Bridget McKenzie called a press conference on Monday to play down her own article from that morning.Credit:Alex Ellinghausen
But senior Nationals sources,who requested anonymity,contradicted Littleproud,saying a recommendation in a McKenzie-led inquiry intoQantas last year called for new policies “including potential divestiture powers to remedy any misuse of market power”.
This recommendation was signed off by shadow cabinet,the sources said,raising doubt about Littleproud’s attempt to distance the Coalition from the policy.
Some of McKenzie’s Liberal colleagues were surprised to read heropinion article in the AFR that argueda government competition review would fail if it did not look at divestiture,which could force Qantas to sell its budget arm Jetstar to bring down airfares.
Hours after the article was published,Littleproud said the Coalition had not endorsed McKenzie’s idea as policy in an implicit rebuke to his senator.
Credit:Matt Golding
By 11.45am,McKenzie was insisting the Coalition had not changed its position,and claiming she had always opposed taking Qantas apart. “In my opinion piece in theAFR,that I hope you have all read,I explicitly rule out needing to break up Jetstar and Qantas,” McKenzie said at a press conference.
That disclaimer does not appear in her original article. It argues that Treasurer Jim Chalmers will have “failed another reform opportunity unless he deals with divestiture as a measure to ensure consumers’ interests are protected,and not at the mercy of the entrenched duopoly”.