Who is Christine Holgate and why is she in the news?

Christine Holgate came out swinging against the Prime Minister and Australia Post yesterday, but who is she and why is she dominating headlines?

Australia Posts new Managing Director & Group CEO Christine Holgate in Sydney, Tuesday, June 27, 2017.

Australia Posts new Managing Director & Group CEO Christine Holgate in Sydney, Tuesday, June 27, 2017. Source: AAP

Dressed in suffragette white, former Australia Post CEO Christine Holgate dropped bombshell after bombshell at a Senate inquiry on Tuesday. 

Her fierce criticisms of the Prime Minister and her former employer have saturated the news. The PM has since expressed “regret” for the “hurt” caused… but who is Christine Holgate and where did this story come from?

Who is Christine?

Christine Holgate is a British-Australian business executive who resigned from vitamin giant Blackmores in 2017 to become the first female chief executive of Australia Post.

In 2015, she became the first woman to win the 2015 CEO of the Year by CEO Magazine.

As an inaugural chairwoman of the ASEAN Australia council board, her appointment was supposedly based on her to capitalise on the potentials in the Asian markets.

As CEO of Australia Post, she was tasked with managing the modernisation of its e-commerce system.
Former Australia Post CEO Christine Holgate appears before a Senate inquiry at Parliament House in Canberra.
Former Australia Post CEO Christine Holgate appears before a Senate inquiry at Parliament House in Canberra. Source: AAP
She signed onto the company with a salary of $1.375 million, five times less than her male predecessor. 

Ms Holgate that under her tenure, the company’s earnings will start to grow again in 2022 after three years of going backwards.

She led during a colossal parcel boom during the pandemic, where profits were reported to have leapt by a stunning.

But she was when she was reported to have kept “close tabs” on the delivery of One Nation stubby holders to the Melbourne housing tower residents during lockdown.

The stubbies read ”I’ve got the guts to say what you’re thinking” and were mailed after Ms Hanson had labelled the residents “drug addicts” who “cannot speak English”.

How it started

Ms Holgate was forced to step aside as Australia Post CEO last October when it was revealed she purchased Cartier watches worth $20,000 in total for four senior executives.

She told Senates Estimates the watches had been a “reward” for securing a deal with the country’s largest banks in 2018. 

As part of the deal, Commonwealth Bank, Westpac and NAB $100 million a year to fund banking services in post office branches.

“It was all about a service called Bank@Post, and it was being threatened with closure … that would have meant 55 per cent of all communities in Australia had no access to financial services because the banks had already left," Ms Holgate told the ABC on Tuesday evening.
Scott Morrison has brushed off suggestions he threw former Australia Post chief executive Christine Holgate under the bus.
Scott Morrison has brushed off suggestions he threw former Australia Post chief executive Christine Holgate under the bus. Source: AAP
During the hearing, Ms Holgate emphasised she had not used taxpayers’ money. 

“We are a commercial organisation… We do not receive Australian government funding,” she said.

“We are a commercial organisation and it was… a recommendation from our Chair that these people get rewarded.”

Communications minister Paul Fletcher asked Ms Holgate to resign as CEO as he announced an investigation into Australia Post. 

An incensed Prime Minister Scott Morrison later repeated his minister’s request in Question Time, demanding that Ms Holgate step down.

“I was appalled, and it is disgraceful and not on,” he told Parliament of the spending.

“She has been instructed to stand aside. If she doesn’t wish to do that, she can go.”
Former Australia Post CEO Christine Holgate appears before a Senate inquiry into changes at Australia Post, at Parliament House in Canberra on Tuesday.
Former Australia Post CEO Christine Holgate appears before a Senate inquiry into changes at Australia Post, at Parliament House in Canberra on Tuesday. Source: AAP
Labor leader Anthony Albanese also chimed in at the time, claiming Ms Holgate’s position as Australia Post CEO was “untenable”.

“It is perfectly reasonable that Christine Holgate resign,” he said in November. 

When asked about the matter in the midst of the Senate Estimates session last October, he referenced Labor’s role in pushing the matter into the spotlight. 

“Christine Holgate gave evidence before the Senate yesterday. Without that evidence and without Labor's questioning, none of this would have come to light.” 

Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young told a Budget estimates hearing she understood why people were “pissed off” at Ms Holgate’s decision to buy watches during an economic recession.
Union leaders also slammed Ms Holgate’s decision.

"Whether it's watches in 2018 or big fat bonuses in the middle of a pandemic, the Australia Post board and its management are out of touch,” CPSU deputy national president Brooke Muscat said.

The investigation

The into the gifting of the Cartier watches in January.

