Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Luke Sayers Scandal - David Plouffe: To Win Everywhere, Democrats Must Change Everything

 Luke Sayers plays below the belt 

The former PwC boss is again proving to be a gift to journalism. 
JOE ASTON | 26 JAN, 2026
Luke Sayers plays below the belt Luke Sayers at Flemington Racecourse. November 2024. Photo: Elke Meitzel 

Modern Australian society is powered by envy. Those of us grinding out a living imagine the rich and famous leading the charmed lives we'll never lead. Nowadays we don't even have to imagine, since they rub it in our faces via Instagram. 

Their hedonism is especially stark over summer, when – having bled the rest of us dry all winter – they're down at Portsea or Palm Beach in their cliffside piles, on their Baracuda yachts, parading their Saint Haven physiques and their blinding white teeth, eating salmon blinis for breakfast and having the kind of s-x usually reserved for old Kim Basinger movies. 
 And then there's Luke Sayers. Thank God for him, I say. For those of us down here in the real world of drudgery and family budgets and stretch marks, he confirms on an all-too-regular basis that we are not missing out on f—ken' anything. You can always sense the summer break is petering out and the natural starting point of a new corporate year has arrived when Sayers's flaccid knob is once again dominating news headlines. 
Welcome to 2026! Before last summer, Sayers was merely a discredited professional services principal, after his laugh-out-loud evidence to multiple inquiries into the PwC tax leaks scandal. That, of course, in no way disqualified him from the presidency of the Carlton Football



Inside the long tail of the Luke Sayers lewd photo scandal 


It’s been more than a year since the now-infamous post appeared on Sayers’ X profile. But a new defamation case this week shows the saga isn’t going away.


Luke Sayers’ wife sues former Carlton president in lewd photo fallout

Luke Sayers allegedly implied his wife was responsible for posting a lewd photo on his social media account and made a number of damaging claims about her mental health as he sought to extract himself from the damaging scandal last year that led to his exit from Carlton Football Club.


That accusation has been made by Sayers’ wife Cate in filings with the Victorian Supreme Court, according to people familiar with the matter who requested anonymity given the sensitive nature of the proceedings.


Couple ‘leaking tax’ to ATO save $1.32 million and boost kids' inheritance: ‘Not a trick’


Donald Trump Is Waging War Against Human Conscience. “The lust for mud has taken up many guises in our history and has been many given names of late — neo-reaction, post-liberalism, fascism. But the name familiar to most is evil.”


David Plouffe: To Win Everywhere, Democrats Must Change Everything

In election after election last year, Democrats had big wins everywhere. Voters who swung hard to President Trump swung hard back. These moments are incredibly rare. Trust me.


Police Unmask Millions of Surveillance Targets Because of Flock Redaction Error

404 Media – np paywall: “A handful of police departments that use Flock have unwittingly leaked details of millions of surveillance targets and a large number of active police investigations around the country because they have failed to redact license plates information in public records releases. Flock responded to this revelation by threatening a site that exposed it and by limiting the information the public can get via public records requests. 


The Top 10 Fastest Growing Technologies of 2025

IFI CLAIMS Patent Services: Fast Growing Technologies Look For Circular Economy – “The big 2025 technology story was a recurrence of what we saw in 2024 and 2023: artificial intelligence, and all the ways AI is changing (and will surely transform) the way the world does business and the structure of society. So you would think IFI CLAIMS’ ninth annual list of fastest growing technologies would be filled with the know-how going into the most scorching technology we’ve seen so far in the 21st century. 



IT’S FRAUD ALL THE WAY DOWN: A third of federal agencies in audit lacked regular fraud monitoring or evaluation.

The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) released a technical appendix to its 2015 fraud risk management guidance this month, aimed at helping federal agencies strengthen how they prevent fraud in U.S. government programs. The reason? Many still lack basic safeguards.

Previous GAO reports have revealed the extent of fraud across the federal government.

A report from 2024 showed that the U.S. loses between $233 billion and $521 billion annually to fraud, based on data from 2018-2022.

“Fraud prevention, including deterrence, decreases the need to chase after and recover stolen funds,” read the latest report. “Demonstrating the value of fraud prevention can help inform antifraud resource allocation decisions.”

The new report builds on GAO’s 2015 Fraud Risk Framework, which outlines best practices for preventing, detecting and responding to fraud in federal programs. 

The framework is organized into four components: establishing an antifraud culture; assessing fraud risks; designing and implementing control activities; and evaluating outcomes and adapting efforts.

GAO’s new technical appendix focuses specifically on the fourth component, which is how agencies can systematically evaluate the effectiveness of their fraud risk management activities and adapt them as needed.