He is about to become one of the most important politicians in the country.
But David Crisafulli, the man most likely to become Queensland’s next premier when the state goes to the polls on Saturday, might want to adjust the privacy settings on his Spotify account.
Daily Mail Australia can reveal that the married father-of-two and Liberal National Party (LNP) leader has an extremely raunchy public playlist titled ‘DU Down’, a reference to Kevin Gates’ 2017 song of the same name.
The song features lines including: “I’m going hard in bed, I’ll be pulling his hair / Diamonds shining in your face / Now stick that ass in the air” and the chorus has the chorus: “D** * you’re down, damn you below.’
Urban Dictionary helpfully provides a definition of ‘DU Down’ as: ‘giving a girl the best shit of her life’.
Other tunes on the ten-song, 40-minute playlist have a very similar theme.
These include ‘Earned It’ by The Weeknd, one of the best songs from the Fifty Shades of Gray movie soundtrack, ‘Slow Hands’ by former One Direction star Niall Horan and ‘Bed’ by J. Holiday.
It also contains ‘Wet the Bed’ by Chris Brown and Ludracris, which features the infamous opening lines: ‘Listen to the sound of your body drip, drip, drip / As I kiss both pairs of lips-lips (wow)’.
Daily Mail Australia can reveal that Liberal National Party (LNP) leader David Crisafulli has an extremely raunchy public playlist titled ‘DU Down’, a reference to Kevin Gates’ 2017 song of the same name (Mr Crisafulli appears in the photo with his wife). Tegan)
‘DU Down’ features lines including: ‘I get hard in bed, I’ll pull his hair / Diamonds shine in your face / Now stick that ass in the air’ and the chorus has the chorus: ‘D “Fuck you “Fuck you” (pictured: Mr. Crisafulli’s Spotify account)
The chorus concludes with the line: “I’ll put your legs behind your head when I make you wet the bed.”
The penultimate song on the playlist is Ginuwine’s ‘Pony’ from 1996, which was described as a ‘sex jam’ in an early review.
It features this immortal equine metaphor in its chorus: ‘If you’re horny, let’s do it / Ride it, my pony / My saddle is waiting / Come and jump on it.’
Crisafulli, 45, has another playlist titled simply ‘David,’ which contains many of the same songs and others on a similar R&B theme.
When approached by this publication for comment, a spokesperson for Mr. Crisafulli’s office said that “playlists are the mix tapes of the ’20s.”
“It’s a personal playlist shared privately with his wife,” the spokesperson added.
The LNP leader has 13 followers on Spotify, one of whom is his wife Tegan.
The couple, who share two children, are intensely private.
“I have deliberately kept them out of public life,” Crisafulli told the alphabet recently.
“That’s always been something I’ve been proud of in my second stint in politics.”
The raunchy playlist was created on September 1, 2019, when Crisafulli was Shadow Minister for Tourism and Environment, Science and the Great Barrier Reef.
Four days after creating the playlist, Crisafulli met with her mother-in-law for tea.
Slow Hands: The playlist includes former One Direction star Niall Horan’s raunchy song, plus Genuwine’s 1996 ‘Pony’, which was described as a ‘sex jam’ in an early review.
Other songs on the ten-song, 40-minute playlist have a very similar theme.
He joked that of all the meetings with voters, “this catch-up is the hardest.”
“This location demanded to know when I arrived, when I’m coming home, how my kids are doing and if (my wife) is enjoying work,” he captioned a social media post.
“And there’s no wiggle room for weasel words.”
Polls indicate the LNP is likely to emerge victorious in Saturday’s state election.
But Crisafulli’s campaign has been dogged by questions about his views on abortion after he voted against decriminalization in 2018.
Current Labor Prime Minister Steven Miles has repeatedly pressed Crisafulli on whether he would grant his party a conscience vote when it comes before parliament next term on a bill introduced by Robbie Katter’s Australai party.
One news organization estimated the LNP leader dodged the question more than 130 times.
Crisafulli, leader of the LNP since November 2020, has repeatedly said he plans to maintain the current laws.
Queenslanders will go to the polls on Saturday, and more than 900,000 voters have already cast their ballots.
The LNP remains ahead in the polls, but its lead over the Labor Party has narrowed in recent days.