 August 2017 a b Chapter 2 A massive failure of public administration Parliament of Australia Retrieved 19 May 2022 Calls heard again for royal commission into horrific and unlawful robodebt scheme SBS News 19 August 2021 Retrieved 1 May 2022 Government concedes flaws but refuses to apologise for its unlawful robodebt program ABC Australia 31 May 2020 Retrieved 1 March 2021 Miranda Live Cashless welfare improves lives says Christian Porter The Daily Telegraph 19 December 2017 Retrieved 25 November 2019 Koslowski Max 13 September 2019 The card declined and I broke down Life on the cashless welfare card The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 25 November 2019 Briefing What s wrong with the cashless debitcard PDF Vinnies Retrieved 25 November 2019 Koslowski Max 12 September 2019 What are cashless welfare cards and how do they work The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 25 November 2019 Allam Lorena 15 October 2019 Cashless welfare card loophole allows purchase of alcohol and pornography The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 25 November 2019 Cashless debit card extended following positive independent evaluation Media Release Parliament of Australia 17 March 2017 Retrieved 14 August 2022 Henriques Gomes Luke 9 September 2019 The Coalition want to drug test welfare recipients Here s why experts think it s a bad idea The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 25 November 2019 Fact check Drug testing welfare recipients ABC News 18 September 2017 Retrieved 25 November 2019 Knaus Christopher 22 November 2017 Drug testing of welfare recipients may be delayed Christian Porter says The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 25 November 2019 Welfare drug testing pilot halted The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners Retrieved 25 November 2019 Christian Porter cops it for choosing cricket over commission NewsComAu 14 December 2017 Retrieved 25 November 2019 Porter s the new AG but can he keep his own seat ABC News 19 December 2017 Retrieved 20 December 2017 Attorney General Christian Porter to prioritise family law rule of law Australian Financial Review 19 December 2017 Retrieved 25 November 2019 a b Peatling Stephanie 19 December 2017 Christian Porter the country s new top legal officer The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 25 November 2019 Remeikis Amy 20 October 2019 Christian Porter says he can t guarantee he wouldn t prosecute journalists The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 25 November 2019 Karp Paul 25 October 2019 Christian Porter asks high court not to destroy material from Annika Smethurst raid The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 25 November 2019 Chambers Geoff 21 November 2019 Religious freedom bill Christian Porter expands bill to protect hospitals aged care providers The Australian Retrieved 20 November 2019 Karp Paul 20 November 2019 Christian Porter calls for Facebook and Twitter to be treated as publishers The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 25 November 2019 a b Morton Adam 10 November 2019 Inside Market Forces the small climate group Scott Morrison wants to put out of business The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 25 November 2019 Karp Paul 21 October 2019 Liberal MPs complain about GetUp at inquiry into 2019 election The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 25 November 2019 Henderson Anna 7 April 2020 Recalled Parliament to pass 130b JobKeeper payment amid push to include casual workers www abc net au Snape Jack 30 November 2020 Family law experts reject Government s plan to merge Family Court as Parliament debate looms ABC News Retrieved 2 December 2020 a b Worthington Brett 30 March 2021 Scott Morrison moves Christian Porter Linda Reynolds and Peter Dutton in Cabinet reshuffle ABC News Retrieved 15 September 2021 Christian Porter resigns from ministry ABC News 19 September 2021 Retrieved 19 September 2021 Katina Curtis 16 November 2021 Porter denies reports of imminent retirement from politics Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 26 March 2022 Karp Paul 1 December 2021 Christian Porter bemoans harshness of politics as he announces he ll quit parliament The Guardian Retrieved 1 December 2021 Moore Georgie 1 December 2021 Porter pulls pin on rocky political career The Canberra Times Retrieved 1 December 2021 Josh Butler 28 February 2022 Christian Porter starts two new companies and signals possible writing ventures The Guardian Retrieved 26 March 2022 Paul Karp 11 July 2022 Christian Porter acting for Mick Gatto in his high court appeal over ABC defamation case The Guardian Retrieved 13 August 2022 Lauren Ferri 14 July 2022 Christian Porter to pay massive bill after losing Federal Court appeal news com au News Corporation Retrieved 13 August 2022 Karp Paul correspondent Paul Karp Chief political 30 March 2023 Clive Palmer hires Christian Porter for 300bn lawsuit against Australian government The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 30 March 2023 Anthony Albanese mocks Clive Palmer s 300b lawsuit Australian Financial Review 29 March 2023 Retrieved 30 March 2023 Milligan Louise Cronau Peter Carter Lucy 10 November 2020 Investigation reveals history of sexism and inappropriate behaviour by Attorney General Christian Porter ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 11 November 2020 Keep religious freedom law simple senator SBS News 10 July 2019 Mr Charles Christian Christian Porter Members biographical register Parliament of Western Australia Who is Christian Porter PBA Pro Bono Australia Retrieved 25 November 2019 Christian Porter resigns The rise and fall of a