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Former first lady Melania Trump said she was completely comfortable with
posing nude during her modeling days.
In her memoir Melania, which was released Tuesday,
she recounts how her nude photos were put on the cover of The
New York Post during the closing weeks of the
2016 presidential election.
The tabloid used the 'disgusting heaadline,' as Melania described it, 'Menage à Trump.'
'My upbringing in Europe had fostered a different perspective on nudity,
a more open and accepting attitude,' she wrote.
'We were accustomed to beaches where nudity was commonplace, a natural
and uncontroversial aspect of life.'
She noted how 'attitudes toward the female body in the United States were starkly different.'
Melania Trump at a Vogue event in 2000. She wrote in her memoir Melania about
her nude photographs shot for the French magazine Max in 1996 used against her husband politically
The controversial photos were from a 1996 photoshoot from a now defunct French fashion magazine called Max.
'The photos had never been circulated in the United States,
' she recalled. 'The magazine that had originally published them had ceased to exist long before these images were unearthed, and now they were being shared for the
sole purpose of damaging Donald's campaign.'
She wrote that the photos 'were not a source of shame for me.'
'The female form was once revered and honored in Western culture.
Historically, artists produced magnificent paintings
and sculptures that exalted the beauty of the feminine figure.
Nudity was a medium through which humanity was elevated and celebrated,' Melania sid.
'This sentiment resonated deeply with me when I posed
for Vogue during my pregnancy,' she wrote.
Throughout the book she mentions her working relationship with Vogue and its longtime top editor Anna Wintour.
These days Wintour is actively supporting former President
Donald Trump's Democratic rival, Vice President Kamala Harris.
A 1998 photo of Melania Trump depicting her in a white bikini.
The former first lady said she never felt shame
about posing nude but was angered that her nude modeling photos
were used to try to hurt her husband's first presidential campaign
'I believed then, as I do now, that women should take pride
in their bodies, not feel shame,' Melania continued.
'During my modeling days, posing nude was commonplace and hardly scandalous,' she said.
'To me, those images were artistic and tasteful, fitting for a publication like Max, which showcased many
renowned super-models.'
But there was another problem with the photographer selling the photos of Melania to the newspaper - he originally said the photoshoot happened a year before.
'This misinformation led to unfounded allegations that I had illegally
worked in the United States, a claim propagated by the New York Post,' she wrote.
'Although the photographer later admitted the error,
the damage was done - sensationalized lies about me spread worldwide, driven by a shameful pursuit of scandal and profit,' the former first lady added.
Melania TrumpPolitics
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The existence of an exclusive hideaway for the country's
movers and shakers where secret deals were done in private luxury first exploded into the public eye back in 2007.
Back then, the fact that Qantas spent hundreds of thousands
of dollars wining and dining the nation's political elite in ultra-exclusive VIP lounges was relatively unknown.
It was a time before Alan Joyce's tenure as the CEO of Qantas had even started,
when he was boss of the comparatively lowly budget airline, Jetstar.
And unlike Anthony Albanese's current slide in the polls leading up to an election in next year, the prospects back in 2007
were rosy for Labor.
The election that was looming was the 'Kevin 07'
landslide that would see Kevin Rudd become prime minister and John Howard lose his own seat.
The issue which blew open the 'guilty secret' of the Chairman's Lounge then wasn't about a prime
minister's privileges, although John Howard and Kevin Rudd were
certainly both members during their terms as PM.
But when broadcaster Steve Price - himself a long time Chairman's Lounge member - revealed a politically charged remark made within the club's hallowed walls, the cat was out of the
bag.
The political revelation - a comment by ex-rock star turned senator Peter Garrett that Labor
would change the policies it campaigned on if it won government - did not deter his party
from romping in on election day.
In contrast, the scandal currently engulfing Anthony Albanese about his Chairman's Lounge membership and that of his ex-wife Carmel Tebbutt,
and their son Nathan could bring down the prime minister.
The exclusive Qantas Chairman's Lounge (above) has been a well-kept secret
for years, but it exploded into the public conscience in 2007 as the result of
a political furore
Broadcaster Steve Price revealed he had been a Chairman's Lounge member since 2002
during a row before the 2007 election won by Kevin Rudd which let
the cat out of the bag about the VIP club
The existence of the lounge was so little known back in 2007 that in defending his disclosure of Garrett's remark, Steve Price
had to explain what the private enclave actually was.
In a first person piece he wrote: 'The Chairman's Lounge
is a separate frequent flyers lounge away from the crowded
normal Qantas Club.
'As its name implies, the people given access to it are approved
by the Qantas chairman, Margaret Jackson.
'I have been a Chairman's Lounge member since 2002.'
In his opinion piece, Price also revealed TV entertainment reporter Richard Wilkins was also
a member of lounge.
Wilkins had also been inside at the time and was his
only witness to the remark Price said Garrett had
made.
Other prominent media figures, such as 60 Minutes reporters, actors and performers, and well-known writers and sports people are said to be
among the lounge's exclusive membership of around 6000.
Price went on to defend himself for reporting what some claimed was a
confidential conversation in a private place, but which exposed him
to criticism over his own membership for allegedly promoting Qantas on his radio show.
Back in 2007, Alan Joyce (left) was boss of the comparatively lowly budget airline Jetstar, and then Qantas CEO Geoff Dixon (right) had the power over who made the cut to the Chairman's Lounge
One observer has described the relationship bet6ween leading politicians such as
PM Anthony Albanese and the former Qantas CEO Alan Joyce (above) as 'alarmingly cosy'
'Why on earth is Qantas giving a controversial shock jock membership of
its Chairman's Lounge, which is supposedly to enable our elite politicians and business leaders some privacy from the
hoi polloi?' demanded Crikey reporter Stephen Mayne at the time.
