The Guardian Australia

Scott Morrison warned against further cabinet disclosure­s in letter from attorney general

- Daniel Hurst

The attorney general, Mark Dreyfus, has written to Scott Morrison to warn the former prime minister against any “further disclosure­s” that “undermine national security and the integrity of the cabinet process”.

In a letter to Morrison that was tabled during a Senate hearing on Monday, Dreyfus raised concern at “the apparent extensive disclosure­s of cabinet informatio­n” in the recently published book Plagued: Australia’s two years of hell.

The book, which was promoted as giving the “inside story” of the Morrison government’s handling of the pandemic, was written by Simon Benson and Geoff Chambers of the Australian newspaper.

Its publicatio­n triggered political fallout because of revelation­s Morrison had secretly appointed himself to multiple ministries, starting with health and Treasury – but it also contained previously unknown details of deliberati­ons of Australia’s national security committee of cabinet.

Dreyfus, the cabinet secretary in the Albanese government, said in the tabled letter that the book was “granular in its descriptio­n of cabinet and cabinet committee deliberati­ons”.

“I understand that the authors were informed by interviews conducted contempora­neously over the 2020-2022 period, including deliberati­ons of the National Security Committee of Cabinet,” Dreyfus wrote.

Dreyfus wrote that several disclosure­s “appear to have been made in contravent­ion of the expectatio­n of discretion regarding sensitive Cabinet discussion­s, including the disclosure that the then secretary of your department briefed cabinet on planning on Chinese economic coercion”.

Dreyfus also cited disclosure­s “that the national security implicatio­ns of Covid-19 were further discussed at the National Security Committee of Cabinet … which includes alleged quotes from you and paraphrase­s discussion­s allegedly from those meetings”.

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Dreyfus wrote that references to a ‘secret intelligen­ce briefing’ from the Office of National Intelligen­ce “would appear to be contrary to the confidenti­ality of informatio­n from the intelligen­ce and security agencies”.

Dreyfus’ letter did not make any allegation of laws being broken and did not specify further any action to be taken, but raised general concerns about the impact on cabinet processes and urged against any repeat.

“Disclosure­s of cabinet discussion­s and deliberati­ons undermine cabinet confidenti­ality and solidarity,” Dreyfus wrote.

“I trust there will be no further

disclosure­s from your period in government that undermine national security and the integrity of the cabinet process.”

Morrison has been contacted for a response, but has previously said he provided the authors with interviews as the pandemic unfolded, saying he cooperated with interviews “that were done contempora­neously”.

“That book was written based on interviews that were conducted at the time, in the middle of the tempest,” the member for Cook said at a press conference in August.

According to the book, Morrison told his colleagues at a meeting of the national security committee in April 2020: “Don’t doubt China’s capacity and will to exploit Covid-19.”

The book stated that during a later meeting, “Morrison took a decision to up the ante with Beijing”, telling the meeting “the time had come to be more strident in its language about China’s conduct”.

Morrison was reported to have told colleagues: “We need multiple points of pushback on this increasing aggression.”

Late last month, the first assistant secretary of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, John Reid, said the department had referred informatio­n about the book to the Attorney General’s Department.

“Our conclusion­s were it certainly appears to reveal informatio­n that was, until it was revealed, cabinet material, and would ordinarily have been protected under the principle of cabinet confidenti­ality,” Reid told an earlier Senate estimates committee hearing.

On Monday, the Attorney General’s Department also told Senate estimates that it did not provide advice to Christian

Porter before the then attorney general advised Morrison on the way he could be appointed to multiple ministries in 2020.

The Albanese government has asked the former high court justice Virginia Bell to lead an inquiry into Morrison’s five secret ministeria­l appointmen­ts, with a report due back by 25 November.

 ?? Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP ?? The former prime minister Scott Morrison has been warned against further cabinet disclosure­s by the attorney general.
Photograph: Dean Lewins/AAP The former prime minister Scott Morrison has been warned against further cabinet disclosure­s by the attorney general.

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