An Australian politician who interrupted King Charles‘s address at Australia’s Parliament today with a foul-mouthed rant is a controversial activist with a history of outbursts and stunts.
On Monday, Indigenous activist Senator Lidia Thorpe, 51, screamed ‘f*** the colony’ and ‘you are not my king’ at Parliament House in Canberra on Monday.
Dressed in a native fur coat, she shouted: ‘You committed genocide against our people. Give us our land back. Give us what you stole from us. Our bones, our skulls, our babies, our people. You destroyed our land.
‘Give us our treaties. We want a treaty in this country. You are a genocidalist. This is not your land, this is not your land.’
Senator Thorpe then repeatedly yelled, ‘Not my king,’ as she was led out of the room by security.
Lidia Thorpe has a track record of stunts at major political events and angry outbursts, from calling the Queen a ‘coloniser’ to berating a group of men outside a strip club.
She was even forced to quit as Greens party deputy leader in the Senate after she failed to disclose her relationship with former biker gang boss Dean Martin.
Her tirade came during King Charles III’s first visit to Australia as monarch
Ms Thorpe told the Australian Broadcast Corporation that herself and bikie boss Dean Martin ‘briefly dated’ in 2021 after they met through Blak activism – she is pictured here posing on a Harley Davidson motorbike
She was even forced to quit as Greens party deputy leader in the Senate after she failed to disclose her relationship with former biker gang boss Dean Martin (pictured together)
In 2022, the Senator mockingly recited the parliamentary oath of allegiance while slamming the late Queen as a ‘coloniser’ in 2022.
The Aboriginal senator marched into the floor of the chamber on Monday morning and gave a Black Power salute as she prepared to take her oath for the start of a new post-election parliament.
After raising her right fist, she begrudgingly swore to serve the 96-year-old monarch, who was Australia’s head of state, as King Charles is now.
Ms Thorpe sarcastically recited the oath of allegiance as she continued holding her fist in the air.
‘I will be faithful and I bear true allegiance to the colonising Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the Second,’ the outspoken politician said in a mocking tone.
Her conduct received support from Greens Leader Adam Bandt, who tweeted: ‘Always was. Always will be.’
Senator Thorpe was reprimanded and, smirking, eventually recited the oath correctly and was sworn into parliament.
Just days before the Queen’s funeral, she wrote on X/Twitter: ‘They buried our kids in the sand and kicked off their heads, and you want me to pay my respects?’
‘This isn’t about an individual, it’s about the institution she represents and the genocide that they’re responsible for.’
Lidia Thorpe once strode into the Senate with her fist in the air and then mockingly called the late Queen a ‘coloniser’
Lidia Thorpe (pictured) previously fired up about ‘paying respects’ to the late Queen saying the British Empire declared war on First Nations people
Her Majesty (pictured in 2012) passed away aged 96 at Buckingham Palace in September 2022
A seething Ms Thorpe, formerly a Senator for the Greens, took to Twitter on Thursday (pictured)
Meanwhile, in 2022, Ms Thorpe resigned as the Greens party deputy leader after failing to disclose her relationship with the ex-president of the Victorian Rebels outlaw motorcycle gang, Dean Martin.
Ms Thorpe told the Australian Broadcast Corporation the pair ‘briefly dated’ in 2021 after they met through Blak activism.
The New Zealander is a former national president of the Rebels bikie gang and infamously dated Ms Thorpe while she was on a committee investigating bikie gangs.
According to ABC, Ms Thorpe’s staff were ‘so alarmed about her dating a former president of an outlaw motorcycle gang’ they took the issue to the office party leader Adam Bandt as well as an independent parliamentary authority.
Mr Bandt later announced he had asked for Ms Thorpe’s resignation as deputy state leader and that she had agreed to resign. Both have said the failure to disclose the relationship was an error in judgement, ABC reported.
Ms Thorpe struck a pose on a Harley Davidson just two months after she was censured over her affair with a bikie boss.
The Senator posted the photo of herself straddling the black motorcycle to her social media pages with the caption ‘ran into some old mates’.
Lidia Thorpe (pictured) attempted to storm the podium during British trans critic Kellie-Jay Keen-Minshull’s speech for the Let Women Speak rally outside parliament house in March
Senator Thorpe (pictured in May this year) said the government had ‘made a mistake’ cancelling Martin’s visa because he is Indigenous
Despite this, Ms Thorpe came to Martin’s defence in July when the government were set to deport Martin to New Zealand after his visa was cancelled on character grounds.
Ms Thorpe said while she hadn’t spoken to Martin, she believed ‘the government had made a mistake with this decision’.
‘Mr Martin has proof, support and recognition that he is Aboriginal from Elders and community in Lutruwita Tasmania,’ she said.
Martin did manage to avoid deportation in August after proving his Indigenous heritage.
Ms Thorpe has also made enemies within other left-wing movements and in early 2023 disrupted a ‘Let Woman Speak’ event outside Parliament House in Canberra held by controversial women’s rights campaigner Kellie-Jay Keen-Minshull.
Draped in an Aboriginal flag, Ms Thorpe made a beeline toward Ms Keen-Minshull, before she was intercepted and taken down by police.
