This one’s a “charlatan”. That one’s a “child in a man’s body”. When, for the love of God, is the Midwinter Ball , so I can get my Hollywood fashion critic on and find politics momentarily interesting?(Which reminds me, Barnaby Joyce, I still haven’t forgiven you for that diabolical hat-tuxedo-stockwhip ensemble from 2017.
A length of rope flatters nobody. I would’ve left you on the spot and cited “provocation” in the divorce papers.) Meanwhile, politics.
Image: Marija Ercegovac. Credit: There comes a point where you get the strong sense that your subject’s best days are behind them. And so, it was with mounting dismay – but also familiarity, because #nostalgia – that I read former prime minister Paul Keating’s (predictably insulting, but relatively dull) assessment of Opposition Leader Peter Dutton as “a charlatan” and “a denialist now seeking to camouflage his long-held denialism in an industrial fantasy [nuclear power]“.
“Only the most wicked and cynical of individuals would foist such a blight on an earnest community like Australia,” he added. And lest anybody think Dutton himself was above a spot of casual mudslinging , he also spent the weekend accusing Prime Minister Anthony Albanese of being a fraud, an appeaser and a “child in a man’s body”, after the latter promised to pull rank on premiers opposed to the construction of nuclear power plants in their state. As anyone who has accidentally tuned into question time will a.