In Plagued, journalists have traded their independence for access, resulting in a kind of political pornography
- Written by The Conversation

The publication of Plagued, by Simon Benson and Geoff Chambers, is destined to become a classic study of the perils for journalists in writing books about current political events.
You might have missed it in the tumult swirling around former Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s multiplying ministries trick – but Plagued is where the public got its first inkling that Morrison had a yen for job-sharing.
By “inkling”, I mean the book had part of the story, but not the most important part. That should ring alarm bells: the main benefit of journalists writing books is they have the time and space to dig deeper into current events to reveal what is not known, or is rushed past, in daily media coverage.
Review: Plagued: Australia’s two years of hell – the inside story – by Simon Benson and Geoff Chambers (Pantera Press)
Politically significant ‘inside story’
The book’s revelations are not just politically significant but will surely feature in future historians’ accounts of the 2019-2022 Coalition government. So, what happened?
Plagued is the work of two experienced journalists: Simon Benson, political editor for The Australian (and before that for The Daily Telegraph) and Geoff Chambers, chief political correspondent for The Australian (previously news editor at The Daily Telegraph).