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Former deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce sitting on the backbench in the House of Representatives at Parliament House in Canberra. Photo: EPA

‘If I wasn’t, I’d still go through with it’: ex-deputy PM raises then rejects doubt about whether he’s father of mistress’s baby

Australia

An affair that led to the resignation of Australia’s deputy prime minister took a bizarre twist on Sunday after he questioned the paternity of the baby carried by his partner and former aide.

Barnaby Joyce quit and moved to the backbenches last month after his affair with the younger ex-member of staff made headlines for weeks and raised questions about whether he had breached ministerial rules.

The scandal led Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull to impose a ban on sex between ministers and their staff, in an overhaul of the cabinet code of conduct.

Joyce was the leader of the National Party – which rules alongside Turnbull’s Liberals in a governing coalition – and his resignation appeared to end the saga for the embattled government.

Barnaby Joyce and 33-year-old former staff member Vikki Campion. Photo: Facebook

The coalition has a wafer-thin parliamentary majority and has been hit in recent months by a series of controversies that has shaken its grip on power.

But the issue flared up again when Joyce – who left his wife of 24 years for the former adviser – told Fairfax Media in an interview published late on Saturday that the identity of the biological father was “a grey area”.

He claimed Sydney’s Daily Telegraph, which broke the story of the affair in early February, had “never even asked if it was Joyce’s bundle”.

Joyce believes he and the former aide, 33-year-old Vikki Campion, were apart for almost all of the conception period, but said he would not get a paternity test.

The baby boy is due in April, according to Joyce.

New Australian Deputy Prime Minister Michael McCormack and Turnbull in parliament. Photo: EPA

“It’s mine, on the record, there it is,” he told Fairfax. “And can I say, even if it wasn’t, I wouldn’t care, I’d still go through this, I’d still love him.”

The Daily Telegraph reporter who revealed the affair said on Twitter on Sunday that Joyce’s claim that his office was not asked about paternity was not true.

The affair sparked a rift between the Liberal and National parties, with Turnbull criticising Joyce’s behaviour and voicing sympathy for his wife, four daughters and Campion.

Even though Joyce – who was replaced by Nationals MP Michael McCormack in both roles – has stepped down, his expenses during and after the period when he worked with Campion were under scrutiny in Senate hearings last week.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Ex-deputy PM airs doubts about paternity of baby
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