James McGrath (Australian politician)


James McGrath is an Australian politician and Senator for Queensland since 2014. He is a member of the Liberal National Party of Queensland and sits with the Liberal Party in federal parliament.

Early life

McGrath was born in Toowoomba and went to Nambour State High School, also the alma mater of other politicians such as prominent Labor members Kevin Rudd and Wayne Swan. He graduated from Griffith University with a Bachelor of Laws and from the Queensland University of Technology with a Master of Laws. He was admitted as a solicitor and worked as an articled clerk in a legal firm before working with the Queensland Parliamentary Ombudsman between 1999 and 2001. McGrath is a former political strategist who worked with Lynton Crosby on Boris Johnson's 2008 London mayoral campaign until June 2008 when he was endorsed by the Liberal Party of Australia after saying of Afro-Caribbean immigrants, "let them go if they don't like it here." The Sydney Morning Herald reported that McGrath was sacked from this position.

Politics

Between 2009 and 2010, McGrath was the deputy federal director of the Liberal Party of Australia. He was campaign director for the Liberal National Party and the Country Liberal Party between 2010 and 2012, during which the LNP recorded the largest ever electoral victory in the state of Queensland.

Senate

McGrath was elected to the Senate at the 2013 federal election. In 2014, he delivered his maiden speech, calling for the GST rate to rise to 15 per cent, federal health and education departments to be abolished, youth radio station Triple J and ABC to be privatised and defended people's right to say "hurtful and bigoted and stupid and dumb things".
McGrath assisted in toppling both Conservative leader Tony Abbott, and Moderate leader, Malcolm Turnbull. The night before Turnbull 'rolled' Abbott, McGrath joined the dinner with a close group of plotters. McGrath was even labelled by some as Turnbull's 'key numbers man'. During the Channel 7 election coverage, Australian radio broadcaster Alan Jones engaged McGrath in a heated debate. Jones accused McGrath of being ‘too panicked’ and had taken the LNP down the path of Labor by supporting Turnbull. Jones told McGrath: ‘There are a lot of bed-wetters in the Liberal Party and you seem to be the captain of the bed-wetters.’
Under Turnbull, McGrath was rewarded with a promotion to assistant minister to the Prime Minister. He served as Assistant Minister to the Prime Minister in the Turnbull Government from September 2015 to August 2018, and Assistant Minister to the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection from February to July 2016.
Having supported Malcolm Turnbull in the 2015 leadership spill, McGrath reversed his support for Turnbull in 2018. Consequently, he resigned from his executive position on 22 August 2018. Mcgrath was not promoted back into the outer ministry following his rebellion against Turnbull and the subsequent Morrison Government.

Controversy

In 2008, McGrath ‘resigned’ from Boris Johnson's mayoral campaign for allegedly 'racist' comments. McGarth was asked if the election of a right-wing conservative might trigger a 'mass exodus of older Caribbean migrants' and he replied that ' go if they don't like it here'.
In 2011, McGrath was revealed to have paid a disgruntled Labor staffer for dirt files on government MPs. McGrath orchestrated the research through disgruntled Labor staffer, Rovert Hough. In sum, $3,075 was given to Hough to research the file. The sheet organised by McGrath included information on politicians sex lives, sexual promiscuity, drinking habits, health matters and family breakdowns. The dirt sheet even included details of the schools of the children of government MPs. Though McGrath was merely reprimanded for his actions, there were strong calls for him to be sacked for his involvement in commissioning the research.
On 5 October 2019, Senator McGrath posted a picture on his Facebook page with the caption "Car 1. Flock of cockatoos 0." The picture depicted a dead and mangled cockatoo in the roof rack of a vehicle, presumably Senator McGrath's. This led to widespread condemnation online. After being alerted to the post, the RSPCA Queensland spokesman Micheal Beatty said that the post was ‘grossly insensitive and completely juvenile’.
It was soon revealed that this was not the first post of its kind by the senator, who in 2007 posted a picture of two dead birds caught in the grill of a car with the caption "I think dinner tonight has been sorted thanks to my bullbar. Suggestions for how to cook the roadkill?" . In other posts he has suggested hitting as many as six kangaroos in a single evening and has referred to cockatoos as "menaces" and that "Anyone who thinks cockatoos are cute needs their head read by a suitably qualified medical professional" .
Senator McGrath later updated the original caption suggesting that the context of the post had been "missed" and that the post was highlighting "the dangers faced by drivers" in the country.