'The Chairman's Lounge is meant to be all about discretion and confidentiality,'
he said, accusing Price of breaking 'a confidence'.
The following year, before he was succeeded as Qantas CEO by Alan Joyce, Geoff Dixon was the sole gatekeeper
of entry into the club's hushed confines.
Qantas Chairman's Lounge membership was 'so exclusive that you have
to be personally invited by the airline's chieftain', Nine newspapers reported in 2008.
'A marvellous benefit of lounge membership is that the mega rich and
powerful avoid having to mingle with the riffraff who will be travelling cattle class.
'Having said that, members of the ultra-exclusive club have
included Pauline Hanson.
'Another lounge member is Brad Cooper, who is currently enjoying a prolonged
exposure to cattle-class in Kirkconnell Correctional Centre.'
(Cooper was the former HIH insurance executive jailed for eight years on fraud and bribery offences).
Membership of the elite lounge is confined to about 6000 Australians
including politicians from both sides, senior public servants, TV stars
and actors
The 'scandal' currently engulfing Anthony Albanese about his Chairman's Lounge membership and that of his ex-wife Carmel Tebbutt, and their son Nathan could bring down the prime minister (above the PM with partner Jodie Haydon and
ex-Qantas CEO Alan Joyce)
The report noted that politicians declaring membership of the lounge 'which most of their spouses got too' in their pecuniary interests that year included Liberal MPs of the day, Philip Ruddock, Bob Baldwin and
Andrew Southcott.
Labor MPs with lounge privileges included Tanya
Plibersek, Bob McMullan, and Sharon Grierson, and Martin Ferguson declared a bottle of
Grange hermitage as a gift from Qantas, as did Liberal,
Christopher Pyne.
Asked if all MPs got the captain's pick from Geoff Dixon, the airline's spokesperson told Nine:
'We like to retain a bit of mystery. Membership is by invitation only and it is reviewed periodically.'
Fast forward to today, and nearly every single federal politician in the country has accepted free membership
of the controversial, invitation-only lounge with one even describing it as an 'entitlement'.
Qantas and the Albanese government recently denied the 'very, very
high-end perk' gives the airline a disproportionate level of influence over the country's politicians.
They were commenting ahead of the launch of the new book The
Chairman's Lounge by former Australian Financial Review columnist Joe Aston, which
has stirred up the controversy.
A Daily Mail Australia audit of the members' interest registers - in both
Federal Parliament's House of Representatives and the Senate - revealed almost 93 per cent of the nation's leaders have been 'gifted' membership
to the lavish, all-inclusive lounge.
Mr Albanese has defended himself by saying he declared all his benefits in pecuniary interest statements.
At a press conference this week, he repeated that all of his upgrades 'have been declared
as appropriate. What's appropriate is transparency.'
Apart from the PM, members include every one of his 22-person Cabinet,
his seven-person Outer Ministry and all 12 assistant ministers.
PM Anthony Albanese and every member of his 22-person Cabinet, his seven-person Outer
Ministry and all 12 assistant ministers are members of the
exclusive Chairman's Lounge
Entry to the country's six opulent VIP clubs
are suitably discreet, but once inside, the designer lounges offer free à la carte
fine dining, table service and a discreet army of dedicated lounge attendants
On the Coalition side of parliament, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton, deputy leader David
Littleproud and former deputy Barnaby Joyce are also among the
swathes of politicians who have disclosed they have taken up free membership to the contentious club.
Bill Shorten is a member, Tanya Plibersek is still a member and so is Teal MP,
Zali Steggall.
Last year it was reported that Australian Competition and Consumer Commission chairwoman Gina Cass-Gottlieb and
Australian Securities and Investments Commission chairman Joe Longo and some of
their deputies are members of the Chairman's Lounge despite regulating the
airline.
Senior public servants in the club included Department
of Prime Minister and Cabinet secretary Glyn Davis,
deputy secretaries Nadine Williams, Liz Hefren-Webb, Rachel Bacon and ambassador
to Beijing, Scott Dewar.
Other Qantas freebies bestowed on members include numerous business class flight upgrades, model Qantas aircrafts, frequent flyer
points, and tickets to sporting and entertainment events.
Touted as 'the most exclusive club in the country',
membership to the Chairman's Lounge is still veiled in secrecy.
The new book The Chairman's Lounge by former
Australian Financial Review columnist Joe Aston (above) has stirred up
the controversy
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission chairwoman Gina Cass-Gottlieb and Australian Securities and Investments Commission chairman Joe Longo are members despite
regulating the airline
Even the entrances to each of the country's six opulent VIP clubs - in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide,
Canberra and Perth airports - are suitably discreet.
Once inside, however, the designer lounges are noticeably luxurious, with free à la carte fine dining, table service, a decadent
selection of wines and Champagne and a discreet army
of dedicated lounge attendants.
Virgin Airlines has its own version of the VIP enclave, the
'Beyond' lounge.
Only a handful of federal politicians have relinquished their membership to the Qantas Chairman's Lounge in the
wake of the furore.
The select few to take a principled stand on the issue include South Australian senator Barbara
Pocock and former Wallabies star turned ACT senator David Pocock, along with MPs Stephen Bates, Queensland Green Elizabeth Watson-Brown,
and Monique Ryan, a Teal from Victoria.
Geoffrey Watson SC, a former counsel assisting the Independent Commission Against Corruption and a director
of the Centre for Public Integrity, has implored all politicians and policymakers to follow suit.
'There are certain positions in life where you cannot take Chairman's Club membership,
' he said.
'You're taking public money for the job and you are supposed to represent the public.
Why not sit with them while you're waiting
for a plane?'
QantasAnthony Albanese
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