once bright political prospect The West Australian 1 December 2021 Taylor Paige 24 January 2020 Attorney General Christian Porter and his wife Jennifer announce separation The Australian Le May Rebecca 24 October 2022 Huge diamond ring confirms Porter s engagement to lawyer The West Australian Retrieved 8 January 2023 Statement from Attorney General Christian Porter The Project Network Ten Pty Limited 10 November 2020 Retrieved 14 August 2022 Naomi Neilson 10 November 2020 Christian Porter considers legal action after Four Corners report Lawyers Weekly Retrieved 13 August 2022 Samantha Maiden 10 November 2020 Christian Porter hits back at totally false claims aired on Four Corners Nationwide News Pty Ltd Retrieved 13 August 2022 Bartlett Liam 10 November 2020 Porter s only interview after explosive allegations 6PR Retrieved 4 March 2021 Maiden Samantha 10 November 2020 Christian Porter hits back at totally false claims aired on Four Corners news com au Milligan Louise 26 February 2021 Cabinet Minister accused of rape in letter sent to Scott Morrison senators www abc net au Retrieved 3 March 2021 Patrick Aaron 2 March 2021 1988 rape allegation His anonymity tenuous accused minister should out himself Australian Financial Review Retrieved 3 March 2021 Maley Jacqueline 1 March 2021 Friends remember extraordinary woman who claimed rape by cabinet minister Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 3 March 2021 a b Worthington Brett 3 March 2021 Cabinet minister Christian Porter strenuously denies historical rape allegation ABC News Retrieved 3 March 2021 Attorney General Christian Porter s full media conference March 2021 7NEWS YouTube 7NEWS Australia Archived from the original on 26 May 2021 Retrieved 26 May 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Dennett Harley 3 March 2021 Christian Porter denies rape allegation The Canberra Times Retrieved 3 March 2021 Read the full press conference transcript Christian Porter denies historical rape allegation ABC News 3 March 2021 Attorney General Christian Porter launches defamation action against ABC Australian Broadcasting Corporation 15 March 2021 Christian Porter ends defamation action against the ABC ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation 31 May 2021 Retrieved 31 May 2021 Mitchell Georgina McPhee Sarah Evans Michael 24 June 2021 Christian Porter rape allegation dossier revealed The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 4 December 2021 McGowan Michael 11 June 2021 Court orders Christian Porter and lawyer Sue Chrysanthou to pay substantial legal costs of Jo Dyer The Guardian Retrieved 4 December 2021 Debelle Penelope 6 August 2021 Writers Week chief to leave after 2022 festival InDaily Retrieved 3 December 2021 Christian Porter rape allegation documents revealed The Sydney Morning Herald Fairfax Media 24 June 2021 Retrieved 25 June 2021 Exhibit 1 Dossier Letter PDF 1 8 MB PDF Federal Court of Australia Retrieved 25 June 2021 a b c d Mystery donors pay some of Christian Porter s legal fees www abc net au 14 September 2021 Retrieved 14 September 2021 a b c Porter Charles 13 September 2021 Statement of Registrable Interests PDF Register of Members Interests 46th Parliament 17 Maiden Samantha 14 September 2021 The mystery trust contributing to Christian Porter s legal fees new com au Retrieved 15 September 2021 Maiden Samantha Gould Courtney Christian Porter reveals constant abuse in statement following his resignation News com au Archived from the original on 19 September 2021 Retrieved 19 September 2021 Doran Matthew 20 October 2021 Government blocks bid to investigate Christian Porter over legal fee donation ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 24 October 2021 Bath Gemma 21 October 2021 A disgraceful shameful moment This week we witnessed exactly why we need a Federal ICAC MamaMia Retrieved 24 October 2021 Coalition s protection of Porter defies logic and belief The Canberra Times 21 October 2021 Retrieved 24 October 2021 Maley Jacqueline 23 October 2021 A blind trust Certainly the government is keeping voters blind as to Porter s secret donors The Age Fairfax Media Retrieved 24 October 2021 Lillywhite Serena 21 October 2021 The government s move to block investigation of Porter donations is a nail in the coffin of integrity in politics The Guardian Retrieved 24 October 2021 Christian Porter to be formally asked to explain declaration that blind trust helped pay his legal fees the Guardian 1 November 2021 Retrieved 6 November 2021 External links edit nbsp Media related to Christian Porter at Wikimedia Commons Christian Porter v ABC Federal Court of Australia online file Official website Parliament of Australia Preceded byJudi Moylan Member for Pearce2013 2022 Succeeded byTracey Roberts Political offices Preceded byKaren Andrews Minister for Industry Innovation and Science2021 Succeeded byAngus Taylor Preceded byKelly O Dwyer Minister for Industrial Relations2019 2021 Succeeded byMichaelia Cash Preceded byGeorge Brandis Attorney General for Australia2017 2021 Preceded byScott Morrison Minister for Social Services2015 2017 Succeeded byDan Tehan Parliament of Western Australia Preceded byTrevor Sprigg Member for Murdoch2008 District abolished District established Member for Bateman2008 2013 Succeeded byMatt Taylor Political offices Preceded byJim McGinty Attorney General of Western Australia2008 2012 Succeeded byMichael Mischin Preceded byColin Barnett Treasurer of Western Australia2010 2012 Succeeded byColin Barnett Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Christian Porter amp oldid 1219931239, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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