Abstract
ABSTRACT In recent years, the concept of ‘free speech’ appears to have reached a position of significant prominence in public debate. In this context, we ask how the concept of free speech was used discursively by the Morrison-led government. Utilising a political discourse analytic approach, and examining texts from 2019 to 2021, we argue that, and show how, the government engaged in multiple discourses around free speech that were incompatible, inconsistent and incoherent. These inconsistencies and discontinuities were so significant as to render this a ‘weaponisation’ of free speech discourse. Thus, the article both reveals the complexities of the Morrison government’s discursive positioning of free speech, and renders sensible the otherwise nonsensical way in which ‘free speech’ was used to garner support for a range of public policies.
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