Scott Morrisons Question Time video featuring Fatman Scoop song breached rules
2 replies, posted
Prime Minister Scott Morrison's offbeat Fatman Scoop social media post breached Parliament's strict rules about video use and will spark a wider crackdown.
Key points:
There are strict rules around the manipulation of footage from Parliament for re-broadcast
The Serjeant-at-Arms complained about that fact, rather than the content of the song used
It's not the first time the Parliamentary rule enforcer has asked MPs to remove video
The clip dubbed part of the hip hop track Be Faithful over vision of Coalition MPs raising their hands in unison during Question Time on Thursday.
The song glorifies casual sex and contains a flurry of expletives, and the video was deleted hours after being posted on the Prime Minister's Facebook, Twitter and Instagram accounts.
While the clip was widely mocked online, Mr Morrison and his office also incurred the wrath of the Parliament's enforcer, the Serjeant-at-Arms.
The video was doctored to show Liberal and Nationals MPs raising their hands more times than they did, and the audio was deleted completely and replaced with the 2004 hit.
Read more at Scott Morrison's Question Time video featuring Fatman Scoop song..
https://www.facebook.com/abcnews.au/videos/463456817391262/
All I've heard about ScoMo is how much he's fucking up his Twitter game
Get on our level
https://twitter.com/SecPompeo/status/1039243856661893125
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