Daniel Andrews: New book by Sumeyya Ilanbey on Victoria premier

Daniel Andrews puts colleagues who don’t agree with him into ‘Dan’s freezer’ – refusing to take their calls or answer text messages, an explosive new book claims.

Sumeyya Ilanbey’s biography, simply titled Daniel Andrews, reveals the story behind his rise from ‘factional hack’ to Victorian leader and the ‘scandals and dramas’ along the way. 

Labor insiders shed extraordinary light on Mr Andrews’ relationship with his then-NSW counterpart Gladys Berejiklian, his ‘ruthlessness’ as a ‘command-and-control’ leader – and reveal he planned to quit ahead of the upcoming state election. 

Daily Mail Australia contacted Mr Andrews for comment on the claims made in the book.

Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews (left) is pictured with his wife Catherine in Fitzroy, Melbourne, Friday, October 22, 2021

‘Dan’s freezer’

Former colleagues of Mr Andrews claim the Victorian premier is ‘loyal to no one but himself’ and that he cuts off his political allies if they don’t see eye-to-eye. 

‘When you tell him what he doesn’t want to hear, he freezes you. He won’t call, he may not take their call, might denigrate them in a meeting,’ a Labor insider said. 

Ilanbey wrote there was ‘rarely a confrontation’ between Mr Andrews and his colleagues, ‘he just stops returning phone calls’. 

‘He never f***ing responds. Never returns a text message unless it’s something that he needs. It’s just hysterical,’ another former colleague said. 

Victorian Labor figures can be in ‘Dan’s freezer’ for weeks, months – or even years, according to the book.  

‘No one has been spared from the freezer – not even those who have shown him the greatest loyalty,’ Ilanbey wrote. 

She claimed Mr Andrews has a unique ability to ‘steamroll’ anyone who tries to oppose his ‘vision for government’. 

‘His is a command-and-control leadership … Daniel Andrews runs everything. The power is vested in his, and his inner sanctum’s hands, and those who dare stick their head above the parapet will soon find themselves in the freezer,’ she wrote.   

None of the political allies ‘put in the freezer’ are named in the book – nor are there positions. 

Covid and Gladys Berejiklian       

The gradual ending of Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews' (right) once-close relationship with his NSW counterpart Gladys Berejiklian (left) is laid bare in a new book

The gradual ending of Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews’ (right) once-close relationship with his NSW counterpart Gladys Berejiklian (left) is laid bare in a new book

Mr Andrews was furious with the NSW leader, according to the biography, during June 2021 – when the Covid crisis began to spiral out of control in Sydney.

The premiers cooperated at the start of the pandemic when the political opposites tackled what they saw as then prime minister Scott Morrison’s lack of urgency.

On March 13, 2020, a National Cabinet was formed by Australia’s federal, state and territory governments to deal with the pandemic, but it took just nine days for the two biggest states to set their own agenda – closing all but essential services. 

But the days of Mr Andrews and Ms Berejiklian working in tandem did not survive an outbreak in Sydney in June 2021 of the more virulent Deltra strain of Covid-19. 

Mr Andrews berated Ms Berejiklian’s ‘soft approach’ to the new wave of infections during his daily press conferences and called for a ‘ring of steel’ around Sydney to prevent the virus leaking to other states. 

But Ms Berejiklian ignored the advice – and was praised by Mr Morrison for doing so – and the disease spread, just as Mr Andrews had warned. 

Former minister Martin Pakula, a colleague of Mr Andrews, insisted the relationship between the NSW and Victoria premiers did not completely fall apart, but Mr Andrews was ‘pretty ‘p***ed off’ at the time. 

‘I think that was primarily because Daniel felt, understandably, that Victoria had been unnecessarily exposed by the kind of cavalier approach NSW took to Delta in the early days,’ Mr Pakula told Ilanbey.

Plans to step down ditched 

Daniel Andrews (left) and Scott Morrison arrive to Remembrance Day 2021 Service at the Shrine of Remembrance, in Melbourne, Thursday, November 11, 2021

Daniel Andrews (left) and Scott Morrison arrive to Remembrance Day 2021 Service at the Shrine of Remembrance, in Melbourne, Thursday, November 11, 2021

Poll

Do Daniel Andrews and the Labor Party deserve to win the upcoming Victorian state election on November 26?

  • Yes, they’ve been a good government over the past eight years. 0 votes
  • No, they’ve been terrible. Kick them out. 0 votes

One of the most surprising revelations in the book is that Mr Andrews had always planned to step down before the 2022 election.  

‘Andrews assumed – based purely on the way modern politics works – he would not have been re-elected for a third term,’ Ilanbey writes.

She says he changed his mind when Labor had such a resounding victory in 2018. 

Then ‘he realised he could win a third term and see himself in bronze alongside other long-serving premiers outside Parliament’s Treasury Place’. 

‘Scandals and drama’ 

From the hotel quarantine bungle and branch stacking to the Red Shirts rort, Victorian Labor has been plagued by scandal under the leadership of Mr Andrews.  

