Barnaby Joyce urged to take leave after 'embarrassing himself'

Kat Wong
AAP
Barnaby Joyce is now facing pressure from within the Coalition to take leave after the release of a video of him lying on a footpath in Canberra.

Barnaby Joyce has been urged to take leave after the former deputy prime minister “embarrassed himself” when he was filmed lying on a Canberra pavement.

Video published online by The Daily Mail showed the shadow cabinet MP lying on the ground speaking loudly into his phone in the inner suburb of Braddon after falling off a planter box.

Mr Joyce’s future on the opposition front bench has been under a cloud and while his position is unchanged, his Nationals leader David Littleproud confirmed on Wednesday the member for New England had been asked to take leave.

Sign up to The Nightly's newsletters.

Get the first look at the digital newspaper, curated daily stories and breaking headlines delivered to your inbox.

Email Us
By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.

“This wasn’t normal behaviour and Barnaby’s embarrassed himself and his family,” he told Seven’s Sunrise.

“He needs to make sure he addresses this and the best way, we believe, is for him to take a break to get himself sorted and then come back when he’s done that.

“I’ve strongly encouraged him to take that leave ... and to give comfort and confidence to both myself and to Peter Dutton that he has addressed these issues.”

Barnaby Joyce is seen lying on the side of the road in Braddon, Canberra
Barnaby Joyce was caught on camera lying on the side of the road in Braddon, Canberra. Credit: Daily Mail/Daily Mail

Mr Joyce, 56, who is the opposition veteran’s affairs spokesman, has admitted to making a “big mistake” and blamed his behaviour on a mixture of alcohol and prescription drugs, adding “there’s no excuse for it”.

Mr Littleproud said Mr Joyce was being supported.

“These are deeply personal circumstances that Barnaby needs to address and it’s beyond the medication,” Mr Littleproud said.

“I don’t want to overreach into people’s lives - that’s not my job - but my job is to create the environment, to know he is supported.”.

Asking on Monday if he was angry someone filmed the incident rather than helping him, Mr Joyce said “that’s a question for them”.

“To me, the Good Samaritan was the Indian taxi driver who pulled over as I was walking home and said ‘do you need a lift mate?’, which I obviously did,” he said.

Comments

Latest Edition

The Nightly cover for 07-02-2025

Latest Edition

Edition Edition 7 February 20257 February 2025

Vets unleash fury at former ADF chief over stripped medals.