Australian PM Malcolm Turnbull mimics Trump in humorous speech to press ball

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June 15, 2017

Prime minister recorded making jokes about US president’s alleged links to Russia, his views on fake news and poor poll ratings

CANBERRA – The Australian Prime Minister, Malcolm Turnbull, has been recorded mimicking Donald Trump and joking about his poll numbers, his attacks on fake news and his alleged links to Russia.

June 15, 2017

Prime minister recorded making jokes about US president’s alleged links to Russia, his views on fake news and poor poll ratings

CANBERRA – The Australian Prime Minister, Malcolm Turnbull, has been recorded mimicking Donald Trump and joking about his poll numbers, his attacks on fake news and his alleged links to Russia.

Leaked video and audio of Turnbull’s off-the-record speech – which was also self-deprecating about his own poor opinion poll ratings – shows him impersonating the US president’s unique oratorical style.

Thigh splits and political whips at Canberra's Midwinter Ball.

In his speech to the Canberra press gallery’s Midwinter Ball, the Australian equivalent of the White House correspondents’ dinner, Turnbull says: “The Donald and I, we are winning and winning in the polls. We are winning so much, we are winning, we are winning like we have never won before. We are winning in the polls. We are, we are. Not the fake polls. Not the fake polls. They’re the ones we’re not winning in.

“We’re winning in the real polls.

“You know, the online polls. They are so easy to win. I know that. Did you know that? I kind of know that. They are so easy to win. I have this Russian guy.

“Believe me it’s true, it’s true.”

Speeches at the press gallery Midwinter Ball are intended to be light-hearted. For a decade, the speeches made at the dinner have been widely regarded as being off-the-record. However, the most senior press gallery journalist, Channel Nine’s Laurie Oakes, routinely refuses to attend the ball and has consistently said he is not bound by the off-the-record convention.

He played leaked audio, and a small snippet of video uploaded on social media, in a news piece on Thursday.

Turnbull and Trump had a famously difficult phone call after the president entered the White House. A furious president ended a call early, angry over a deal struck by the Obama administration for America to resettle refugees from Australia’s offshore detention islands. The US president reportedly told Turnbull he’d spoken with four other world leaders – including the Russian president, Vladimir Putin – and said “this was the worst call by far”.

In May the two men met for an apparently convivial meeting at a dinner on the USS Intrepid aircraft carrier in New York to mark the 75th anniversary of the Battle of the Coral Sea. Impersonating Trump at the press dinner, Turnbull joked: “It was beautiful. It was the most beautiful putting-me-at-ease ever.”

Speaking in a 3AW radio interview shortly after the speech was leaked, Turnbull said the speech was light-hearted and affectionate.

'We're not babies': Trump says bad blood in call with Turnbull was exaggerated

“Well it [the ball] is a great tradition, it’s a big charity fundraiser … and it is a good-humoured sort of roast really. The PM and the opposition leader give a speech and poke fun at themselves and often other politicians.

“My speech was light-hearted, affectionately light-hearted.”

Turnbull said he was disappointed elements of the speech had been leaked, given the convention that it is not reported. “I guess what this means is at the Midwinter Ball next year, I will read selected passages from budget paper No 2.

“It’s a breach of protocol and a breach of faith and all of those things but it’s light-hearted, affectionate and good-natured. And the butt of my jokes was myself.”

The prime minister said he wasn’t mocking the president. “It was more good-natured than that … It’s a stressful business politics, you’ve got to have fun.”

The US embassy in Canberra issued a statement, reiterating Turnbull’s position that the speech was not intended to mock. “We understand that last night’s event is equivalent to our own White House correspondents’ dinner. We take this with the good humour that was intended.”


Courtesy: The Guardian