She crawled along the lawn and made her way toward a group of more than 100 pro-trans counter-protesters.
The independent ‘black sovereignty’ movement senator later claimed she was ‘pulverised’ by police and said Ms Keen-Minshull – who she referred to as ‘filth’ – should not be allowed to speak on Aboriginal land.
Thorpe has also been in hot water of another foul-mouthed tirade at a Melbourne strip club last year.
She was seen screaming profanities at punters claims the rogue senator was going up to ‘white men’ before the incident saying: ‘You stole my land’.
Senator Lidia Thorpe (pictured) was filmed unleashing an extraordinary spray on a group of men outside a Melbourne strip club at 3am on Sunday
Senator Thorpe was filmed unleashing an extraordinary torrent of abuse at a group of men outside Maxine’s Gentlemen’s Club in north Melbourne at 3am, telling one: ‘You’ve got a small penis’ and another ‘you’re marked’ in a menacing tone.
David Ross, general manager of Maxine’s, told Daily Mail Australia that Senator Thorpe’s behaviour was ‘just unacceptable’ and that she has been banned for life from the establishment.
He revealed that bouncers kept a close eye on the Greens defector throughout the evening because she was ‘a bit argumentative’ during the wild night out with friends.
He said: ‘One of our security guards said they thought she [Senator Thorpe] was going to be trouble because she was going up to white men in the crowd and telling them that they’d stolen her land.’
Senator Thorpe, who was out for a 50th birthday party with a group of three friends, had earlier told 7News that she was provoked and harassed by the men.
‘It’s sad people are utilising whatever they can to drag me down when we’re trying to discuss important issues in this country,’ she told the network.
David Ross, general manager at Maxine’s Gentleman’s Club, has handed Senator Thorpe a lifetime ban
Senator Thorpe was later pictured lying on her back in front of a float during Sydney Mardi Gras
In 2021, she even allegedly left another female politician in tears after telling her ‘at least I keep my legs shut’ during a debate in parliament.
Lidia Thorpe was accused of making the ‘disgusting’ comment towards Liberal Senator Hollie Hughes on the floor of the Upper House.
Liberal Senator Ben Small interrupted proceedings to claim he clearly heard Ms Thorpe’s insult, with the 48-year-old then offering a retraction in the senate chamber.
Ms Thorpe though did not confirm the nature of her comment.
‘Senator Thorpe just made the most outrageous statement directed at Senator Hughes, which you probably didn’t hear,’ Mr Small said.
‘But in the scheme of disgusting statements made in this chamber that surely ranks at the top of them.’
Attorney-General Amanda Stoker’s Assistant Minister also alleged she heard Ms Thorpe direct the jibe at Ms Hughes.
Lidia Thorpe (pictured) allegedly left female Liberal senator Hollie Hughes in tears after telling her ‘at least I keep my legs shut’
Senator Hughes on Thursday morning said she found the comments ‘beyond disgusting, beyond vile.’
‘I’m still a bit in shock,’ she told Sky News. Senator Hughes said Senator Thorpe’s comments were a reference to her giving birth to an autistic son.
Thorpe later said: ‘I just want to unreservedly take back my comments that I made earlier and I apologise to that senator wholeheartedly, Senator Hughes.’
Senator Small alleged outside the chamber he distinctly heard Ms Thorpe say ‘at least I keep my legs shut’.
‘I did very clearly hear Senator Thorpe heckle ”at least I kept my legs shut”,’ he said. ‘That’s when I leapt to my feet to raise a point of order.’
Federal MP Jason Falinski said the then-Greens senator’s alleged insult was a form of ‘slut-shaming’.
‘It has no place in public life, and frankly I don’t think it has a place in the wider Australian community,’ the member for Mackellar on Sydney’s Northern Beaches told 2GB.
He added: ‘It’s nothing short of slut-shaming.’
Liberal Senator Hollie Hughes was allegedly on the receiving end of the ‘disgusting’ comment
Thorpe said modern Australia must acknowledge the injustices inflicted upon generations of Aboriginal people to become a ‘mature’ nation.
She has called for official recognition in the form of a treaty.
‘Australia is one of the few Commonwealth countries that does not have a treaty with First Nations people.’ she said.
Proponents for a treaty say it is integral to a reconciliation process, would provide practical rights for Indigenous Australians, and that it would bring self-determination to First Nations people that would bridge the social and economic gap.
‘Treaty is an end to the war. It’s when we come together to negotiate how we can live alongside each other, peacefully. Treaty will create a new national identity, that we can all feel proud of and a part of,’ the Senator said.
Buckingham Palace declined to comment on Thorpe’s outburst in Parliament House on Monday, but sources brushed off the lone protestor, saying Their Majesties were ‘deeply touched’ at the warmth of the welcome they had received throughout the day.
During the tirade, King Charles and Queen Camilla were seen laughing off the politician’s heckling.
Australia was a British colony for more than 100 years, a period during which thousands of Aboriginal Australians were killed and communities were displaced wholesale.
The country gained de facto independence in 1901, but has never become a fully fledged republic.
In 1999, Australians narrowly voted against removing the Queen, amid a row over whether her replacement would be chosen by members of parliament, not the public.