My goodness. Gerard Henderson
on Lateline is livid, shouting and being nonsensical about Barry O'Farrell being a victim of the ICAC process.
What is it with much of the Right in Australia with their acquired inability to deal with the rhetorical use of "truth" and "truthfulness" with care? First, it was Julia Gillard and their insistence that an (alleged) broken promise was actually a deliberate lie. (True, Gillard compounded the problem by wrongly conceding that her carbon pricing scheme was actually a broken promise - a tax - but still the Right wing echo chamber latched onto "lie" and never let go despite the lack of evidence.)
Now it seems that Gerard Henderson has a poor grip on matters of "truth". The journalist was saying that O'Farrell did not tell the truth, on the not unreasonable grounds that he today resigned when he admitted he must have given wrong evidence under oath to the commission yesterday. "No", said an extremely agitated Gerard (I'm paraphrasing): "you have no evidence to make the accusation of his untruthfulness and it's outrageous that you are - it's all explained by his having a poor memory."
Gerard, let's take this carefully:
1. Giving detailed evidence under oath that something did not occur, and that he surely would have known if it had occurred, and then agreeing the next day that it now looks certain that it
did occur, means the first evidence was
not true;
2. It is not a distortion of English to say that the first evidence which was given was "
untruthful";
3. What you and O'Farrell are arguing is that it was
not deliberately untruthful;
4. I believe if I check the transcript tomorrow that the the journalist you were shouting at and virtually telling to shut up was not even insisting that she believed O'Farrell had been
deliberately untruthful.
5. There are, obviously, possible grounds for people to be inclined to disbelieve O'Farrell. [
Update:
even Andrew Bolt says that. Are you getting out the whip to attack him?] Whether or not you think people who think he was dishonest have formed a fair judgement is up to you to dispute, but don't get all high and mighty about how it is impossible for anyone to disbelieve O'Farrell's explanation. People are disbelieved in court all the time, and it's not treated as some inherent outrage against justice.
6. Even without believing him to have been deliberately dishonest, his performance raises pretty big questions about his competence and reliability, and it was without doubt a major embarrassment that even you seem to concede left him with little option other than to resign;
7. As many have said, the allegation had been around for months; O'Farrell had time to check, and if he could find no evidence, he still would have been wise to give evidence of no recollection of the gift and emphasise that if it had been made it did not win any contract for the lobbyist anyway. Sure, having "no recollection" from a politician does usually come across as weasel words of convenience (as it did with Sinodinos,) but if that's the truth, then it can be wise to use it. Better than being emphatic about how you would have remembered if it had happened.
As with Andrew Bolt, O'Farrell's problem with the law was one which was self created, but at least he is man enough to take it on the chin and not complain (unlike Gerard, and Bolt regarding his own case.)
Update: here is the grand low point of Gerard Henderson's political pundit career:
GERARD HENDERSON: Yeah, but that's a very unfair implication. You're
suggesting the former premier may have given misleading evidence.
There's no evidence to support that. That's your theory based on sitting
in the room. He may ...
KATE MCCLYMONT: Gerard, he's resigned. He's resigned.
GERARD HENDERSON: Yes, because he said he forgot. So ...
KATE MCCLYMONT: No, no, he didn't resign because he said he forgot.
GERARD HENDERSON: No. No, no, he said he forgot. You're suggesting that he didn't tell the truth. That's what you're suggesting.
KATE MCCLYMONT: Yes, I am suggesting that.
GERARD
HENDERSON: Well that's a very serious allegation to make with no
evidence. You have no evidence that he didn't tell the truth. That's an
outrageous allegation to make.