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AAP
AAP
Politics
Matt Coughlan

PM promises to get house in order on women

Scott Morrison has pledged to "get our house in order" in an extraordinary media conference after weeks of pressure over rape allegations in federal parliament.

One week after refusing to meet thousands of women protesting outside Parliament House, the prime minister promised to do better and admitted some of his responses had fallen short.

He tearfully defended focusing on consulting his wife Jenny and speaking "as a father" when responding to sexual assault.

Mr Morrison's government is under colossal pressure after former Liberal staffer Brittany Higgins said she was raped by a former colleague in Parliament House in 2019.

That triggered a wave of revelations about harassment, assault and sexism, as well as a national protest movement calling for more action.

"I acknowledge that there have been people who haven't been happy with how I have responded in every single way over the course of this last month," Mr Morrison said.

"I am setting about to put that right."

His sombre tone evaporated when Mr Morrison launched an extraordinary attack on a Sky News journalist after he questioned if his job should be in jeopardy over the myriad issues.

"You are free to make your criticisms and to stand on that pedestal, but be careful," he said.

The prime minister claimed he knew about a person at the news organisation who had a complaint against them relating to harassing a woman in a toilet.

"You are not aware of it. So let's not, all of us who sit in glass houses here, start getting into that," Mr Morrison said.

The journalist later revealed a senior media adviser confirmed the prime minister was mistaken and the incident did not concern Sky News.

Mr Morrison will address coalition staff later on Tuesday, while Sex Discrimination Commissioner Kate Jenkins is set to speak to Liberal and Nationals MPs.

After cabinet minister Karen Andrews suggested gender quotas in the Liberal Party, Mr Morrison said he had been open to the idea "for some time".

"We tried it the other way and it isn't getting us the results so I would like to see us do better on that front," the federal Liberal leader said.

Mr Morrison admitted his responses to the furore around the treatment of women in Australia had fallen short.

"These events have triggered, right across this building and indeed right across the country, women who have put up with this rubbish and this crap for their entire lives, as their mothers did, as their grandmothers did," he said.

He said it had been a traumatic month.

"We must get our house in order," Mr Morrison said.

Labor frontbencher Kristina Keneally acknowledged Mr Morrison's mea culpa but questioned why it took five weeks of anger to spark the response.

"What I haven't heard from the prime minister is what he is going to do about that," she told Sky News.

"If the prime minister is serious about making real change ... then let's see some specific actions."

Senator Keneally said quotas for coalition preselection, domestic violence services and closing the gender pay gap were key issues that needed action.

A guard on duty the night of the alleged rape of Ms Higgins office has questioned the prime minister's claim the accused man was sacked because of a "security breach".

Mr Morrison said the accused man was sacked because he had "form", including accessing classified documents in the then defence industry minister's office.

Finance Minister Simon Birmingham insists attending the office out of hours for a non-work purpose while drunk did amount to a security breach, but the guard did nothing wrong.

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