The Stalking of Julia Gillard: How the Media and Team Rudd Brought Down the Prime Minister
By (Author) Kerry-Anne Walsh
Allen & Unwin
Allen & Unwin
1st September 2014
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Central / national / federal government
994.072092
Winner of Australian Book Industry Awards 2014 (Australia)
320
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 24mm
286g
When Julia Gillard took the reins of the Australian Labor Party on 24 June 2010 she did so with the goodwill of most of her party and a fawning Canberra press gallery. But when she announced in February 2011 that her government would introduce a carbon pricing scheme, Kevin Rudd and his small team of malcontents were already in lock-step with key Canberra and interstate journalists in a drive to push her out of the prime ministerial chair. Never has a prime minister been so assiduously stalked. Cast as a political liar and policy charlatan, Julia Gillard was also mercilessly and relentlessly lampooned for her hair, clothes, accent, her arse, even the way she walks and talks. This is the story about one of the most extraordinary episodes in recent Australian political history. It focuses on Team Rudd and the media's treatment of its slow-death campaign of destabilisation, with its disastrous effect on Gillard and the government's functioning. It is about a politician who was never given a fair go; not in the media, not by Rudd, not by some in her own caucus.
Kerry-Anne Walsh worked for 25 years in the Canberra press gallery, as chief political correspondent for publications such as the Daily Telegraph, the Bulletin magazine and the Sun Herald. She also wrote for a string of international publications, and worked in both radio and TV. She is a regular political commentator on Sky News, Radio New Zealand and the ABC.