今日吃瓜papers Run Front Page Transphobic Clive Palmer Ad

今日吃瓜papers Run Front Page Transphobic Clive Palmer Ad
Image: Photo: Lukas Coch/AAP

The Newcastle Herald has apologised for running a transphobic ad from the Clive Palmer Trumpet of Patriots party on the front page, after significant backlash from editorial staff and human rights groups.

The ad, published on Tuesday, was explicitly transphobic, reading: 鈥淲e must stop confusing children in schools. Give them a safe and normal environment to grow and develop in and let them decide who they are when they become adults.鈥

The same ad ran across other papers, including聽The Australian and The Age.

“The ads were designed to do nothing more than stoke division and provoke outrage 鈥渇rom a fringe political actor desperately looking for attention鈥, Equality Australia CEO Anna Brown the Sydney Morning Herald on Tuesday.

鈥淭hey do nothing to inform debate or promote any understanding of what are complex issues that affect the most vulnerable people in our community.”

The publisher of the Newcastle Herald, Australian Community Media, has also removed the ad from digital publication and issued an apology to readers, saying that the ad did not align with its company values.

鈥淎CM and the Herald apologise unreservedly to our readers, the transgender community and to the Newcastle community more broadly for any hurt and distress caused by the publication of the advertisement,” the statement read.

鈥淲e support freedom of speech and a diversity of views, but on this occasion we let our readers and our staff down.鈥

Nine entertainment defends decision to run ad

Nine entertainment, which publishes The Age, stood by their decision, writing a letter to staff on Wednesday, arguing that rejecting a political advertisement could lead to allegations that the newspaper endorsed what it published.

鈥淚t is abundantly clear in any political ad that it is authorised by a representative of a political party registered with the AEC and is not reflective of any editorial position,鈥 the letter said.

鈥淚f we were to start picking and choosing which platforms of a registered political party were acceptable, that could imply endorsement of any political ads we did choose to run, and would insert our organisation into the political debate as a participant rather than observer.鈥

Editorial staff opposed the ad, running a story above it calling Palmer a “persistent wart on the foot of Australian politics”, but readers say the gesture rang hollow when the paper was willing to accept his money in the first place.

The Trumpet of Patriots also ran banners across the front pages of the Australian, Daily Telegraph,聽and several papers from Western Australia聽on Monday, one reading: 鈥淲e don鈥檛 need to be welcomed to our own country,鈥 while the other said: 鈥淭oo much immigration destroys infrastructure.鈥

It’s the start of what will surely become a common, exhausting sight, as Palmer begins his advertising blitz for the upcoming federal election.

The billionaire has already pledged to spend more than the $100 million spent by his previous political party in the 2022 federal election, seemingly taking a very Trump-ian approach to advertising.

The Republican Party reportedly spent more than $65 million on televised ads attacking trans people during Trump’s election campaign.

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