It found the gifting of the watches by Ms Holgate did not amount to corruption or fraud but was “inconsistent with public expectations”.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison at a press conference at Parliament House in Canberra.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison at a press conference at Parliament House in Canberra. Source: AAP
The report also alleged the board of Australia Post did not approve the purchase of Cartier watches.

While it noted The Australia Post Board “has ultimate responsibility for internal controls with respect to reward and recognition at Australia Post”, it identified “no policy which supports gifts such as the watches being made to executives as a reward for high performance.”

It also alleged, “based on a preliminary review of a limited set of credit card usage records, it appears there are potentially other instances of credit card usage for charges that, although for lesser amounts than the expenditure on the Cartier watches, may also be inconsistent with public expectations and Australia Post’s policies.”

How it’s going

Ms Holgate did not hold back in her criticisms of the Prime Minister and her former company when she fronted the Senate inquiry yesterday.

She revealed she had been suicidal after being forced out as Australia Post boss.

"I lost my job, a job that I loved, because I was humiliated by our Prime Minister for committing no offence and then bullied by my chairman," she told the committee.
She alleged the chairman of Australia Post Lucio Di Bartolomeo unlawfully stood her down under the direction of the PM.

"I have done no wrong. Their bullying of me was far from over. I was subjected to a biased investigation and intimidated with constant threats of further allegations and criticism," Ms Holgate said.

In an interview with the ABC on Tuesday evening, she said the Prime Minister's remarks in parliament was "one of the worst acts of bullying I have ever witnessed".
The ex-Post chief said she was humiliated in a way no male public servant was subjected to.

"Do I believe it's partially a gender issue? You're absolutely right I do," Ms Holgate said.

The Prime Minister responded to a growing pressure that he apologise to Ms Holgate on Wednesday. 

Scott Morrison said he “regrets” the hurt he caused Christine Holgate and it wasn’t his intention.
He described his language as “strong” and said he made the comments during a “heated day in parliament”

“I appreciate she has gone through a difficult time. That is not something that I would have liked to have seen happen,” he told the .

Mr Morrison denies the issue was gendered and said it was purely “an issue of tax payers’ money”.

“The issue here was how taxpayers' funds were being used in a Government-owned company and as Prime Minister, I have to stand up for those standards and did,” he added.

He also rejected the view that his comments had forced Ms Holgate to resign.

"The position was that Christine Holgate would be able to stand aside while that review took place... That was a matter between her and the chairman."
Australia Post is yet to apologise to Ms Holgate. Mr Di Bartolomeo said while Ms Holgate had been “treated abysmally”, Australia Post did not plan to apologise to her.

“I believe the board and management did the right things by her. I don’t believe Australia Post owes her an apology.”

A day before the Senate inquiry began, Australia Post appointed Ms Holgate’s replacement, Woolworths supply chain boss Paul Graham. It was a move rebuked by inquiry chair Sarah Hanson-Young.
Leader of the Opposition Anthony Albanese.
Leader of the Opposition Anthony Albanese. Source: AAP
In the wake of Ms Holgate’s statements, Mr Albanese claimed Ms Holgate had been treated differently to ministers like Linda Reynolds and Christian Porter who’ve come under controversy.

“I did regard the Cartier watches as being inappropriate. But the fact is it was Scott Morrison who stood up in parliament and actually, for a change, made a strong decision,” he said.

“The fact of the matter is if you are a cabinet minister in Scott Morrison’s government, you can do whatever you like. And that contrasts with the actions against Christine Holgate.”

In the ABC interview aired on Tuesday evening, Ms Holgate called the chairman's treatment of her "absolutely appalling". 

“I don’t know another chairman in this country who would have treated their CEO leadership team how I’ve been treated. I think it’s absolutely appalling," she said. 

Readers seeking support can contact Lifeline crisis support on 13 11 14, Suicide Call Back Service on 1300 659 467 and Kids Helpline on 1800 55 1800 (for young people aged 5 to 25). More information is available at and . supports people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds.


Share
Through award winning storytelling, The Feed continues to break new ground with its compelling mix of current affairs, comedy, profiles and investigations. See Different. Know Better. Laugh Harder. Read more about The Feed
Have a story or comment? Contact Us

Through award winning storytelling, The Feed continues to break new ground with its compelling mix of current affairs, comedy, profiles and investigations. See Different. Know Better. Laugh Harder.
Watch nowOn Demand
Follow The Feed
8 min read
Published 14 April 2021 1:24pm
Updated 15 April 2021 7:16am
By Eden Gillespie


Share this with family and friends