He built a dinosaur theme park and planned to construct a new
Titanic. But a move into politics appears to have sunk eccentric
Australian billionaire
Clive Palmer, writes
Trevor Marshallsea.
A powerful juggernaut of enormous ambition, thought to be unstoppable until striking an unforeseen obstacle.
The words could describe the world's most famous ship, the
RMS Titanic. They could equally apply to the political career of larger-than-life Australian billionaire politician Clive Palmer, who once aimed to build a replica of the ill-fated liner.
Often called
Australia's Donald Trump, Mr
Palmer embodies his home state of
Queensland: big, brash, with some rough edges and a disregard for political correctness which endears him to some and sparks disdain from others.
With as much chutzpah as he showed in changing hair colour, he traded business for politics and won a seat in the national parliament in
2013 after forming his own political party, the
Palmer United Party (
PUP).
Similar to
Pauline Hanson's polarising, anti-Asian
One Nation party two decades earlier, the PUP promoted itself as an alternative to the established two-party order. It stunned
Australians when it gained the balance of power in the nation's upper house, the
Senate.
But just three years later, Mr Palmer has announced that he will not contest his seat of
Fairfax at the next election. He may run for a Senate seat - other PUP members definitely are - but it seems that the Queensland mogul is a spent force.
Queensland's richest man could also face criminal charges, bankruptcy, and the unravelling of his financial empire, over the collapse of his nickel operation in north Queensland, which put almost 800 people out of work.
The eccentric billionaire appears to be sinking in a sea of bad news.
Titanic II and
Jeff the
T-rex
Formerly a lawyer, and an adviser to long-serving right-wing Queensland premier
Joh Bjelke-Petersen, Mr Palmer built his fortune first in real estate, but then more substantially in coal, iron ore and nickel.
At the height of his pomp in
2011, his empire was estimated to be worth A$5bn ($3.7bn; £2.6bn).
He owned a football team,
Gold Coast United, in the
Australian A-League.
Despite on-field success, the club folded after just two seasons when Australian authorities revoked Mr Palmer's licence.
One of Mr Palmer's most notorious follies began in 2011, when he bought his favourite holiday spot, a high-end golf resort on the
Sunshine Coast, north of
Brisbane.
Formerly the
Hyatt Regency Coolum, he renamed it the Palmer Coolum Resort and announced ambitious plans to build a dinosaur theme park called Palmersaurus.
More than
150 animatronic dinosaurs were brought in to populate this cut-price
Jurassic Park, including a T-rex named Jeff who was placed next to the fairway on the 9th
hole of the golf course during the
2012 Australian PGA Championships.
Australian golf officials promptly took their prestigious tournament elsewhere.
Equally strange was Mr Palmer's plan to channel his cash into building a replica of the Titanic, called Titanic II, with the help of a
Chinese consortium. Speaking to the
Telegraph newspaper in 2013, Mr Palmer referred to his project as "a ship of
peace".
"Why build the Titanic? Why go to the moon?" he continued. "Why do the
Yankees play the Red
Socks? Why did
Christopher Columbus discover the
Americas? Because they could, and I can, and we can build the Titanic."
Big man in politics
Next came Mr Palmer's audacious plan to enter politics.
Not only was Mr Palmer voted into Australia's lower chamber, the
House of Representatives, two PUP candidates were elected to the finely balanced Senate, and with the help of an alliance with another MP, the PUP suddenly held the balance of power in the nation's house of review.
Mr Palmer was fond of stunts such as arriving at parliament in his Rolls-Royce, likened political opponents to
Hitler and called
Rupert Murdoch's ex-wife
Wendy Deng a
Chinese spy.
It didn't take too long for his fortunes to turn. He inflamed sensitivities in
China - where he does a considerable amount of mining business - with an infamous tirade on national TV where he referred to "Chinese mongrels" who "shoot their own people".
And only a year after gaining the balance of power in the Senate, the PUP surrendered it, with Mr Palmer's leadership style driving away his own senators and key allies.
Mr Palmer's own popularity with the electorate began to wane, partly due to his own version of a low turn-out: he went to
Canberra for federal parliament for just 54% of its sittings in
2015, the lowest of any MP.
His image outside of politics has also been battered. Surprising no-one, his dinosaur park folded last year. Reports say no work has been done on the Titanic II and its future is in doubt.
- published: 04 May 2016
- views: 1