Andrew Bolt
Andrew Bolt | |
---|---|
Born | Adelaide, South Australia, Australia |
26 September 1959
Residence | Malvern, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
Nationality | Australian |
Occupation | Journalist, editor, columnist, TV host, radio host |
Years active | 1990s – present |
Employer | Herald Sun, Network Ten, News Corp Australia |
Television | The Bolt Report |
Andrew Bolt (born 26 September 1959[1]) is an Australian journalist, newspaper columnist, radio commentator, blogger and television host. He is a columnist and former associate editor of the Melbourne-based Herald Sun. He has appeared on the Nine Network, Melbourne Talk Radio, ABC Television, Network Ten and local radio. In 2005, Bolt released a compilation of newspaper columns in a book entitled Still Not Sorry: The Best of Andrew Bolt.[2] From 2011, he has hosted The Bolt Report on Network Ten.[3] Bolt is described as a conservative but rejects the label "right-wing".[4] Bolt is known for his outspoken remarks on various political and social issues.
Contents
Background
Bolt was born in Adelaide, South Australia, to newly arrived Dutch migrants. He spent his childhood in remote rural areas, including Tarcoola, South Australia, while his father worked as a schoolteacher and principal. After completing secondary school, Bolt travelled and worked overseas before returning to Australia and starting an arts degree at the University of Adelaide.[5] He left university to take up a cadetship at The Age, a Melbourne broadsheet newspaper. He worked for The Age in various roles, including working as a sports writer, prior to joining The Herald. His time as a reporter included a stint as the newspaper's Asia correspondent, based first in Hong Kong and later in Bangkok.[1] He worked for the Hawke Government on two election campaigns.[1]
Media career
Bolt has had various roles on numerous TV networks, radio stations and in the print media.
Bolt's column and articles are published by News Corp Australia in the Herald Sun and his column is published in The Daily Telegraph, The Advertiser in Adelaide, Northern Territory News and The Courier-Mail.
Internet
In May 2005, Bolt established a web-only forum in which readers could offer comments, feedback and questions in response to his columns. He posted some of these comments on the Herald Sun website. The forum changed to a more conventional blog format in July 2006.
Radio
He hosted a daily radio show, Breakfast with Steve Price and Andrew Bolt, on the former MTR 1377.
He was previously a regular guest on 3AW in Melbourne.
He appeared weekly on 2GB in Sydney for The Clash with union leader Paul Howes and, as of February 2013, appears weekly on 2GB on Nights with Steve Price.[6]
Television
From 2001 to 2011 he was a regular guest on Insiders. Until 2011, he appeared every Monday on the Nine Network's breakfast television program Today to discuss the news of the day. Bolt has been a fill-in panelist on The Project and from May 2011 hosts the TV show, The Bolt Report, both on the Network Ten. He has also appeared on the ABC television show Q&A and ABC Radio National Late Night Live with Phillip Adams.[7]
Controversies, Court actions and findings
Leak of intelligence document
In June 2003, Bolt published an article criticising Andrew Wilkie in which he quoted from a classified intelligence document written by Wilkie as an intelligence analyst for the Office of National Assessments. It was claimed, but never proven, that someone in Foreign Minister Alexander Downer's office had leaked the document to Bolt.[8] A spokesperson for the Australian Federal Police said that they did not have any evidence to identify the culprit.[9][10]
Stolen Generations
Bolt has frequently clashed with Robert Manne, Professor of Politics at La Trobe University, about the Stolen Generation. Bolt claims there were no large-scale removals of children "for purely racist reasons". After Bolt challenged Manne to "name just 10" children stolen for racial reasons,[11] Manne replied with fifty names, which Bolt in response said included children rescued from sexual abuse and removed for other humanitarian reasons.[12] Manne argued that Bolt and others were engaged in historical denialism despite "a mountain of documentary evidence and eyewitness testimony".[13] Bolt noted many instances of contemporary Aboriginal children being left "in grave danger that we would not tolerate for children of any other race because we are so terrified of the 'stolen generations' myth."[14]
Defamation case
In 2002, magistrate Jelena Popovic was awarded $246,000 damages for defamation after suing Bolt and the publishers of the Herald Sun over a 13 December 2000 column in which he claimed that she had "hugged two drug traffickers she let walk free".[15] Popovic stated that she had in fact shaken their hands to congratulate them on having completed a rehabilitation program.[16] The jury found that what Bolt wrote was untrue, unfair and inaccurate, but cleared him of malice.[17]
Bolt emerged from the Supreme Court after the jury verdict, stating that his column had been accurate and that the mixed verdict was a victory for free speech. His statement outside the court was harshly criticised by Supreme Court judge Bernard Bongiorno, who later overturned the jury's decision, ruling that Bolt had not acted reasonably because he did not seek a response from Popovic before writing the article and, in evidence given during the trial, showed he did not care whether or not the article was defamatory.[15] Justice Bongiorno ordered that Ms Popovic be awarded $210,000 in aggravated compensatory damages, $25,000 in punitive damages and $11,500 interest. The judge stated that the damages awarded were significantly influenced by Bolt's "disingenuous" comments he had made outside court and the Herald Sun's reporting of the jury's decision.[18] The Court of Appeal later reversed the $25,000 punitive damages, though it upheld the defamation finding, describing Bolt's conduct as "at worst, dishonest and misleading and at best, grossly careless".[19]
Racial Discrimination case
In September 2010, nine individuals commenced legal proceedings in the Federal Court against Bolt and the Herald Sun over two posts on Bolt's blog. The nine sued over posts titled "It's so hip to be black", "White is the New Black" and "White Fellas in the Black". The articles suggested it was fashionable for "fair-skinned people" of diverse ancestry to choose Aboriginal racial identity for the purposes of political and career clout.[20] The applicants claimed the posts breached the Racial Discrimination Act. They sought an apology, legal costs, and a gag on republishing the articles and blogs, and "other relief as the court deems fit". They did not seek damages.[21] On 28 September 2011, Bolt was found to have contravened section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act.[22][23]
Personal life
Bolt is married to Sally Morrell, a fellow columnist at the Herald Sun. They have three children. Bolt is an agnostic.[24]
See also
References
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External links
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