‘There are scandals and dramas (the Premier) should have avoided, and if he had been thinking, he would have,’ one former Labor MP told Ilanbey. 

‘He’s been really good at riding out scandals. The question sometimes is should they have been scandals in the first place?’  

SCANDALS THAT HAVE ROCKED THE ANDREWS GOVERNMENT 

ADEM SOMYUREK BULLYING

* In May 2015, small business, innovation and trade minister Adem Somyurek was stood down from cabinet after his then chief of staff Dimity Paul accused him of bullying, which he denied.

* He resigned in July 2015 after an investigation by the secretary of the Department of Premier and Cabinet.

PATCH AND TED

* In November 2016, training and skills minister Steve Herbert resigned for using his taxpayer-funded driver to chauffeur his two dogs, Patch and Ted, between his Melbourne and Trentham homes.

* Mr Herbert told parliament he had organised for his dogs to be driven without him, but didn’t know how many times because the trips weren’t logged.

* He paid back $192.80 in travel expenses for the trips and donated $1000 to a Woodend animal shelter.

* Mr Herbert left parliament in 2017.

SECOND HOME ALLOWANCE

* In 2017 former Speaker Telmo Languiller and his deputy Don Nardella were involved in rorting an allowance for country members, prompting their resignations.

* Mr Languiller represented Tarneit, but claimed $38,000 to live in Queenscliff in 2016.

* He repaid the money and did not recontest the election.

* Mr Nardella claimed the allowance since 2010, first living in Ballarat, then Ocean Grove.

* He initially quit Labor rather than agree to Premier Daniel Andrews’ demand to pay back $98,000.

* Mr Nardella later agreed to a payment plan and a $16,000 lump sum.

* The scandal resulted in the creation of the tribunal meant to take pay issues out of the control of MPs themselves.

* In April 2019, former Victorian assistant treasurer Robin Scott paid back $60,000 in second-home allowances he unknowingly received between 2014 and 2016.

RED SHIRTS

* Labor misused $388,000 in parliamentary allowances to pay political campaign staff during the 2014 election.

* About 21 past and present Labor MPs breached parliamentary guidelines when staff were diverted to help campaign for members.

* The rort was subject to ombudsman and police investigations spanning more than 12 months, and no criminal charges were laid.

PRINTING CASH FOR STACKS

* Upper house MP Khalil Eideh’s electoral office was accused of misusing printing allowances to fund party branch stacking in 2017.

* A parliamentary-wide audit found questionable invoices, which were referred to the Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission, and his office office was later shut.

* He resigned as deputy president in October 2017, then retired at the 2018 election.

* IBAC charged four people, including father and son Justin and Umberto Mammarella, whose matters have been finalised this year.

JANE GARRETT AND THE CFA

* Former emergency services minister Jane Garrett quit cabinet rather than sign off on a controversial firefighters’ union pay deal that saw the premier’s intervention in 2016.

* She then lost her pre-selection bid for the state’s upper house after deciding to leave the marginal seat of Brunswick at the 2018 state election.

* She went on to serve Eastern Victoria in the Legislative Council for nearly four years before her death on July 2 this year from breast cancer aged 49.

MODERATE FACTION BRANCH STACKING

* In 2020, Mr Somyurek was accused of handing over cash and using parliamentary employees to create fake members to amass political power.

* He was the first of four ministers to lose their portfolios, with Robin Scott and Marlene Kairouz stepping down, then a year later Luke Donnellan.

* A joint ombudsman and IBAC inquiry uncovered unethical and inappropriate behaviour within Labor, including bullying, taxpayer-funded jobs for unqualified people to undertake factional work, rampant nepotism and forging signatures.

* Adverse findings were made against Mr Somyurek and Ms Kairouz, but neither will face criminal charges.

* Mr Andrews apologised for the “disgraceful” behaviour and promised to implement all 21 recommendations of the Operation Watts report, plus additional legislative reforms for all parties.

Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews (left) is pictured at National Cabinet with then prime minister Scott Morrison (centre) and then NSW premier Glady Berejiklian (right)

Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews (left) is pictured at National Cabinet with then prime minister Scott Morrison (centre) and then NSW premier Glady Berejiklian (right)

Factional brawler 

In summing up her heavily researched book, Ilanbey wrote that at times of crisis, Mr Andrews’ has always acted as though there’s nothing to see. 

‘And then, when things get really tough, he reverts to his roots as a factional brawler: fierce and unforgiving,’ she said. 

But she wrote that his time as premier may be up in the Victorian state election on November 26. 

‘These defining qualities of Andrews, who has always balanced ideology with an acute sense of what the mainstream will tolerate, may yet be the Achilles heel that enables the fall of his government.’

Daniel Andrews by Sumeyya Ilanbey, published by Allen & Unwin, is available in bookshops and online now 

Sumeyya Ilanbey's new book, Daniel Andrews (pictured) is available now in bookshops and for download

Sumeyya Ilanbey’s new book, Daniel Andrews (pictured) is available now in bookshops and for download

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