Photographs: Sukree Sukplang/Reuters
An Australian opposition leader has sparked a controversy by using "grossly sexist and offensive" words to describe Prime Minister Julia Gillard's body at a party fundraiser menu. The menu offered up "Julia Gillard Kentucky Fried Quail -- Small Breasts, Huge Thighs and a Big Red Box".
The controversial menu was presented at a dinner hosted by opposition Liberal Party leader Mal Brough, an ex-minister under former PM John Howard.
Gillard, 51, has described the menu as a "grossly sexist and offensive". The leader ruling Labor Party said the menu follows a "pattern of behaviour" from the opposition party.
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Row in Australia over PM Gillard's 'small breasts' menu
Image: Gillard waves as she leaves MelbournePhotographs: Scott Barbour/Getty Images
Opposition leader Tony "Abbott's solution to this pattern of behaviour is not to show any leadership. I mean, he's effectively stood by Brough," Gillard was quoted as saying by ABC News.
"Brough should be disendorsed. That's what should happen here," said Gillard, the nation's first woman PM.
The opposition party was forced on to the back foot in the row over sexism in politics after the menu, which contains crude references to Gillard's body emerged online.
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Row in Australia over PM Gillard's 'small breasts' menu
Image: Gillard during her visit to Singapore last AprilPhotographs: Nicky Loh/Getty Images
Abbott condemned the use of the menu card, but said it should "absolutely not" cast doubt on Brough's pre-selection for the Sunshine Coast seat of Fisher. "I think we should all be bigger and better than that; whether it's a tacky, scatological menu out the front of a Liberal Party event, whether it's squalid jokes told at union conference dinners with ministers present," he said.
Brough, an opposition candidate for the September general elections, also issued an apology saying the menu was written by a non-party member who thought it would be "humorous", but is now "deeply apologetic".
Opposition Treasury spokesman Joe Hockey was the guest of honour at the dinner for about 20 people hosted by Brough in Brisbane on March 28.
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