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Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull addresses reporters in Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, on Friday. Image Credit: AP

CANBERRA: Australia’s prime minister talked down the need for a US-style ban on legislators having sex with staff, but declined on Friday to say whether he had intervened in his deputy’s relationship with a press secretary.

The US House of Representatives on Tuesday passed a resolution prohibiting members from engaging in sexual relationships with staff. On the same day, Australian newspapers reported that Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce and his former press adviser Vikki Campion are expecting a baby in April.

While some independent and minor party lawmakers see merit in the Australian Parliament considering a similar ban, those in major parties are talking down the prospect.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said while lawmakers were accountable, they also had a right to consensual sexual relationships.

“Relations between consenting adults is not something that normally, you would be justified in, if you like, seeking to regulate,” Turnbull told reporters.

“Adults can conduct their relationships, if it’s consensual, respectful — that’s their right,” he added.

Turnbull later declined to confirm or deny a claim that on learning about an affair, he had personally counselled Joyce to remove Campion from his office.

Turnbull also would not comment on a media report that Campion got a new job with a pay increase last April. She changed jobs again but her contract has now ended.

“This is a deeply personal matter relating to Barnaby Joyce and his family and I do not wish to add to the public discussion about it,” Turnbull told reporters.

“I’m very conscious of the hurt this has occasioned his wife Natalie and their daughters and I have nothing further to add,” Turnbull said.

Independent lawmaker Cathy McGowan on Thursday invited legislators to discuss a potential motion in Parliament to “address personal relationships within the workplace.”

“There is a belief the Parliament is behind expectations and corporate practice,” McGowan said in a statement.

Independent lawmaker Bob Katter gave in-principle support for a ban.

“People’s private lives are their private lives, but I do make the comment: Not staff. Please fellas, not staff,” Katter told Sky News television.

“You’re in such an enormously influential position with staff,” he added.

Attorney-General Christian Porter described such a ban as a “very unwieldy law.” Shadow Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus also questioned whether such a ban should be legislated.

Joyce, leader of The Nationals party, told Parliament in December that he had separated from his wife of 24 years, who is the mother of his four daughters.

But he did not confirm his relationship with Campion, 33, until newspapers published photographs of her obviously pregnant on Tuesday.

Joyce, 50, said in a television interview on Tuesday that he had never used taxpayer-funded travel or accommodation to pursue the relationship. Several journalists who had made freedom of information requests concerning his expenses in an apparent attempt confirm the relationship but had found nothing untoward, he said.

She has not commented and Joyce declined to say how and when the relationship began.

“I’m not going to once again go into all the iterations of a private relationship and there’s nothing beyond the consensual. This is a private matter,” Joyce told Australian Broadcasting Corp.